David Lynch (1946-2025)

Face illuminated by the rippling light of a film’s projection, genre-defying American filmmaker David Lynch opens up about the magic of the cinema in this profile from Stella McCartney… RIP Master David Lynch.
Percebes – Trailer (Dir. Alexandra Ramires & Laura Gonçalves – 2024)

Shortlisted by the Academy as a finalist amongst 15 animated movies to compete for Best Animated Short Film, “Percebes”, by Alexandra Ramires and Laura Gonçalves is a documentary, animated in watercolor and digital, about the life cycle of this crustacean in the context of harvesting in the Algarve.
Grand Tour – Trailer (Dir. Miguel Gomes – 2024)

The latest film from Portuguese director Miguel Gomes competed with Coppola, Lanthimos, Sorrentino and Cronenberg to win the Palme D’Or for Best Director at Cannes 2024.
Bad for a Moment – Trailer (Dir. Daniel Soares – 2024)

The latest by Portuguese director Daniel Soares is competing at the Cannes Short Films category. A team-building event goes wrong and brings the owner of an architect studio face-to-face with the lower-class neighbourhood that his company is gentrifying.
Ryuichi Sakamoto “Opus” (Official Trailer – 2024)

Ryuichi Sakamoto final performance: a concert film, featuring just him and his piano directed by his son Neo Sora in late 2022, with all the energy he could muster, already in his last year leading to his lost battle against cancer. official site
The Ojas System and Audiophile Nirvana – Short film 2021

Devon Turnbull on the Ojas Sound System Approach to Audiophile Nirvana.
Phil Elverum ‘There’s No End’ (Film 2022)

Phil Elverum ‘There’s No End’ (Film 2022) . In Phil’s own words, ‘a beautifully filmed portrait version of this home life; the simple routines with my young daughter, the meandering ideas that burble out unformed.’ Shot on Location in the Washington State.
Joker – Bathroom Dance Scene (OST by Hildur Guðnadóttir – 2019)

Joker – Bathroom Dance Scene (OST by Hildur Guðnadóttir – 2019). “And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.” – Friedrich Nietzsche