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1-50 of 76
- Meet a mother and daughter, high-society dropouts, reclusive cousins of Jackie O., managing to thrive together amid the decay and disorder of their East Hampton, NY, mansion, making for an eerily ramshackle echo of the American Camelot.
- A college graduate goes to work as a nanny for a rich New York family. Ensconced in their home, she has to juggle their dysfunction, a new romance, and the spoiled brat in her charge.
- A film about the life and career of the American painter, Jackson Pollock.
- A Broadway playwright puts murder in his plan to take credit for a student's play.
- A writer's young assistant becomes both pawn and catalyst in his boss's disintegrating household.
- The complete story of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address.
- Two loving middle aged couples get caught in a series of marital misadventures over reasons of fidelity.
- A young woman discovers that her elite Manhattan preparatory school harbors a dark secret.
- An ex-newspaper woman who is now a suburban housewife can't resist getting involved in an investigation of the murder of a philandering dentist who had been having affairs with several of her neighbors.
- Utilizing hours of unseen archival footage, The Beales is a new take on the women of Grey Gardens.
- This moving story was the swan song of actress Viveca Lindfors, who died unexpectedly soon after completing it. It's a fitting tribute, as the film explores the last performance in the ancestral home of a large family of actors.
- Johnny Rizzo is about to trade his dream job in talk radio for some snoozeville gig that'll pay enough to please his fiancee. Enter Uncle Terry, a rascally womanizer set on turning a weekend in the Hamptons into an eye-opening fling for his nephew. Nice guy Johnny's not interested, of course, but then he meets the lovely Brooke, who challenges Johnny to make the toughest decision of is life.
- A group of guys who sang together in a college a cappella group reunite 15 years later to perform at a friend's wedding and discover how their lives have progressed -- and in some cases regressed -- since their college heyday.
- A bisexual female pornographer searches for sexual and economic independence in a male-dominated industry. But most of all, the girl just wants to have fun.
- A chemistry student tries to understand the reasons for the disappearance of his research director. He soon discovers the existence of a secret society, the Domino Club.
- Danny O'Brien falls in love with Clare, the sophisticated girl next door, as he tries to navigate the rich and fabulous world of East Hampton power players.
- In 1975, the Maysles brothers, armed with a film camera and a tape recorder recorded the fascinating mother-daughter relationship between Edith Bouvier Beale and her daughter Edie, the eccentric aunt and first cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Ghosts of Grey Gardens is a 30th anniversary homage to this groundbreaking documentary, Grey Gardens. In 2001, the then-19 year old director, Greenfield-Sanders, saw Grey Gardens and began this project. Ghosts of Grey Gardens is both a documentary on a documentary and one fan's three-year quest to glean additional information about the Maysles' subjects and capture the reason for their enormous impact on so many creative people. Greenfield-Sanders interviews the original co-director, Albert Maysles, as well as the fashion designer Todd Oldham, the writer Beauregard Houston-Montgomery, and the performance artist Johanna Went about the continuing legacy of Grey Gardens. She also interviews the current owners of the Grey Gardens estate, Sally Quinn and Ben Bradlee of the Washington Post, and films a tour of the house and grounds as they look today. Mixing her own footage with Grey Gardens footage, performance art with interviews, and monologue with dialogue, the filmmaker tells the story of the past and present of Grey Gardens.
- Through verité documentary footage, humorous storytelling, interviews and archival film material, Leonard Soloway's Broadway captures a Broadway few ever see as told through the eyes of a legendary Broadway producer you've probably never heard of. He lived an unconventional life on his own terms who, over a 70-year span, staged over 100 shows (and counting) which generated history making headlines, over 40 Tony Awards, 62 Tony Nominations, 21 Drama Desk Awards, 29 Drama Desk nominations and 3 Pulitzer Prizes in addition to launching the careers of famous stars known the world over.
- A love triangle - shot in two single 45 minute takes set eighteen months apart: the first over a sunset, the second a sunrise.
- In the world of organized crime, power remains the ultimate factor. Two of New York's most powerful families will collide in this urban drama.
- "This is the summer of love, confusion, and the smell of fresh cut grass," says drifting protagonist Zac Peace (David Wike), an accomplished recent graduate. Zac arrives at his Long Island home depressed about his father's death, his mother's estrangement, and his own uncertain future. To pass time he mows lawns for his mentor, Sam (McCuffrey), a former publishing genius and current pot-smoking dropout from the rat race. Zac falls in love with Eastern Grace (Hansz), and shares with her his deepest feelings - expressed through letters written to his dead father. When Eastern inadvertently alerts Sam to Zac's writing potential, she sets into motion a cycle of events that brings an uplifting resolution to all their lives.
- The story of young Elizabeth, who is battling with her loyalty to her dead father and her duties as a woman against her own dreams and desires.
- Last night's party, this morning's problem.
- In times of crisis people seek strong leaders and simple solutions. But what happens when their solutions are identical to the mistakes that caused the very crisis?
- Space weary Averson is sick of Captain Kirk, the Enterprise, and especially the damn redshirt he must wear everyday. While on patrol, he meets Leeds, another Redshirt on his first assignment. Averson must tell Leeds the awful truth: The Redshirts die first. But Leeds may have to learn that the hard way.
- The film begins with a sun materializing out of the emptiness of space. In the first of three sequences we see various images from nature against music: the sky, trees, leaves, a bird, water, sand, a beach. A little boy (Herbert Matter's son, Alex Matter) wanders along the beach observing the natural world around him. He walks and presently comes to a house and peers inside. The second sequence has no music. The narrator speaks of sculptor Alexander Calder and his work, as we see Calder in his workshop, cutting and creating unusual shapes, and seeing the resultant artworks. The last sequence has music as we view images of Calder's work. However, now they are intercut with images from nature so that we understand that Calder's inspiration is the natural world around him. The film ends as it began, with an image of the sun, now fading into the sky.
- Manny is a middle-aged ex-real estate mogul who resides in an affluent neighborhood in Long Island, New York. JP, in his early 30's, lives in Queens and works as a security guard at a high brow investment bank. Feeling internal loss and disconnected from the world around them, the lives of the two men converge due to a chain reaction of extraordinary circumstances and they slowly develop a kinship that parallels father and son. Helping one another reconcile the past, they work towards improving the present and avoid making the mistakes that could ultimately jeopardize the future.
- Lucas must kill to escape the grips of hell.
- French Chef Pierre Franey and N.Y. Times Food critic Craig Claiborne, plus assorted culinary colleagues Hughes Franey, Jean Vergnes, and Jacques Pepin, produce an authentic American clambake -- with a few Gallic touches -- on the beach outside Franey's house at East Hampton, Long Island, N.Y. Scenes include: Gathering clams, digging the pit, making the bed of stones, gathering wood for the fire, raking seaweed, shucking corn, wrapping food in cheesecloth, sifting sand, raking off burned logs, sealing pit with seaweed, slicing cooked lobsters, putting food on trays, guests taking food. The menu includes French sausage, the dessert is watermelon. The crowd seen enjoying this banquet included about twenty neighbors and friends, children and dogs, and Howard Johnson, owner of the restaurant chain which was soon to be Franey's employer.
- Jessica is a college student in Connecticut. After a visit with her father ends badly, she looks to her friends to get her back on her feet.
- Local performers get to showcase their performing talents and let the world know a bit more about themselves and their ambitions. There is no judges, just performers showing their craft.
- Possession, Consumption, and Abandonment: a Lesbian Love Tale.
- After his girlfriend leaves for the weekend, an ex-college party boy is guided through an eventful evening by his three best friends, in order to reclaim his freedom.
- When a guy tries to impress a girl by climbing a tree, he falls, cracks his shin in half - and then things get really bad.
- A young family has a collision on the drive to an isolated vacation spot. For eight-year old Max, unimaginable terror awaits.
- After a family tragedy, a young woman goes back to her summerhouse where an old acquaintance challenges her to break out of her mourning.
- Still Plays With Trains explores John Scully's lifelong passion - model trains. In the 3,000 square foot basement of his East Hampton home, Scully reconstructed his idyllic 1950s childhood in the form of one of the world's largest model train sets. From the train tickets, to the dining car menus, to the stores lining the track, his 1:32 scale models have everything down to the last detail. Together the train sets retell the history of railroads in the United States, from coal-fired steam engines to diesel. The film premiered at the 2018 Hamptons International Film Festival. Director: Ross Kauffman; Producers: Regina K. Scully, Andrew Ross Rowe, Nicole Galovski, Geralyn White Dreyfous; Featuring: John H. Scully.
- A long-time resident of the east end of Long Island, Albee does most of his writing in Montauk where he remains an avid supporter of LongHouse Reserve. In this original performance, Albee uses audience suggestions as a point of departure for his dramatic improvisational sketches. Part 1 - A 60 year-old Hungarian poet who has a girlfriend half his age. Part 2 - Catherine the Great, the empress of all of Russia. Part 3 - Jackson Pollock's gravestone. Part 4 - A very petite 40 year-old woman who is very beautiful. Part 5 - An aging Palestinian hijacker, who has hijacked a number of planes. Part 6 - The owner of Red's Car Shop in Pittsburgh. Part 7 - An aging Shakespearean actress whose lover just died. Part 8 - Woman who lives in East Hampton having a conversation with a deer in her garden.
- A mother fed up with her spoiled daughter goes on a world wide search to figure out what mistakes have been made and how she can fix them.