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Nightmare: Trail of the Screaming Forehead: January 21, 2009 Foul Gesture: January 23, 2009 Dog Eat Dog: California Dreamin' January 28, 2009 Worlds Apart: French Film: January 30, 2009 Medicine for Melancholy: February 4, 2009 The Objective: February 11, 2009 The Wild Man of the Navidad: Corrobree: February 13, 2009 Gomorrah: February 18, 2009 ...
The IFC Media Project: Documentary: November 18, 2008 3 season, 15 episodes: 22–28 min: Ended Monty Python: Almost the Truth (Lawyers Cut) Documentary: October 18, 2009 6 episodes: 50–57 min: Miniseries Young, Broke & Beautiful: Travel: June 24, 2011 1 seasons, 6 episodes: 23 min: Ended
IFC is an American basic cable channel owned by AMC Networks.Launched in 1994 as the Independent Film Channel, a spin-off of former sister channel Bravo, IFC originally operated as a commercial-free service, devoted to showing independent films without interruption.
Nick Rosen is an author, campaigner and documentary film-maker. His book Off the Grid: Inside the Movement for More Space, Less Government, and True Independence in Modern America is published by Penguin Books and was released July 27, 2010.
Nightmare is a 1981 American psychological slasher film written and directed by Romano Scavolini, and starring Baird Stafford and Sharon Smith.Its plot follows a deranged man who, after undergoing an experimental medical procedure, is released from a New York City psychiatric hospital and embarks on a road trip to Florida with the intent of murdering his ex-wife and child.
Butcher, Baker, Nightmare Maker, later released as Night Warning, a 1981 American exploitation horror film Night Warning (1946 film) , a French war drama film Topics referred to by the same term
Onion News Network is a parody television news show produced by The Onion that originated as a YouTube video series in 2007 and was further developed into a 22 minute television program in 2011, with two seasons of ten episodes aired on IFC. [1] [2] [3]
Video nasty is a colloquial term popularised [1] by the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association (NVALA) in the United Kingdom to refer to a number of films, typically low-budget horror or exploitation films, distributed on video cassette in the early 1980s that were criticised by the press, social commentators, and various religious organisations for their violent content.