Fourteen-year-old Jeanne has lived in a farm commune since she was two years old. Her mother and father live in city communes and rarely visit. This is one of the commandments given by Otto, who rules the commune: children are to grow up without parents. Knowing nothing else, Jeanne enjoys her outdoor life, surrounded by lots of other children, until she falls in love with 16-year-old Jean and her childhood paradise begins to fall apart.
Baader (2002) is a gripping action-thriller that tells the story of the Baader-Meinhof Group, a left-wing terrorist organization in Germany. The movie explores the origins of the group, their violent acts, and the efforts of law enforcement to bring them to justice. It delves into the political and social climate of the time, highlighting the complex motivations and ideologies of the members. With a combination of intense action sequences and thought-provoking storytelling, Baader (2002) offers a compelling insight into a tumultuous period in German history.
The Ways of Seeing writer is celebrated by Tilda Swinton and her fellow admirers in an unorthodox four-part documentary that visits him at his Alpine home
Moritz and Karl have a boring job at an advertising company. One day they meet an obscure agent of a rival company who wants to buy information about an advertisement campain their company is working on. Having no access to this plans they have no choice but to make up a fake campaign.
A film on time and narrative by Christopher Roth with Armen Avanessian. Hyperstitional thinking hijacks the present-forming daring interventions into conditions of cybernetic governance that foreclose contingency.
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