Eno (documentary, 1973) Director: Alfi Sinniger image The film captures Brian Eno, shortly after his departure from Roxy Music, and features the recording sessions for Here Come the Warm Jets. #documentary #kinostr #kino #fullmovies #documentaries #music #eno #70s
The Net: The Unabomber, LSD, And The Internet (2003) Director: Lutz Dammbeck image More of a film essay - of the type pioneered by Orson Welles and Chris Marker - than a standard documentary, German filmmaker Lutz Dammbeck’s The Net: The Unabomber, the LSD and the Internet begins with the typical format and structure of a nonfiction film, and a single subject (the life and times of mail bomber Ted Kaczynski). From that thematic springboard, Dammbeck branches out omnidirectionally, segueing into a series of thematic riffs and variants on such marginally-related subjects as: the history of cyberspace, terrorism, utopian ideals, LSD, the Central Intelligence Agency, and Cuckoo’s Nest author Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters. #documentary #kinostr #kino #fullmovies #lsd #cia #cyberspace #thriller #filmessay #documentaries #movies #films
964 Pinocchio (1991) Director: Shozin Fukui image Released in the United Kingdom as Screams of Blasphemy, 964 Pinocchio is a 1991 Japanese cyberpunk-horror film directed by Shozin Fukui. brain-modified sex-slaves and mental breakdowns in a hallucinogenic thrill-ride. #cyberpunk #horror #scifi #kinostr #fullmovies #movies #films #kino #90s #japanese
Big Trouble in Little China (1986) image Director: John Carpenter Jack Burton, a truck driver, gets dragged into the mysterious underworld beneath Chinatown where he faces an ancient sorcerer named Lo Pan. #action #comedy #kinostr #fantasy #fullmovies #movies #kino #films #80s image
Welt Am Draht - World On A Wire (1973) (English Subtitles) Director: Rainer Werner Fassbinder image World on a Wire (German: Welt am Draht) is a 1973 German science fiction television serial, starring Klaus Löwitsch and directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Shot in 16 mm, it was made for German television and originally aired in 1973 in ARD as a two-part miniseries. It was based on the 1964 novel Simulacron-3 by Daniel F. Galouye. Plot: The Institute for Cybernetics and Futurology's (Institut für Kybernetik und Zukunftsforschung) new supercomputer hosts a simulation program that includes an artificial world with more than 9,000 "identity units" who live as human beings, unaware that their world is just a simulation. #scifi #kinostr #fullmovies #movies #kino #films #tv #cyberpunk #crime #mystery fleshing out the 'cyberpunk' genre tag/page a bit in near future: will have some cyberpunk-y and -ish, suffixpunk and adjacent stuff thrown in here and there too just fyi
Robert Anton Wilson & Genesis P-Orridge - Infinity Factory Interview (1997) Interviewer: Richard Metzger image Richard Metzger: 'From early 1997 to sometime mid-1999 I had a talkshow called The Infinity Factory that was produced at Pseudo.com (founded by Josh Harris of 'We Live in Public' fame), the increasingly legendary “Internet TV Network,” creative madhouse and party central of downtown New York during the high-flying Silicon Alley dotcom years. The Infinity Factory was taped every Sunday evening at 8pm with a few exceptions. It was produced by Vanessa Weinberg who also DJ’d and mixed the show live. Vanessa was extraordinarily in tune with how the conversations were flowing and added an intricate bed of trippy music, samples and sound loops under what were often extremely psychedelic conversations to begin with—like this episode, with Robert Anton Wilson and Genesis P-Orridge. This show dates, I think, from Fall of 1997. When it was originally netcast it was when most people still had 56k modems and the video quality was fairly awful. Don’t get me wrong, it was pretty cool to be able to do something like this back then and there was a real “pirate radio” aspect to it as well that greatly appealed to me, but in truth it looked more like flickery animation than it did actual video. And it was the size of a postage stamp. There were probably well over 100 shows, each of them around 50 minutes, but I really can’t say for sure how many there were. Most of them are probably lost.' Also available on YouTube: #interview #kinostr #raw #documentaries #kino #robertantonwilson #counterculture #conspiracies #documentary #industrial #music
Being There (1979) Director: Hal Ashby image Chance, a simple gardener, has spent all his life taking care of a wealthy old man. When he dies, Chance is put out on the street with no knowledge except what he has learned from watching television. #comedy #drama #kinostr #kino #films #movies #fullmovies #70s
Four American Composers: Philip Glass (1983) Director: Peter Greenaway image 4 American Composers offers startling and intimate insights into the music and ideas of four very original American composers: John Cage, Philip Glass, Meredith Monk, and Robert Ashley. Incorporating performance and conversations with and about the artists, these programs create an experience that extends beyond the music alone, that explores each composer’s concepts and expresses their personalities. Philip Glass’s “systems music” has been described as a “high mass on Mars.” It combines the Western disciplines of the classical music tradition with Eastern influences and visceral rock. His hypnotic, rhythmic sound is appreciated by rock, jazz and classical audiences alike. This video features conversations with and about Glass, as well as the Philip Glass Ensemble performing, his Music in Similar Motion and passages from Einstein on the Beach and Glassworks. #music #documentary #kinostr #fullmovies #documentaries #minimal #kino #movies #art #artstr #classical #films
Civilisation: A Personal View by Kenneth Clark (1969) image Episode 1: The Skin of Our Teeth (50 mins) 'An extraordinary cultural tour through the centuries. Kenneth Clark's landmark 1969 series, offering his personal perspective on the history of western art and philosophy.' 'In this first episode Clark—travelling from Byzantine Ravenna to the Celtic Hebrides, from the Norway of the Vikings to Charlemagne's chapel at Aachen—tells the story of the Dark Ages, the six centuries following the collapse of the Roman Empire, and “how European thought and art were saved by 'the skin of our teeth'”.' Complete series: #kinostr #documentaries #history #art #philosophy #movies #films #kino #documentary #tv