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- Superman returns to Earth after spending five years in space examining his homeworld Krypton. But he finds things have changed while he was gone, and he must once again prove himself important to the world.
- A wealthy London housewife is forced to return to her hometown in Australia, where she's forced to confront her past and the reasons that caused her to leave years ago.
- Albert Einstein turns the science community upside down with his discoveries including a formula to put bubbles back in beer and rock n' roll.
- The exploits of four boys who leave Sydney and head out for a weekend of surfing and adventure. Unfortunately the fun takes a serious turn when they find themselves involved in a murder.
- The neighbors are scared of her. The police can't keep up with her. Nobody can control her, but everybody's trying.
- When a young schoolgirl is raped and murdered, the mateship between a group of surfers is tested as the truth is slowly revealed.
- Tragedy befalls one of three brothers while on an outback surfing outing with friends.
- Charismatic tap dancing Sean tries to find a way out of working at the steel mill. When failure brings him home he starts his own dance group wearing hardhats. He must then find inspiration in the steel mill he once tried to escape.
- After a heart transplant a young woman finds herself connecting with a homeless man through classical music. Throughout a series of dramatic performances and emotional events the two worlds begin to merge as one.
- A news program for children on topics such as Australia's native flora and fauna, action sports, the environment, science, and technology.
- When a cleaning lady notices a surfer being awarded a heroism medal, she recognises him as the man who assaulted her. With the help of a courier, she confronts the surfer and his pregnant fiancée in a car park.
- A violent man (Bryan Brown), who ostensibly has a slight mental illness due to fillings in his teeth, continues to write letters to his estranged girlfriend, Kris McQuade. She sees that he expresses himself more dearly in his letters and he is still quick tempered when they try to rekindle their relationship.
- After finishing high school, Ethan and his best mates commemorate their final night out together. As the night unfolds, the boy's friendship is tested as inevitably, nothing goes to plan.
- Maeve, upon discovering her father's massive debt, also caught her best friend and fiancé in an affair, leading to her being sold to a remote island. To survive, she opts to participate in a survival game. Can she make it out alive?
- The video picks up on the theme of isolation and references two works of art: Michelangelo's sculpture "Pietà" and René Magritte's painting "The Lovers" (1928). Beyoncé is shown wearing a veil and a gown with a mask of her own face on her hand, that she later puts on, simulating a statue's peaceful expression. Among other scenes the video shows a couple kissing with their heads enshrouded by white fabric.
- A federal agent travels to a small town to investigate the murder of her brother.
- A record of the 1954 visit to Australia by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II and his Royal Highness Prince Philip.
- It's not stalking - it's extreme romance! Mikey's video diary is a warts-and-all tour into obsession, striving to be the best and confronting our own fears in the pursuit of love. Part educational, part romance, and completely wrong, this feature comedy is the ultimate celebration of dedication, the anti-hero, and home security.
- Young Doctors will follow seven first and second-year junior doctors as they leave their training behind to start work on the wards at John Hunter Hospital in Newcastle.
- This documentary recounts the story of Teddy "The Jew Boy" the only Jewish Bushranger.
- Wealthy widower Edward McLean is heading towards a major health scare. Some of his relatives are more concerned about his will, than his health. Can you believe that ?
- A clay figurative sculpture artist who had self-isolated himself for the last 30 years in the woods is forced out of his environment whilst being pursued by a researcher with expertise in behavioural science and cognitive studies.
- A poetic exploration of an excitingly unknown and highly inspiring universe. As we accompany the Australian artist around the globe, Helen Britton's incredible attention to material and detail teaches us that the closer we look at things, the more they have to tell us. A shiny blue bird in a thorny thicket of dark silver, stone drops falling from a metal cloud, a ghost train loaded with mysterious treasure; Australian artist Helen Britton's pieces seem to emerge from some forgotten Wunderkammer. And yet her art is modern, avant-garde jewelry, sculptures and drawings, admired and collected around the world. The film follows her stalking through the German outback, seeking out abandoned workshops, forgotten artisans and manufacturing processes vanishing in time. Visiting the heavy industry sites of her Australian childhood in Newcastle NSW, stone carvers in Idar-Oberstein and glassblowers in Thuringia, we reach her Munich studio, where the artist amalgamates her capture, memories, and precious materials into timeless miniature sculptures. Beyond a simple portrait, the film is a poetic, essayistic approach to a rarely documented creative genre and a subjective narration of a relationship between the protagonist, her work and the filmmaker. Filmed over a four-year period, it is a reflection on art, memories and storytelling, with insightful interviews with the artists friends and colleagues. The Soundtrack includes indie electronic pieces by German cult bands like The Notwist, Driftmachine, Radio Citizen, Sasebo and Mount Hush. Quote from the Film: "While the components themselves are in the form of the cheapest trinket, the sentiment that they intend to convey reaches into the deepest abyss" - Helen Britton Director's Note: I met Helen Britton about twenty years ago, at Munich's Academy of Fine Arts, where she was a guest student in Otto Künzli's goldsmith class. I was sitting on the jury for the competition "Film and Jewelry". We screened a film, and the students had 48 hours to interpret it as jewelry. I clearly recall Helen's object: She had sawed a hollow brooch from the handle of a toothbrush "rendering the essence of the film's love story. The colored fragment shifting back and forth within the handle elicited in me a sensation of pain. I thought: how can a simple object rise such feelings? Now I made a film inverting this experience" from the object to the moving image. Over the years, I have followed Helen's development in Munich, the worldwide center of contemporary avant-garde jewelry. In my encounters with many other jewelry artists, I have reflected on what makes jewelry so existential - beyond its material value. What imbues a ring with significance? What lends one's grandfather's chain, one's mother's earrings their meaning? What motivates international jewelry collectors on their hunt around the globe? Jewelry comes alive only when it is worn "when it becomes a talisman, a messenger from another world. Jewelry speaks a universal language" in every culture, in every family, for each human being. It involves rituals, the body, space. Jewelry "developed parallel to spoken languages" speaks of love, respect, and is above all: communication.