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Lena Dunham’s Top 10 - Explore. Docs I Love - Free Online Documentaries And Lectures. Louis Theroux's favorite documentaries. Those Who Make. A film by Stefan José Instagram: @_stefanjose_ The Artisan Press, Byron Bay. artisanpress.com.au/ As the morning sun breaks through popcorn cloud on Australia's most easterly point, soft infectious rhythms roll out of a small studio in the Byron Arts and Industry estate. Matching time to the bass beats of a reggae classic is the swoosh and rhyme of a 1963 printing press. At the helm of the press and its snapping jaw is Wayne Davis, stepping around the press with the dexterity and confidence that comes from over 26 years of playing this 1500kg instrument in the pursuit of highly tuned printing perfection. As a leader of the letterpress revival in Australia, The Artisan Press has been playing the letterpress tune since 1999.

Our People The Artisan Press owner, Wayne Davis, is an award winning printer who served his apprenticeship in the 1980s with Australia’s leading music industry printer, Z. Europa Film Treasures, the treasures from European Film Archives - Europa Film Treasures. True Films. 'November 22, 1963' - Errol Morris's JFK Assassination Documentary. Watch Free Documentaries Online | Documentary Heaven. Browse Documentaries | Top Documentary Films. Documentaryjungle.com. Forbidden Knowledge TV. Immersion - Video. The 10 Greatest Films of All Time According to 846 Film Critics. Manufactured Landscapes. Manufactured Landscapes is a 2006 feature length documentary film about the work of photographer Edward Burtynsky.

It was directed by Jennifer Baichwal and is distributed by Zeitgeist Films. Subject matter[edit] The film involves the photographs and videos of photographer and visual artist Ed Burtynsky's trip through landscapes that have been altered by large-scale human activity, captured with Super-16mm film.[1] Most of the photographs featured in the film are pieces that are exhibited all over the world are taken with a "large format field camera on large 4x5-inch sheet film and developed into high-resolution, large-dimension prints (of approximately 50x60 inches)"[2] While some would some call the his work beautiful, his main goal was to challenge notions while raising questions about the of interplay of environmental ethics and aesthetics. Critical reception[edit] Although most have praised the film, there has been some negative reception. Awards[edit] See also[edit] References[edit] The Great Planet.

Maybe Logic. How the Universe Works: Stephen Hawking’s Theory of Everything, Animated in 150 Seconds.