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Masashi Ando’s directorial debut is an epic fantasy about Van, the leader of a band of death warriors who is enslaved in a salt mine. One night, savage dogs attack the mine and a mysterious disease wipes out both the slaves and their keepers. Van escapes with a little girl called Yuna and sets out to discover the source of the disease. (2022)

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The movie The Wizard of Oz (1939) with the soundtrack replaced by Pink Floyd’s album The Dark Side…

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It’s been over 80 years years since Dorothy entered the technicolor world of Oz and changed movies forever!…

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Don’t miss the new restoration of David Lynch’s trippy surrealist Hollywood noir shot entirely by Lynch himself with a handheld digital camcorder. Laura Dern stars as an actress who loses touch with the lines between reality and the character she plays.  

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Two nights only on 35mm! Satoshi Kon’s anime thriller stars a young dream detective named Paprika, who must…

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Nic Cage is (as per usual) a guy seeking revenge in this hallucinogenic and trippy horror film with demon biker gangs and sexually deviant religious cults. Cage and his girlfriend lead a loving and peaceful existence; but when their pine-scented haven is savagely destroyed, Cage is catapulted into a phantasmagoric journey filled with bloody vengeance and laced with fire.

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This Chilean stop-motion horror film is a dark and wildly original masterpiece. Based on the Nazi stronghold cult Colonia Dignidad run in Chile in the 1970s, the animation is enrapturing and unforgettable.

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Widely considered one of the best and most influential films of all time, Fellini’s surrealist comedy-drama follows a creatively blocked director on a restful retreat — ordered by his doctor. He fantasizes about his past life until his wife, mistress, producer, staff, and actors show up.

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It’s a Summer Film! is a new teen romcom out of Japan that’s simultaneously an ode to creative youth and a love letter to filmmaking in all forms.
Barefoot and her teen friends set out to make an awesome samurai film for their school film fest. They’ve got only a small tripod and an iPhone, while their snooty classmates with high tech filmmaking gear make a romcom.
With humor, heart, and an unexpected sci-fi twist, Sôshi Masumoto’s 2020 film is refreshing, sincere, and the kind of movie you’ll catch yourself smiling at in a dark theater.

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