Sympathy for the Devil is a documentary that explores the cultural conflicts and political climate of 1960s London. It delves into topics such as democracy, cultural change, and the influence of music on society. The film provides a unique perspective on the counterculture movement and the impact of rock and roll.
Wonderwall is a surreal and psychedelic drama set in swinging London in the late 1960s. The story revolves around a lonely professor named Oscar Collins who becomes obsessed with a beautiful model named Penny Lane. Through a hole in the wall, he spends his days and nights watching her every move, becoming more and more isolated from the outside world. As Oscar's obsession grows, he gets pulled into a world of surrealism and voyeurism, blurring the lines between reality and fantasy.
A group of adventurers, including a scientist and a policeman, use a drilling machine to journey to the Earth's core. Along the way, they encounter monsters, face mind control, and fight for their freedom.
In the business end of a kitchen, a polyglot staff strives to cope with a superhuman task. A microcosm of the world, the kitchen looms around and encloses its workers; they include Peter, the German cook, who is in love with waitress Monica, and constantly asks her to leave her husband. The pressure of the day becomes unendurable, and when Peter realises that Monica does not mean to divorce her husband his grief and pain cause him to run berserk!
The cat and mouse game between government agents and a spy ring that has taken secret documents from a plane crash in Germany, not far from an US military research centre.
The daughter of a textile company owner falls in love with a young illustrator with a secret criminal past.
On their way home from the Isle of Wight Pop Festival, Jeff, Trev and Mick along with girlfriends Marty and Cathy decide to pitch a tent on private land. In the morning the land's owner Rafe turns up and orders them to get off his lawn but changes his mind when one of the girls emerges naked from the tent. Rafe explains he only comes down to the house at weekends and lets them stay providing they redecorate his house. The squatters agree but once Rafe leaves they plot to organize a pop festival at the house. Attempting to raise cash for the venture, the men coerce their girlfriends into making a blue movie. When this proves disastrous Jeff goes to London and poses as a pop journalist in order to book the groups "Crazy Mabel" and "The Juicy Lucy" for the festival.
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