
Love & Mercy
(2015)This fascinating, offbeat biopic chronicles the life and musical genius of the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson.

A Complete Unknown
(2024)In New York, 1961, an unknown nineteen-year-old named Bob Dylan arrives with his guitar and revolutionary talent. He forges intimate relationships with music icons of Greenwich Village on his meteoric rise, culminating in a groundbreaking and controversial performance that reverberates worldwide.

Hustle & Flow
(2005)A hustler in a midlife crisis, with dreams of becoming a rapper, records a demo hoping to slip it to a rap mogul he learns is coming through town.

The Boat That Rocked
(2009)From the creator of Love Actually and Notting Hill comes a trip back to the freewheeling, free-loving '60s when the rock music that inspired a generation was censored by the government.

Cobain: Montage of Heck
(2015)Kurt Cobain -- lead singer, guitarist and songwriter of Nirvana -- remains an icon 20 years after his death. Through the lens of his home movies, recordings, artwork, photography and journals, this fully authorized documentary is a raw and visceral journey through Cobain's life and career -- from his earliest years in Aberdeen, WA, through the height of his fame.

Crazy Heart
(2009)A faded country musician is forced to reassess his dysfunctional life during a spontaneous romance with a single mother.

Autumn Sonata
(1978)Autumn Sonata was the only collaboration between cinema’s two great Bergmans: Ingmar, the iconic director of The Seventh Seal, and Ingrid, the monumental star of Casablanca.

Coffee and Cigarettes
(2004)Jim Jarmusch started Coffee and Cigarettes in 1986 with a six-minute improvised caprice starring Steven Wright and Roberto Benigni. Two guys meet in a coffee bar to sip, smoke and chat.

Deception
(1946)A woman tries to protect her refugee husband from her rich and powerful ex-lover.

Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)
(2021)Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson's transporting documentary is part music film, part historical record.

Buena Vista Social Club
(1999)Prompted by guitarist Ry Cooder, a group of legendary Cuban musicians unite to showcase the sounds of their country, leading to an acclaimed album.

Introducing Dorothy Dandridge
(1999)Dorothy Dandridge was a movie star who had it all, but behind the glamour was the reality. Halle Berry stars in this fact-based story of passion, tragedy and tremendous success. The film spans the life and career of the luminous actress who overcame discrimination to become the first African American woman ever nominated for a Best Actress Oscar(R) (for Carmen Jones in 1954).

Sweet Dreams
(1985)Before there was a "coal miner's daughter," there was Patsy Cline, the woman who inspired a whole generation of country singers. Jessica Lange stars as the gifted, passionate queen of the Nashville sound. Ed Harris co-stars as her husband. Patsy's own voice is on the rich country sound track.

Empire Records
(1995)The employees of an independent music store learn about each other as they try anything to stop the store being absorbed by a large chain.

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.

Footloose
(1984)When teenager Ren (Kevin Bacon) and his family move from big-city Chicago to a small town in the West, he's in for a real case of culture shock after discovering he's living in a place where music and dancing are illegal.

Gimme Shelter
(1970)An unforgettable chronicle of the dark side of rock 'n' roll history, this documentary captures the Rolling Stones' 1969 US tour that ended in tragedy with the killing of Meredith Hunter at the Altamont Free Concert.

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

The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart
(2020)Brothers first. The band forever. Directed by Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Frank Marshall, the film follows the Brothers Gibb: Barry, Maurice and Robin, better known as the Bee Gees, from their early fame in the 1960s and meteoric rise to a storied career in which they wrote more than 1,000 songs, including 20 number-one hits.