
Three Colors: Blue
(1993)An arthouse staple of the ’90s, the Three Colors films hold up some twenty years later as complex, emotionally resonant, and visually beguiling tales of contemporary Europe. The first part, Blue, is a story of death and rebirth that features a tour-de-force performance by Juliette Binoche.

The Piano Teacher
(2001)Erika is a music teacher in Vienna living a hermetic, love-hate existence with her overbearing mother, escaping only to visit porn cinemas and peepshows. When she meets clean-cut, charismatic student Walter, Erika’s carefully calibrated lifestyle is threatened. Control trades hands between student and teacher, as Erika’s masochistic tendencies are inflicted upon Walter during a torrid affair.

The Burmese Harp
(1956)
The Double Life of Véronique
(1991)Two young women lead totally separate lives in France and in Poland, one called Veronique and one called Weronika. They have no blood relation and they and their families have never met, but they are physically identical to one another, and strangely aware of each other's presence.

Monterey Pop
(1968)In New York City during the fall of 1966, Alan Pariser had an idea for the greatest concert in the history of rock and roll. With a banner declaring it a celebration of music, love and flowers, the forerunner to Woodstock was born.
Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould
(1993)
Farewell My Concubine
(1993)Spanning 50 years and a lifelong relationship amidst the violence and upheaval of national civil unrest, this unflinching epic balances intimate romance and devastating scale to heartbreaking effect. Adapted from the novel by Lilian Lee (author of Rouge), the tale of Dieyi and Xiaolou carries us through brutal training, political turmoil, opera stardom and a love triangle that will tear you apart.

Rouge
(1987)
The Red Shoes
(1948)Aspiring to become a prima ballerina, a young dancer is torn between her love for a charming composer and the demands of her obsessive instructor.

Mahler
(1974)Ken Russell's unforgettable film biography of the great composer Gustaf Mahler explores the life of the tormented genius through his sublime music and through poetic, haunting imagery to create a breath-taking cinematic experience. Robert Powell & Georgina Hale star.

Phoenix
(2014)A Holocaust survivor receives surgery to repair her disfigured face before searching for her husband who may have betrayed her to the Nazis.

Let's Get Lost
(1988)This Oscar-nominated portrait of jazz legend Chet Baker uses rare performance footage and candid interviews from the final year of his life.

Velvet Goldmine
(1998)Ewan McGregor, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Christian Bale & Toni Collette star in this gloriously glam rock story inspired by David Bowie. A journalist attempts to discover why a rock star tried to fake his own death a decade earlier. 1998

Limelight
(1952)A broken-down comic sacrifices everything to give a young dancer a shot at the big time.

Quadrophenia
(1979)Jimmy, a member of a well-dressed, drugged-up teenaged gang called the Mods, is forever duking it out with the cycle-punk Rockers.

Scott Walker: 30 Century Man
(2007)Oscilloscope Laboratories presents a documentary film about Scott Walker's career and music, tracing his evolution over the past 30 years.
Intimate Lighting
(1965)
Jimi Plays Monterey
(1987)Dynamic live recordings and behind-the-scenes footage capture the electricity of Jimi Hendrix's landmark concert at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967.

Smithereens
(1982)In the 1980s, Wren, a talent-challenged young woman, tries to promote herself to stardom in New York's waning punk music world.

Original Cast Album: Company
(1970)Documentary recounts the grueling 15-hour recording session for the Stephen Sondheim musical.