Here to be Heard: The Story of the Slits

Here to be Heard: The Story of the Slits

Here to be Heard tells the story of The Slits, the world’s first all-girl punk rock group, from their original formation during the pioneering days of punk rock in mid 70s London, through their individual stories of struggle, to the reformation of the band in 2005... a time period that ends in 2010 when singer Ari Up died of cancer while trying to make this film. This story; a mix of archival footage, never before seen images, and interviews with The Slits along with Punk Rock royalty, extraordinary producers, scholars and those influenced by The Slits, can be best described by a quote from Ari Up herself: “I'm not here to be loved, I'm here to be heard”.

Mystify: Michael Hutchence

Mystify: Michael Hutchence

Deftly woven from Michael’s private home movies and those of his lovers, friends, and family, Mystify: Michael Hutchence delves beneath the public persona of the charismatic frontman of chart-topping band INXS and reveals a multifaceted, intensely sensitive and complex man. Michael struggled with the idea of success, thecreative limits of pop stardom, and how to express his integrity, a longing that shaped his life and music and gave birth to a desire to go far beyond the constraints of pop. But a violent event struck Michael and changed his life forever, fracturing his sense of self and robbing him of his connection to life, contributing to his untimely end. Features interviews with Kylie Minogue, Bono of U2, and many more.

Mysteryland: The Compilation Movie

Mysteryland: The Compilation Movie

Every year at the end of August Mysteryland takes place. This edition features appearances by Afrojack, Galantis, Sam Feldt, Lost Frequencies and many more. The 2 day event had a 60.000+ crowd and was sold out. Mysteryland dates back to 1993 and is now the world’s longest-running electronic music, culture and art festival in the world. The first international edition of Mysteryland was held in Chile in 2011 an in May of 2014, Mysteryland made it’s stateside debut at the site of the legendary 1969 Woodstock Festival.

D.O.A.: A Right of Passage

D.O.A.: A Right of Passage

Legendary 1980 punk rockumentary film featuring interview and concert footage of the late seventies scene. Features live performances by the Sex Pistols, The Dead Boys, Generation X (with Billy Idol), The Rich Kids, the X-Ray Spex, and Sham 69, with additional music from The Clash, Iggy Pop and more. Includes the notorious Sid & Nancy footage, inspiration for the Alex Cox biopic!

Bloody Daughter - Martha Argerich

Bloody Daughter - Martha Argerich

The mother through the daughter’s eyes - a family portrait blending intimate conversations, agreements and disagreements, and shred ties of sounds and blood. This intimate portrait of two musical giants by Martha Argerichs daughter Stéphanie has been filmed over two decades and around the world: Warsaw, where Martha Argerich won the Chopin competition first prize; Japan, which hosts a unique Argerich festival; London, where Stephen Kovacevich, Stéphanies father, lives, works and enjoys intensively Indian food; Belgium, where Martha lives in a house filled with pianos and cats; Argentina, which she left at the age of twelve to study in Vienna, but still conceals valuable family treasures; Switzerland, where Stéphanie and her sister Lyda are currently living. Made up of documentary sequences focusing on the two characters of Martha and Stephen in their everyday lives, in rehearsal and in performance, the film willbe largely given over to intimate, delicious anecdotes, and a few scenes in which the family is reunited. A film by Stéphanie Argerich.

How to Grow a Band

How to Grow a Band

This intimate documentary follows mandolin virtuoso (and MacArthur Foundation “Genius”) Chris Thile through a turning point in his life and musical career. By age 26, Thile had already reached some significant career highs, winning a couple of Grammys for both his solo records and his work with the platinum-selling, pop-bluegrass trio Nickel Creek. But, in a move that stunned fans, Thile and Nickel Creek went on “indefinite hiatus” while Thile paused to re-asses and, in many ways, start over. HOW TO GROW A BAND is about what happened next.

ZEF: The Story of Die Antwoord

ZEF: The Story of Die Antwoord

The story of the controversial South African band Die Antwoord. Tracing them from their humble beginnings to global phenomenon. Like their music, the documentary is shocking, provocative, highly creative and strangely funny.

Stuart Sutcliffe: The Lost Beatle

Stuart Sutcliffe: The Lost Beatle

The Beatles - John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr. But Lennon's best friend Stuart Sutcliffe was there at the start, playing bass. And his style forever shaped the band. Pierce the mystique that surrounds the start-up of the Beatles. See the down-and-dirty existence in Liverpool and Hamburg's sex quarter. Meet his lover Astrid Kirchherr, Klaus Voorman, and Tony Sheridan.

Art Dealers

Art Dealers

In the tradition of art-world documentaries like Stop Making Sense and American Movie, Art Dealers follows eccentric rock-n-roll artist Adam Weiner aka Low Cut Connie, and his band as they attempt to mount a concert production of their recently released album "Art Dealers" for a three-night run in NYC. The stunning high-intensity performances are laid against a backdrop of five years of footage that shows an artist plagued by bad luck, but who attacks each performance with humor and stagecraft.

The Ordinary Man Interview

The Ordinary Man Interview

Ordinary Man, Ozzy Osbourne’s first solo album in a decade, may be notable at first for featuring Elton John and Post Malone. But the most important collaboration is the one between Ozzy and Andrew Watt, who helped shepherd the project, which Ozzy calls the easiest album he’s ever made in this revealing, rowdy conversation with Zane Lowe.

A-ha: The Movie

A-ha: The Movie

Take on Me was one of the biggest pop songs ever and made these teens global superstars. 50 million albums later, a-ha still sells out arenas worldwide - but can they mend broken friendships to get on stage and create new music still?

Charli XCX: Alone Together

Charli XCX: Alone Together

Seeking solace in music during the COVID-19 pandemic, global pop star Charli XCX asks her fans to help her make an album while quarantined at home. Charli embarks on a creative and emotional journey as she confronts mental health issues, rekindles her relationship with her boyfriend, connects with her fans, and ultimately produces the music for How I'm Feeling Now.

Springsteen & I

Springsteen & I

“Springsteen & I” is a unique feature music documentary celebrating a rock ‘n’ roll icon: Bruce Springsteen. Working with the filmmakers, Springsteen’s fans have helped create a film that reflects on their personal insights and experiences to explore what this timeless artist means to them. Their stories are at times touching, at times humorous, at times extraordinary and they all come from the heart. Combined with previously unseen archive footage of performances throughout Springsteen’s career, this is a film by the fans and for the fans created with the full support of Bruce Springsteen. “This beautifully crafted film provides a unique insight into the powerful bond between a recording artist and those who connect so profoundly with his music.” Ridley Scott, Executive Producer.

When Patsy Cline Was... Crazy

When Patsy Cline Was... Crazy

Widely considered one of the greatest and most influential singers of all time, Patsy Cline, in her brief but extraordinary career, made a colossal impact on country and pop music. Cline’s remarkable life and enduring legacy will be honored in When Patsy Cline Was… Crazy, a new release that collects the acclaimed PBS documentary, Patsy Cline: American Masters, and a wealth of exclusive bonus material comprised of themed additional interview footage and rare vintage performances. With exclusive access to the Cline estate, the film, hailed by Yahoo! as “a beautifully assembled salute to one of the most important singers in country-music history” and “a work of fresh scholarship that’s also highly entertaining,” features rare performances of such Cline classics as “Walkin’ After Midnight,” “Three Cigarettes in an Ashtray,” “Come On In,” “I Fall to Pieces,” “Crazy,” “You Made Me Love You” and more, alongside exclusive archival interviews with Cline’s contemporaries, and new interviews with a wide range of artists who have been influenced by Cline: Reba McEntire, Wanda Jackson, LeeAnn Rimes, Kacey Musgraves, Beverly D’Angelo, Bill Anderson, Rhiannon Giddens, Callie Khouri, Mickey Guyton, Terri Clark, and more. The bonus material contains nearly an hour of additional interviews as well as Willie Nelson performing his original version of “Crazy” and Clark, unplugged in her living room, playing a verse of “Walkin’ After Midnight.” Narrated by Rosanne Cash and produced by TH Entertainment LLC., When Patsy Cline Was… Crazy examines the roots of Cline’s impact in both personal and cultural terms to illuminate how she arrived at a pivotal moment in the evolution of American culture and, with Decca Records producer Owen Bradley, synthesized country, pop and rock in a new way to create the Nashville Sound.Cline boldly bucked female conventions of the 1950s with her fashion sense, her decision to divorce, her support of fellow female artists, and her assertive ambition to get opportunities equal to those of her male Nashville peers, such as the same kind of headliner billing and radio airplay, particularly after breaking free of her unfavorable contract with Four Star Records. Six years after her national breakthrough on Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts (CBS, 1957), she died in a plane crash returning home from a benefit performance. In 1973, ten years after her death, she became the first female solo artist inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Her many posthumous honors include a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and a U.S. postage stamp. She was also portrayed in the Oscar-winning feature film Coal Miner’s Daughter (1980) by D’Angelo and in Sweet Dreams (1985) by Jessica Lange.

Lowell George - Feats First

Lowell George - Feats First

In the late 1960s, a collective from Los Angeles emerged that was so musically eclectic and boasted such an unusual sound that it was all but impossible to detect where its origins lay. It was a band that instantly captured the imagination and acclaim of critics, journalists, artists, celebrities, producers and DJs, but one that struggled to sell many records or to trouble the charts. However, it was a band that ultimately found huge favour from a rock audience who came to love the group with an uncommon fervour. The group was of course called Little Feat. At the centre of the Little Feat story is Lowell George, the group's frontman and principal songwriter. Over the course of a decade leading the Feat, he wove a unique tapestry using a singular artistic vision which ended, shockingly, with his untimely death in 1979. Lowell Gorge however left an ever astonishing body of work which still today, almost 40 years on, is as relevant and popular as it has ever been. This film, the first ever to chronicle George's life, music and career, uses archive footage and interviews of and with Lowell and Little Feat, plus contributions from many of those who knew him best, to visually recount the sometimes ecstatic, other times tragic life and times of this maverick genius.

Rhyme and Punishment

Rhyme and Punishment

Acclaimed Hip-Hop documentary filmmaker Peter Spirer (Rhyme & Reason, Tupac: Thug Angel, Beef I-IV) takes his camera inside the nation’s toughest prisons to capture the real-life stories of some of the most influential Hip-Hop artists who have ever been incarcerated. Featuring intimate interviews with convicted rappers Beanie Siegel, Prodigy, Cassidy, Slick Rick, Immortal Technique and many others, find out what happens when celebrity status and 24-karat bling are replaced by orange jumpsuits and the shocking brutality of prison life.