Appearance

The Real Animated Adventures of Doc and Mharti
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Mharti's kite is stuck in a tree and Doc must help him retrieve it by getting--well... it's a Justin Roiland pilot so there are a lot of balls in it.
Theme: Moving relationship stories

Drunken Monkey
"Few can master it. None can survive it."
China, the early 1930's: martial arts master Wen Biao discovers that his brother has been using their security company for illegal activities. A confrontation between the brothers leaves Web Biao missing and presumed dead.
Theme: Bollywood emotional dramas

Issey Miyake Moves
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Touring Issey Miyake's design studio and factory as well as spotlighting his garments on the runway, this program presents a total look at one of the world's leading fashion designers. Half innovation, half invention, Issey's use of pleats and twists has opened up a whole new world of possibilities in fabric by exploiting texture and wrinkles. The process of folding and twisting the fabrics by hand, then baking them, is captured on film. Miyake talks about his background, training, and some of his favorite projects, such as designing costumes for William Forsythe's Frankfurt Ballet and outfits for Lithuania's 1992 Olympic team.
Theme: Monsters, aliens, sci-fi and the apocalypse

The Boy from Hell
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A teenage boy is hidden at an orphanage by his mother to protect him against his father, who wants to use the boys body to be reborn.
Theme: Imaginative space odysseys and alien encounters

Stop the World: I Want to Get Off
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The Anthony Newley/Leslie Bricusse London and Broadway musical hit Stop the World, I Want to Get Off is given literal treatment in this filmization. Newley stars as Littlechap, whose allegorical rise to success is countered by the instability of his private life. Like the play, the film is staged impressionistically, with Newley decked out in mime makeup and periodically stopping the action to address the audience, and with all the women in his life -- German, American and "Typically English" -- played by a single actress (Millicent Martin, taking over from the stage version's Anna Quayle). In Wizard of Oz fashion, the play itself is lensed in color, while the brief prologue, showing the actors preparing for their performance, is in black-and-white. The production includes such standards (and perennial audition pieces) as What Kind of Fool Am I? and Gonna Build a Mountain.
Theme: Political drama, patriotism, and war

The Blind Menace
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This is the story of a blind masseur who tricks people, steals, and kills; he is the anti-Zatoichi
Theme: Dangerous technology and the apocalypse