Random Hearts is a movie about a policeman and a US congresswoman who discover a shocking secret about their deceased spouses, leading them on a thrilling investigation filled with political intrigue, betrayal, and forbidden love.
The Bay is a horror film set in the fictional town of Claridge, Maryland. It follows the events of the Fourth of July festival in the town, where a parasitic outbreak leads to chaos and panic. The film utilizes found footage style, incorporating various forms of media such as 911 calls, text messages, and interviews with survivors. As the town descends into desolation, a reporter uncovers the truth behind the environmental disaster plaguing the Chesapeake Bay.
Director Christy Cabanne's 1933 film dramatizes one year in the lives of four midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy.
Melanie McGuire is accused of murdering her husband and disposing of his body in suitcases, as the investigation and trial unfold.
In 1967, a young David Lynch grabbed his new Bolex 16mm camera, to film his friend and mentor Bushnell Keeler and brother Dave Keeler sailing on the Chesapeake Bay in Bush's King's Cruiser. This was David Lynch's very first film, which he prefers to call a "home movie". It depicts a man, a painter, who changed David's life forever pursuing the artist's life, which he continues to this day.
In the early 1940s, a depressed young woman, who's been eclipsed all of her life by her beautiful twin sister, tries to overcome her low self-esteem with help from a crusty old sea captain.
Animated clay paintings tell the true story of the last house on a sinking island in the Chesapeake Bay, a large and important estuary and waterway in Maryland, on the East Coast of the United States. In an Old-Time Music ballad, the house sings of its life and the creatures it has sheltered during its lifetime journey from tree, to timber, to home, to an ultimate return to nature. It contemplates time, environmental change, and the rise of the seas.
Is it possible that Ice Age people succeeded in crossing the frozen Atlantic Ocean to North America, thousands of years before the Vikings and Columbus? Two archaeologists believe so after discovering artifacts in Chesapeake Bay that bear an inexplicable resemblance to those from prehistoric Europe. Follow them as they combine old-fashioned excavations with exciting new DNA testing to prove their theory, answer their critics, and rewrite the history books.
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