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Written by Donnie Lusion
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"The Revolution Will Not Be Televised", also known as "Chávez: Inside the Coup", is a documentary about the 2002 attempt to overthrow the Venezuelan president Hugo Chavéz and dissolve the country’s democratic institutions. During the events of April 11, 2002, a television crew from Ireland's national broadcaster, RTÉ happened to be recording a documentary about Chávez inside the presidential palace. Shifting focus, they followed the events as they occurred. During their filming, the crew recorded images of the events that contradict explanations given by Chávez's opposition, the private media, the US State Department, and then White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer. The coup was the result of a conspiracy between various old guard and anti-Chávez factions within Venezuela and the United States.
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Written by Donnie Lusion
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Tromaville's nuclear reactor has been rebuilt and the Nukamama Corporation that funded it has incorporated a new college, the Tromaville Institute of Technology (T.I.T.), inside the design, as an effort to atone for the events of the first film. Located inside the nuclear plant, is where Professor Holt who has perfected a race of 'Sub-humanoids'; Living beings without emotions, who have been created and programmed to perform menial tasks. When school reporter Roger Smith meets a beautiful subhumanoid named Victoria, they fall in love. However, the creatures have a tendency to go into spontaneous meltdown. Roger is now determined to save Victoria from this messy fate, but first he'll have to face the giant mutant squirrel, Tromie, who attacks Tromaville tech in the climax.
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Written by Donnie Lusion
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“Manual of Evasion LX94” is a thought-provoking Dadaist film about time by the Portuguese director Edgar Pêra. It was shot in Lisbon in 1994 and stars Terence McKenna, Robert Anton Wilson and Rudy Rucker. Time is explored from many unusual angles, while Pêra fills the screen with a wide variety of bizarre and mind-warping imagery.
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Written by Donnie Lusion
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| “There have been few artists who have changed our perception of reality, and even less who have changed the world. This story is about neither.” |
Clark: A Gonzomentary is a web series created by Daniel D. Warwick, William Clark and James Curcio. The footage from the first season has been edited into the movie you’re about to watch. The story revolves around Clark, an artist who makes paintings and sculptures of penises, and his friend and art manager, JC, whose main task is to supply Clark with enough drugs to keep his creative juices flowing.
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Written by Donnie Lusion
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Alan Moore is the writer behind iconic graphic novels such as Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell. Moore, who has publicly denounced the big screen adaptations of his comics, turned down large payments from Hollywood and even asked for his name to be taken off the credits. In order to make a film he actually likes, Moore teamed up with photographer/director and fellow Northamptonian Mitch Jenkins. “Jimmy’s End” is Moore’s spiritual interpretation of purgatory for those who have committed depraved acts during their lifetime. The film takes place in a seedy working men's club in Nighthampton, an alternate version of Moore's hometown. A nightmarish place populated by pin-up girls and burned out comedians, with judgement just behind the tinsel. Darrell D'Silva, Siobhan Hewlett and Robert Goodman star in the film and Moore himself makes a cameo appearance. If you like David Lynch movies, then you will like Jimmy’s End as well.
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