When a group of friends attend a live-action role-playing game in the woods, they accidentally summon a real demon from a book of evil. Chaos ensues as they try to survive and find a way to send the demon back.
Blinkity Blank is a 1955 animated short film that combines abstract imagery with jazz music. The film explores the concept of form and improvisation, showcasing the creativity of the composer. It incorporates various animation techniques, including drawn-on-film and stop-motion animation. The film's unique style and innovative approach make it a must-watch for animation enthusiasts.
Humorous Phases of Funny Faces is a comical and innovative short film from 1906. It showcases various humorous and peculiar hand-drawn illustrations that come to life through stop-motion animation. The film features a variety of humorous scenarios, including a circus, a French poodle, a playing clown, and a chalkboard. It is a droll and inspirational piece of early animation filmmaking.
A train heads for a tunnel. In one car, a restless man smokes, and a woman is reading on the seat opposite him. In the darkness of the tunnel, he rises, crosses over to her seat and the two share a willing embrace and kiss. The train steams out of the tunnel toward us and past us. A Bamforth Films remake of George Albert Smith's The Kiss in the Tunnel (I) (1899).
Abstract shapes morph in and out of focus.
In a posh, swanky restaurant, a neurotic man's meal is interrupted by an unexpected little guest.
The author of the work in a grotesque form tries to convey to the viewer that school education can not only make people better, but also, with an inappropriate approach to training, turn them into notorious monsters. We follow one lesson in school of fantastic, but such recognizable monsters.
A strive onto continuing a lost art form that one artist by the name of Raii starts up again causes security and regulations against street art to heighten. The true art form almost diminishes until a group is formed to change that.
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