1BR follows Sarah, an aspiring costume designer, who moves into a new apartment complex in Los Angeles. As she settles into her new home, Sarah realizes that her neighbors are part of a disturbing community that uses coercion, isolation, and brainwashing to control its residents. Sarah must navigate the horrifying reality of her new living situation and find a way to escape before it's too late.
Zeitgeist: Moving Forward is a documentary that delves into various aspects of society, including socioeconomics, politics, and technology. It examines the current state of the world and presents a vision for a better future. The film explores topics such as poverty, consumerism, resource management, and the impact of technology on society.
A thought-provoking documentary that explores the influence of religion on various aspects of human life, including terrorism, child abuse, and religious extremism. Through engaging interviews and insightful analysis, it challenges the beliefs and practices of different religious traditions while highlighting the consequences of blind faith.
The story of the clone of a famous entertainment mogul created to revive the glory days of his deceased predecessor's corporation. In the process of restoring reality entertainment to a synthetic, virtual world, the clone relizes he has yet to live as his own man.
"Though not given a New York showing until 1935, V. I. Pudovkin's Mechanics of the Brain (Mekhanika Golovnovo Mozga) was written and directed by Pudovkin in 1926. A full year in the making, this scientific documentary concentrates on the behavioral studies conducted by Prof. Ivan Pavlov. The laboratory dogs used in Pavlov's research don't seem too happy about it, and as a result this film might be hard to take for the more sensitive viewers (the vivisection sequence is particularly rough). The progress of the research is detailed with charts and graphs, hardly the "cinematic" touches one might expect from Pudovkin. Interestingly, Mechanics of the Brains was released two years before the results of Pavlov's studies were printed in book form."
A discussion about body images, sexuality, society, conditioning of what women should look like, the fashion industry's profits from women's insecurities and the pressures on women to conform.
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