The Foreigner
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1h 31m
Directed by Amos Poe | 92 mins | 1978
Described by its director as an “anti-homage,” Poe’s noir-inflected tale follows a French secret agent (Eric Mitchell), arrived in NYC on a mission whose exact nature is unclear, and targeted by enemies whose grudges are equally ambiguous. Shot with a mere $5,000 and largely improvised—including Cramps frontman Lux Interior’s pulling of a knife on Mitchell in a fight scene at CBGB’s—"The Foreigner" is a work of desolate beauty and creeping menace.
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The Great Adventure
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The Great Canadian Puberty Rite
Directed by Mary Stephen | 20 mins | 1974
This lyrical film diary chronicles a westward “pilgrimage” Stephen made, together with her partner John Cressey, at the end of her studies in Montreal, in the summer of ’74. As she contemplates the impetus for the journey, her camera surveys a variety of ...