Short film directed by John Auerbach

A Turk and a German try their hand at the art of being a man. They love the women on the Ferris wheel, seal their male friendship with a chicken heart feast and occasionally send their philosophical thoughts on a paper boat.

In Silver, Murata subjects a snippet of footage from a vintage horror movie (Mario Bava's 1960 film 'Mask of Satan', featuring Barbara Steele) — to his exacting yet almost violent digital manipulations. The seething black and white imagery constantly decomposes and reconstitutes itself, slipping seductively between abstraction and recognition.

Digital TV Dinner is a video art clip from 1979 created using the Bally Astrocade console game to generate unusual patterns. The Bally Astrocade was unique among cartridge games in that it was designed to allow users to change game cartridges with power-on. When pressing the reset button, it was possible to remove the cartridge from the system and induce various memory dump pattern sequences. Digital TV Dinner is a collection of these curious states of silicon epilepsy set to music composed and generated upon this same platform.

China’s irresistible process of growth and its precariousness.

A stop-motion animation made against a vertical pin screen describes a pedestrian, yet powerful pontification by No Nothing Cinema co-founder Dean Snider.

A tour of Istanbul in all its glory. All the sights, such as the Hagia Sophia, but also the small details are shown.

Don't try to understand it. With an experimental visual aesthetic, Ninin invites you to reflect on the fleetingness of existence and the ephemeral beauty of life.

Experimental short film by Oskar Fischinger. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2000.

Experimental short film by Oskar Fischinger

Directorial debut. Short experiment.

A man is preaching, two people are listening, and another pretends he’s freezing to death.

A priest walks around his church and loses his faith.