OVID’s September Lineup: ABBA, American Jews & Zionism, Soccer Fanatics, Korean Animation, Romanian Sci-Fi, Patricio Guzmán’s first film, Wang Bing’s hit from last year, Gaspar Noé’s VORTEX… & more! 

This September OVID presents 26 new films and 11 exclusives.

Our most wide-ranging fall season rollout yet, OVID will forgo teasing out highlights — since this entire month is a highlight!

Full details on September’s complete lineup are below.

(Image above from Robert Mugge's Sun Ra: A Joyful Noise, premiering on OVID on September 23rd)
No Place for You in This Town (2022)

Tuesday, September 3

No Place for You in This Town
Directed by Nikolay Stefanov
Lightdox | Documentary | Bulgaria | 2022

“An observational exercise that elegantly critiques the hollowness of fascist ideology… a reminder that the violence which Europe considers a remote past still remains, its root causes still ever present.” —Variety

Football hooliganism in the roughest city in Bulgaria — Pernik, a once flourishing industrial center, where all that’s left is the urban legend about its citizens’ toughness. The film follows a skinhead and single father named Tsetso, a gang leader named Dado, and Mimeto, the only woman in the group. Still, amid a grave water crisis and their health problems, Nikolay Stefanov’s camera peeks underneath the rough and tough appearance to reveal vulnerable lives.

OVID EXCLUSIVE


Polish Prayers
Directed by Hanka Nobis
First Hand Films | Documentary | Switzerland, Poland | 2022

Antek, 22, grows up in a deeply religious and radical right-wing family in contemporary Poland. Catholicism, nationalism, and especially celibacy define his world. Antek enjoys his growing power in the Brotherhood, a small group of like-minded young men. But when he falls in love, doubts begin to set in. It is the women, the tender, difficult, exciting relationships with them, through which Antek learns to be a man. Antek practically lives a double life, praying the rosary with a megaphone in the marketplace of Wroclaw during the day to “save Christians from persecution and Europe from Islamisation” and getting drunk with young women at techno parties at night. Not everything is as it should be at home either.

OVID EXCLUSIVE

Wednesday, September 4

The Dilemma of Desire
Directed by Maria Finitzo
Utopia | Documentary | USA | 2020

A feature-length verité documentary, The Dilemma of Desire follows a conceptual artist, two scientists, and an industrial designer who are using their work to shatter the myths and outright lies women have been taught about their sexual desire and their bodies. These four compelling women are out to change culture. There can be no equality without equality of pleasure. 

“It is a fascinating exploration in female sexuality and everything it encompasses.” —Film Inquiry

The Story of Hong-Gil Dong (1967)

Thursday, September 5

Midwives
Directed by Léa Fehner
With Khadija Kouyaté, Héloïse Janjaud, Myriem Akheddiou, Quentin Vernede
Distrib Films | Feature | France | 2023

After five years of dedicated learning in the noble profession of midwifery – often hailed as ‘the most beautiful job in the world’ – Louise and Sofia are embarking on their professional journey, bracing themselves for substantial responsibilities. In a world that operates at a frenetic pace, they navigate the delicate realms of birth, motherhood, and occasionally, the solemnity of death. 

“An exceptional movie… a deeply human story about what we risk when we don’t protect ourselves.” —Critic’s Notebook

OVID EXCLUSIVE


The Story of Hong-Gil Dong
Directed by Dong-Heon Shin
MVD | Animated Feature | South Korea | 1967

Adapted from a classic Korean novel written during the Joseon Dynasty, The Story of Hong Gil-dong follows the illegitimate son of a nobleman, banished from his family due to the predictions of a fake prophecy. Out of his home, Hong Gil-dong witnesses first-hand the injustices of society. Along with his sidekick Chadol Bawi, the pair steal from a corrupt magistrate and return the money to the poor. As the magistrate brings in more forces and grows more powerful, will Hong Gil-dong and his band of merry men prevail?

“A delight to watch… The hand-painted backgrounds evoke watercolor paintings of Joseon-era architecture, nostalgic of the past.” —Asian Movie Pulse

Friday, September 6

ABBA Forever: The Winner Takes it All
Directed by Chris Hunt
MVD | Documentary | UK | 2019

The history of ABBA’s success told in retrospect by its former members, featuring rare archival footage, and a feast of ABBA songs. It starts with their early careers, then the inside story of how they conquered Eurovision (first in Swedish, then in English), and then how they’ve continued to conquer the world. We see them in performance and in the sound studio to learn how their sound was created.

OVID EXCLUSIVE


A-ha: The Movie
Directed by Thomas Robsahm
MVD | Documentary | Norway, Germany | 2022

The music of Queen and the Velvet Underground instilled a sense of destiny in 3 teenagers living in 1970s Norway. That dream led to A-ha: featuring keyboardist Magne Furuholmen, vocalist Morten Harket, and guitarist Paul Waaktaar-Savoy. “Take on Me” was one of the biggest pop songs ever and made these teens global superstars. 36 years later, A-ha still sells out arenas worldwide – but can they mend broken friendships to get on stage and create new music? A story of great music, big ambitions, friendship – and maybe forgiveness.

“A no-holds-barred, melancholy, often surprising examination of Norway’s most famous — and underrated — musical export. A must for fans.” —Empire Magazine

Tuesday, September 10

Who is Harry Nilsson?
Directed by John Scheinfeld
MVD | Documentary | USA | 2006

The Beatles said that Harry Nilsson was their favorite American musician. Nilsson won two Grammys and was the recipient of seventeen gold records, yet he is relatively unknown today. This wildly entertaining, star-studded documentary tells the story of one of the most talented singer-songwriters in pop music history. His hits include the Grammy-winning “Everybody’s Talkin'” and “Without You,” as well as “Coconut” and “One (Is the Loneliest Number).” The film reveals to what extent his personal life was as complex and contradictory as his music, from his spirited relationship with John Lennon to his close bond with Ringo Starr.

Director John Scheinfeld (The U.S. vs. John Lennon) paints a detailed and revelatory portrait of an extraordinary artist featuring over fifty Nilsson recordings, as well as rare or never-before-seen film clips, home movies, photos from the Nilsson family album and interviews with those who knew him well.

“A heartfelt tribute to one of pop-rock’s greatest songwriters.”  —The Seattle Times

Who is Harry Nilsson? becomes like one of his songs: melancholy, whimsical, and memorable.” —The New Yorker

The First Year (1972)

Wednesday, September 11

2K Restoration!

The First Year
Directed by Patricio Guzmán
Icarus Films | Documentary | Chile | 1972

The First Year is a jubilant record of the 12 months following the election of Chile’s first socialist president, Salvador Allende. Director Patricio Guzmán travels the country, meeting workers who no longer have to answer to the caprices of bosses, fishermen hoping to be freed from predatory capitalist middlemen, and Indigenous people rising up to reclaim their land. Guzmán has a talent for capturing powerful emotions: the man with an arm mangled after a workplace accident remembering workplace humiliation. But not everyone is happy. The upper classes do their best to undermine the economy — and blame the results on Allende. By the end of the year, there are already signs of the counter-revolution to come, documented in Guzmán’s three-part documentary The Battle of Chile, also streaming exclusively on OVID.

“Critic’s Pick! Remarkable… throbs with jubilant energy.” —Devika Girish, The New York Times

“A dual ode to the revolutionary potential of Latin America beyond Cuba and a celebration of decades of organizing in Chile. This is an active cinema for an active audience.” —PopMatters

OVID EXCLUSIVE — SVOD PREMIERE

Zurita, You will see not to see
Directed by Alejandra Carmona Cannobbio
Pragda | Documentary | Chile | 2019

National Literature Award Laureate Raúl Zurita is one of Latin America’s most celebrated and controversial living poets.  He is not only a great poet – one that has captured his work on paper, on Chilean geography, and even on his body – but also a rocker, a human rights activist, a public figure, and a tireless struggler. The film is an account of his experiences during his travels and his daily life, as he reflects on topics such as state terrorism and death.

“With a mysterious admixture of logic and logos, Christian Symbols, brain scans, graphics, and a medical report, Zurita expanded the formal repertoire of his language, of poetic materials, pushing back against the ugly vapidity of rule by force.” –C.D. Wright

“A touching and candid story of Raúl Zurita… The film is a chronological account of Zurita’s passage from his childhood, youth, the darkest moments of his life during the dark days of military dictatorship in Chile, and his current life.” –Video Librarian

Thursday, September 12


Israelism
Directed by Eric Axelman & Sam Eilertsen
Watermelon Pictures | Documentary | USA | 2023

The controversial documentary that colleges tried to ban: Two young American Jews—Simone Zimmerman and Eitan—are raised to defend the state of Israel at all costs. Eitan joins the Israeli military. Simone supports Israel on another “battlefield” – America’s college campuses. When they witness Israel’s mistreatment of the Palestinian people with their own eyes, they are horrified and heartbroken. They join the movement of young American Jews battling the old guard over Israel’s centrality in American Judaism, and demand freedom for the Palestinian people. Their stories reveal a generational divide in the American Jewish community as more young Jews question the narratives their synagogues and Hebrew school teachers fed them as children. The film features voices like Jacqui, a Jewish educator who says “Judaism is Israel and Israel is Judaism”, and former Anti-Defamation League President Abe Foxman, who claims voices like Simone and Eitan’s represent a small minority. Thought leaders including Peter Beinart, Jeremy Ben-Ami, Noura Erakat, Cornel West, and Noam Chomsky also weigh in.

“A timely documentary exploring changing Jewish attitudes toward Israel.” —Variety

My Gaza Online
OVID Exclusive
Directed by Mohamed Jabaly
First Hand Films, Documentary, 2020
US

Over the course of five years, Palestinian film director Mohamed Jabaly has been living in the far north of Norway, distant from his family and friends in Gaza. Now the internet has become the only way to communicate with them. Jabaly says: “While living in Gaza I was always in the front line trying to capture everything around me and what was happening. I wanted to make a film about my feelings of living in Norway, and the challenge of finding new ways to tell a story from Gaza. As the situation is getting worse in Gaza, my family and friends have been sharing their thoughts, depression, and glimpses of daily life online…. My Gaza Online has helped me realize and understand more about the importance of the internet, and how that can change our lives in the way that we use or deal with it.”

OVID is also streaming Ambulance — Jabaly’s raw, first-person account of the war in Gaza. 

Friday, September 13

Fugue
Directed by Agnieszka Smoczyńska
With Gabriela Muskala, Lukasz Simlat, Iwo Rajski
Dekanalog | Feature | Poland, Czech Republic, Sweden | 2018

After a two-year disappearance, free-spirited Alicja is reunited with her parents, husband, and young son, despite having no memory of them. Suddenly thrust back into a domestic life she has no recollection of choosing, Alicja struggles to reconcile her new and unfamiliar roles of dependability with the unshackled independence sprung by her recent mental break. With surreal, icy imagery and a seductively hypnotic atmosphere, director Agnieszka Smoczyńska’s (The Lure) sophomore feature burrows into the landscape of Alicja’s mind, evoking the pressure on women to accept maternity without hesitation or reflection, questioning the societal presumption that biological circumstances dictate that every woman should be willing to be a mother.

“Critic’s Pick! The gutting question Fugue poses is whether any of us can ever go back to being who we once were.” Devika Girish, The New York Times

“A poised, consistently intriguing combination of suspense with a timely consideration of a woman’s journey towards self-realization.” —Screen International

“An assured and gripping work.” —Another Gaze 

* Cannes Film Festival 2018

Delta Space Mission (1984)


Monday, September 16

Delta Space Mission
Directed by Mircea Toia & Călin Cazan
With Mirela Gorea, Marcel Iures, Dan Condurache
Deaf Crocodile/MVD | Animated Feature | Romania | 1984

In the year 3084, a Modigliani-esque alien journalist with blue-green skin, Alma, boards a state-of-the-art spacecraft named Delta – whose highly advanced computer brain develops a mad teenage crush on her with disastrous results.  An incredibly strange and strangely beautiful work of galactic eye candy, Delta Space Mission defies all rules of perspective and logic, like M.C. Escher and Moebius teaming up on a Romanian Saturday morning cartoon.  Fueled by an addictive Perry-Kingsley like electronic synth score by Calin Ioachimescu, Delta Space Mission grooves along folding space and time, an early Eighties Euro disco perched on the edge of a Black Hole.

“Offers a hallucinatory vision of the future that is part 2001: A Space Odyssey, part Star Wars, part Star Trek, and most of all uniquely its own thing.” —Hammer to Nail 

Tuesday, September 17

A Bomb Was Stolen
Directed by Ion Popescu-Gopo
Deaf Crocodile/MVD | Feature | Romania | 1962

A dialogue-free Romanian science-fiction spy-comedy that draws upon farce, satire and surrealism as it subversively deconstructs the spy thriller. The story centers around a criminal gang of Runyanesque hoods who steal an atomic bomb, only to have it end up in the hands of a man, who has no idea he’s carrying a deadly device around town. A riotous, slapstick-fueled chase ensues between the rival powers of the criminals and the military.

“The first distinctive filmmaker to emerge from Romania… [Ion Popescu-Gopo] filters live action through an animator’s surreal sensibility.” —BFI


Visitors from the Arkana Galaxy
Directed by Dusan Vukotic
With Zarko Potocnjak, Lucie Zulová, Ljubisa Samardzic, Ksenia Prohaska
Deaf Crocodile/MVD | Feature | 1981

Imagine if Troma Films had been hired to make a Sid & Marty Krofft Saturday morning kids’ show, and you have some idea of the unspeakable strangeness of Visitors from the Arkana Galaxy, a truly gonzo Croatian sci-fi / fantasy / comedy about a struggling writer, Robert (Zarko Potocnjak), who dreams up a story of gold-skinned alien androids named Andra, Targo and Ulu from a distant planet. Incredibly, his fictional alien creations become reality, causing chaos in his relationship with his girlfriend Biba (Lucie Zulová) and threatening his small seaside village.

“Shows the depths of the struggle to create in vivid, unhinged detail… If you enjoy finding special, quirky pockets of international cinema, this is the movie for you.” —Geek Vibes Nation

The Strangler (1970)

Wednesday, September 18

2K Restoration!

The Strangler  
Directed by Paul Vecchiali
With Jacques Perrin, Julien Guiomar, Eva Simonet, Jacqueline Danno
Altered Innocence | Feature | France | 1970

An unconventional French giallo released before the subgenre’s popularity boom resulting from filmmakers like Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci, The Strangler centers on Émile (Jacques Perrin, The Young Girls of Rochefort), a handsome young man targeting women he believes are too depressed to go on living. Praised as a “complex, melancholic meditation on isolation as well as a portrait of collective hysteria” by the New York Film Festival, the film equally subverts and indulges in the conventions of the giallo with unexpected beauty and refinement.

“A strange, seductive film that takes the conventions of the serial-killer thriller and explodes them with baroque colors and convulsive camera movements. It’s like Peeping Tom meets one of Dario Argento’s giallo joints, but slathered in a coat of melancholic malaise.” —Beatrice Loayza, The New York Times


Amore Mio
Directed by Guillaume Gouix
With Alysson Paradis, Elodie Bouchez, Félix Maritaud
Distrib Films | Feature | France | 2023

Still in shock from the sudden death of her husband, Lola (Alysson Paradis) makes a snap decision to flee the funeral with her 7-year-old son and sister, Margaux (Élodie Bouchez, In Safe Hands, Guy). As the impromptu escapade turns into a road trip through France, the long-estranged sisters are forced to contend with each other’s clashing personalities. The responsible and reliable Margaux bristles against Lola’s bohemian spontaneity, while the long hours on the road soon resurface unhealed wounds. Buoyed by stand-out performances from Alysson Paradis and Élodie Bouchez, Amore Mio is an affirming story of rediscovering family and living life fully in the face of overwhelming grief.

“A confident and well-formed debut. [Alysson] Paradis is absolutely magnetic as Lola.” —The Arts STL

OVID EXCLUSIVE
Island in Between (2024)

Thursday, September 19

A Light Never Goes Out
Directed by Anastasia Tsang
With Sylvia Chang, Cecilia Choi, , Henick Chou, Simon Yam
Orchard Tree Media | Feature | Hong Kong | 2023

Starring Sylvia Chang, who won best actress at Taiwan’s prestigious Golden Horse Awards for the role, the film revolves around one woman’s plight to save her deceased husband’s legacy in making neon signs, which once defined the cityscape of Hong Kong. 

* Hong Kong’s submission for Best International Feature at the Oscars

OVID EXCLUSIVE


Island in Between
Directed by S. Leo Chiang
Icarus Films/dGenerate Films | Documentary | Taiwan | 2024

The rural Taiwanese outer islands of Kinmen sit merely 2 miles off the coast of China. Kinmen attracts tourists for its remains from the 1949 Chinese Civil War. It also marks the frontline for Taiwan in its escalating tension with China. Filmmaker S. Leo Chiang weaves lyrical vignettes of tourist visits and local life with his own narrative as someone negotiating ambivalent personal bonds to Taiwan, China, and the US, and contemplates Taiwan’s uncertain future.

“At once personal, poetic, and educational—a mix one wishes more of this year’s short-form Oscar contenders managed so well.” —48 Hills

“Weaves together the personal and the political, reminding us that no matter the stories which those in power like to tell, on either side, they are meaningless in the face of actual human interconnection.” —Eye for Film

SVOD Premiere

Friday, September 20

Youth (Spring) (2023)

Youth (Spring)
Directed by Wang Bing
Icarus Films/dGenerate Films | Documentary | France, Luxembourg, Netherlands | 2023

A remarkably intimate documentary filmed over five years, Wang Bing (Bitter Money, Three Sisters) takes us into the garment workshops of Zhili, China — many on a street named Happiness Road. Young women fend off their co-workers’ advances. Managers and employees engage in intense negotiations over piece-work rates. Unexpected pregnancies throw couples and their families into turmoil. While not an outright exposé of the garment industry, Bing draws us into the lives of young people doing the best they can in a challenging environment.

Critic’s Pick! An exhortation not to forget the unseen.” Ben Kenigsberg, The New York Times

“Possibly the most significant document of Chinese garment workers ever created.” —Paste Magazine

*** Cannes 2023, NYFF61, TIFF

Wang Bing’s two new films: Youth (Hard Times) and Youth (Homecoming) will have their US Premiere at NYFF62’s Main Slate, opening September 27th.

OVID EXCLUSIVE — SVOD Premiere

Monday, September 23

Sun Ra: A Joyful Noise
Directed by Robert Mugge
MVD | Documentary | USA | 1980

Music documentarian Robert Mugge documents performances by American experimental jazz composer, bandleader, and poet Sun Ra, known for his “cosmic” philosophy, prolific output, and theatrical performances. Sun Ra and his Arkestra are filmed on tour in Philadelphia, D.C., and Baltimore. The doc also includes interviews and rehearsal footage.

“One of the most satisfying portraits I’ve ever seen. An extraordinary documentary. Revelatory.” Richard Brody, The New Yorker

“Trying to cover all there is to say about this most flamboyantly unique artist is a daunting task, especially in an hour, but Robert Mugge’s A Joyful Noise does a darned good job. More personal portrait than actual comprehensive musical documentary, it presents a good range of Ra’s many musical moods” Michael Shore, Music Video: A Consumer Guide

Gil Scott-Heron: Black Wax (1982)

Tuesday, September 24

Restored!

Gil Scott-Heron: Black Wax
Directed by Robert Mugge
MVD | Documentary | USA | 1982

A portrait of the late African American poet-singer-songwriter and self-described “bluesologist” Gil Scott-Heron – the man Melody Maker called “the most dangerous musician alive” and who many dubbed the forefather of rap music – and his Midnight Band. The entertainment is political. Restored from the original 16mm film, and likely the first film to use Steadicam from first to last frame.

“Gil Scott-Heron’s long-standing political commitment and protean influence on rap sing-speech are finally given their due in this outstanding documentary.” —Michael Shore, Music Video: A Consumer Guide


Gospel According to Al Green
Directed by Robert Mugge
MVD | Documentary | USA | 1984

A 94-minute portrait of soul singer and gospel preacher Al Green filmed at a concert in Washington, D.C. and a church service in Memphis, TN. “This is a film about love,” Mugge says. “About the connections between soul music and gospel, and about a guy who flew too close to the sun, got his eyeballs burned, and has been singing ever since with fire coming out of his mouth.”

Thursday, September 26

Boreal
Directed by Federico Adorno
With Amado Cardozo, Fabio Chamorro, Mateo Giménez
Pragda | Feature | Paraguay, Mexico | 2022

Benjamín is finding it hard to adapt to his job and starts behaving erratically-he anxiously awaits the return of the Mennonite leader, but the wait is long. When he finally appears, he says that they must stay on for longer to continue putting up the wire fencing, but Benjamín objects.

* Locarno Film Festival 2023 


The Wind Blows the Border
Directed by Laura Faerman & Marina Weis
Pragda | Documentary | Brazil | 2022

On the violent border between Brazil and Paraguay, a battle between agribusiness and indigenous sovereignty wages. Filmmakers Laura Faerman and Marina Weis outline the clash between lawyer Luana Ruiz – heiress to the contested land and staunch Jair Bolsonaro supporter, and Alenir Ximendes – Guarani-Kaiowá leader, teacher, and activist. A powerful cinematic chronicle of Ximendes’s courageous fight against Ruiz and agribusiness to protect her community, culture, and indigenous lands. The land in dispute is the Ñande Ru Marangatu Indigenous Territory, which has been inhabited by the Guarani-Kaiowá Indigenous people for at least 1500 years. Farmers arrived in the region in the 1940s.

* Hot Docs Special Jury Prize

Friday, September 27

Jane by Charlotte
Directed by Charlotte Gainsbourg
With Jane Birkin, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Jo Attal, Serge Gainsbourg
Utopia Films | Documentary | France | 2021

Charlotte Gainsbourg looks at her mother Jane Birkin in a way she never did, overcoming a sense of reserve. The documentary, which debuted during Cannes Film Festival, is what Gainsbourg calls “an open love letter” to her mother Jane Birkin, an actress and singer like Gainsbourg herself and the longtime collaborator and muse for her father, the late Serge Gainsbourg. The film is built on intimate and difficult conversations between the two, emotionally poignant and at points quietly cathartic.

“The rocky relationship between a famous mother-daughter duo is gently mended in Jane by Charlotte, an intimate memory portrait that reminisces as much as it reprimands…  It might not be a broadly relatable piece of cinema, but its commitment to one family’s healing across matriarchal lines is wholesome and inspiring.” —Paste Magazine

Saturday, September 28

Vortex
Directed by Gaspar Noé
With Dario Argento, Françoise Lebrun, Alex Lutz, Kylian Dheret
Utopia Films | Feature | France | 2021

This avant-garde psychological drama film spans the last days of an elderly couple. Starring Dario Argento as a father and author, in his first leading role, alongside Françoise Lebrun (The Mother and the Whore) as his wife, and Alex Lutz as their son, Stéphane. The film marks a shift in Noé’s style from extremity to slow cinema genre. The film premiered in the Cannes Premiere section at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival, to widespread acclaim from film critics.

“Violent and tragic in much less obvious and more insidious ways.” —The Hollywood Reporter

“A harrowing portrait of both the disease and the cure. It wants to show us the perils of old age with the gloves off, unsoftened by sentimental cushioning, and there’s no denying that the movie succeeds in doing that.” —Variety

Monday, September 30

Stooges: The Men Behind the Mayhem
Directed by Paul E. Gierucki
MVD | Documentary | USA | 1994

This extensive documentary goes behind the scenes of the legendary comedy show The Three Stooges. Over two hours of previously unseen footage offers viewers an insightful look at the private lives of everyone’s favorite funnymen. Interviews with family and friends of the stars, outtakes, and backstage material help to paint a revealing portrait of the men who made up the hugely popular comic trio.

“An absolute treasure trove of rarities for devoted Stooges fans.” —Blu-ray.com

Complete list of films premiering on OVID this month (in alphabetical order):

ABBA Forever: The Winner Takes it All, Chris Hunt (2019)
A-ha: The Movie, Thomas Robsahm (2022)
A Light Never Goes Out, Anastasia Tsang (2023)
Amore Mio, Guillaume Gouix (2023)
Boreal, Federico Adorno (2022)
Delta Space Mission, Mircea Toia & Călin Cazan (1984)
Fugue, Agnieszka Smoczyńska (2018)
Gil Scott-Heron: Black Wax, Robert Mugge (1982) 
Gospel According to Al Green, Robert Mugge (1984) 
Island in Between, S. Leo Chiang (2024)
Israelism, Eric Axelman & Sam Eilertsen (2023)
Jane by Charlotte, Charlotte Gainsbourg (2021)
Midwives, Léa Fehner (2023)
No Place for You in This Town, Nikolay Stefanov (2022)
Polish Prayers, Hanka Nobis (2022) 
Stooges: The Men Behind the Mayhem, Paul E. Gierucki (1994)
Sun Ra: A Joyful Noise, Robert Mugge (1980)
The Dilemma of Desire, Maria Finitzo (2020)
The First Year, Patricio Guzmán (1972)
The Story of Hong-Gil Dong, Dong-Heon Shin (1967)
The Strangler, Paul Vecchiali (1970)
The Wind Blows the Border, Laura Faerman & Marina Weis (2022)
Vortex, Gaspar Noé (2021)
Youth (Spring), Wang Bing (2023)
Who is Harry Nilsson? John Scheinfeld (2006)
Zurita, You will see not to see, Alejandra Carmona Cannobbio (2019)

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