Blog

  • The Bells of Fraggle Rock

    Gobo thinks the Fraggles’ own Solstice holiday, the Festival of the Bells, is a big waste of time. Despite Cantus’ warnings, Gobo goes on a journey to find out if the mythical Great Bell at the heart of Fraggle Rock is real. When the Rock slows down in the winter, the Fraggles hold the Festival of the Bells to make sure it keeps moving. As part of the celebration, they ring bells to awaken the Great Bell at the heart of the Rock. They also dress up as a Weebabeast, who used to guard the Great Bell when the Rock was small. Meanwhile, Doc and Sprocket explore mid-winter holiday traditions from around the world.

  • Cobra Thunderbolt

    A crippled war veteran creates an advanced battle tank and gets the attention of terrorists. They kidnap his wife for the exchange of the vehicle’s blueprints, so he asks his daughter and best friend for help to battle the bad guys.

  • The Soldier’s Tale

    A soldier, returning home from war, chances upon a stranger who offers to buy his violin. The stranger is none other than the devil.

  • The Life and Death of King John

    The reign of England’s King John is threatened by Philip of France who demands that John’s nephew Arthur be placed on the throne. Pragmatic and decisive, King John moves to plactate the French, but there are others who seek disputre his authority.

  • Baajin nante kowakunai

    A gang of street punks attack a female radio DJ in a subway because she didn’t play their requested song. A man comes to her rescue and they run away together. She doesn’t know that he was the one who killed her older sister in a motorcycle accident.

  • The Curse

    Journalist Hamdi enters the mental hospital, claiming that he is mentally disturbed to investigate a journalistic precedent by discovering the secret of the killing of a patient, who shows some changes as a result of his integration, but he reaches the killer.

  • Secret Honor

    In his New Jersey study, Richard Nixon retraces the missteps of his political career, attempting to absolve himself of responsibility for Watergate and lambasting President Gerald Ford’s decision to pardon him. His monologue explores his personal life and describes his upbringing and his mother. A tape recorder, a gun and whiskey are his only companions during his entire monologue, which is tinged with the vitriol and paranoia that puzzled the public during his presidency.

  • The Blood of Others

    In the German-occupied Paris, Helene is torn between the love for her boyfriend Jean, working for the resistance and the German administrator Bergmann, who will do anything to gain her affection.