Blog

  • Kotsos Out Of N.A.T.O.

    Kotsos is an honest civil servant, director at the Ministry of International Agreements and Interventions, married with two children. The temptations are certainly great, as many try to bribe him, first and foremost Tom Americo, representative of the American telecommunications company, and the representatives of the Seven Sisters oil companies, but he stands firm as a rock. And when these representatives, with the full support of the corrupt Director General of the ministry, become particularly aggressive, even threatening his life and that of his family, Kotsos has had enough. But in the end, he remains undeterred, signing the sinful contracts, but with sympathetic ink, which disappears after a few hours, thus exposing his superior and all those who act against the interests of the country.

  • Play it, Boogie-Woogie

    A runaway cat-loving girl begins a love triangle with a reckless older man and a young biker in high school. The film follows their subsequent chaotic relationships.

  • Magistrate of the Floating World

    Kodaira Mochizuki has come from Edo to keep Horisoto secure.

  • Shima Izumi no suwappingu (hi) sekkusu kōza

    A sexually mature wife was overwhelmed by her desires. The person she chose to swap with was a lesbian friend from her high school days. She was impatient to wait for her husband, and began playing while remembering the past. Mixing in the pleasure techniques she had experienced since graduating, the lesbian play in all sorts of ways was exciting, and the two of them ascended to heaven at the same time…

  • Carbon Copy

    A middle-aged married wealthy white corporate executive is surprised to discover that he has a working-class black teen-age son who wants to be adopted into the almost-exclusively-white upper-middle-class community of San Marino, California.

  • Oothikachiya Ponnu

    Sukumari, a saleswoman, struggles to run her poor family. Her life takes a turn when she meets a business tycoon, Vishwanathan.

  • Knights Electric

    “Four punk lads making a sortie into an amusement park where they antagonise other customers and come upon a group of teenage girls. However, they are consistently thwarted by the apparition of four spectral youths (the ‘Knights Electric’) who ultimately squire the girls away. Told with a remarkable fluency and gusto.” BFI Newsletter, August 1981

  • Electric Angel

    A typical experimental film, in which a variety of audiovisual techniques are used to create the sense of polymorphic eroticism as developed by European and Mediterranean cinematography of the 20th century. Combining the methods of “animation” and “live action”, this intricate work embodies the idea of an “ars combinatoria”. The structure is loose, with neither a central axis nor a point where everything converges, contributing greatly to the open-ended character of the film, where rhythm is the key element.