Frederick Wiseman has died at 96. He is known for films including Titicut Follies (1967), Hospital (1970) and Welfare (1975).
In “Playing for Time,” she recounted how singing in an all-female orchestra while in a concentration camp saved her from death.
Frederick Wiseman became a globally celebrated documentary filmmaker by capturing the inner workings of a wide range of social institutions, from governments to schools, small towns, and cultural ...
The filmmakers won an award at Sundance for The Friend’s House Is Here, which was shot in secret in Tehran and smuggled out of the country.
All there is to know about this WWII docudrama set inside Sweden’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs, exploring hidden diplomacy, ...
Originally destined to be executed by the Nazis, three Jewish women not only managed to hide their pregnancies from their ...
"...not even in Europe," says Adrian Goiginger about his new Berlinale film, starring Valerie Pachner, which used input from ...
Snyder’s film, New Jersey librarian Martha Hickson emerges as a central figure seeking to protect children’s right to read amid growing conservative repression. In c ...
Right-wing media prattled on for months about how Bad Bunny, the Puerto Rican reggaeton superstar who is the world’s most ...
Therese W., along with other patients, was deported to one of the six euthanasia killing centers, five in Germany and one in ...
An unlikely love story blossoming in the thick of war provides the backdrop to a new documentary that raises questions about how modern media cover conflict. "Birds of War" traces the growing ...
Netflix is kicking off February with one of its biggest release months in memory, anchored by major returning hits, new Netflix Originals, and a huge wave of classic films landing on the platform. The ...