2040 is a positive and empowering journey to explore what the future could look like by 2040 if we embraced the best solutions already available to us to improve our planet.
Lusciously shot National Geographic documentary about Alex Honnald scaling a 3000 rock face in Yosemite.
Although about a magnificent plane, this film is really about people at their finest.
Michael Caine hosts David Batty's documentary about the cultural changes wrought by the swinging 60s.
Documentary film-maker Catherine Scott talks about her latest project, Backtrack Boys.
This solid documentary offers a starting point into Vivienne Westwood's enigmatic life.
The most moving and important documentary to be made in Australia in the last 20 years.
Sleeth looks to bring into undeniable clarity the last 72 hours of Myuran Sukumaran's life.
Fresh off the back of the release of the ‘Descent Into The Maelstrom’ documentary, Radio Birdman continue to defy the mainstream by pounding out gig after gig of solid rock and roll more than 40 years after they first came to light.
This visually stunning film poignantly tells the story of a raucous, bolshie creative genius.
A beautifully put-together documentary about an enduring mystery.
Wayne Groom and Carolyn Bilsborow's latest documentary looks at the enduring mystery of the unidentified man found dead on Somerton Beach in 48.
EXHIBITION ON SCREEN open its fifth season with Canaletto & the Art of Venice, an immersive journey into the life and art of Venice’s famous view-painter.
Thousands of votes have been cast, and more than 300 Australian features – fiction and documentary - have been named as audience favourites in Adelaide Film Festival’s global poll for the top three Australian films of all time.
The man behind both Leconfield and Richard Hamilton Wines has recently finished off his second documentary feature.
This is a slower-paced documentary, but considering its gently nurturing subject matter, it appears well suited.
SuperSapiens will leave its audience in contemplation about humankind’s future and what sort of world we may be creating.
This film is a must see for anyone who found themselves standing shoulder to shoulder with their friends and strangers screaming their lungs out in unison in a concert in the 80s.
This is a work for lovers of Hockney, of art in general and of good documentaries. It is an astonishingly engaging piece of film.
Gurrumul is an incredibly expressive film that highlights the disconnect in aboriginal and western culture and the magnificence that was Gurrumul’s music.