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- The Movies That Made Me: David Morse
- The Movies That Made Me: Clayne Crawford
- The Movies That Made Me: Dr. Z (Dana Gould)
- The Movies That Made Me: Billie Piper
- The Movies That Made Me: B. Goldthwait/D. Gould
- The Movies That Made Me: Mitch Watson
- The Movies That Made Me: Alex Kurtzman-Jenny Lumet
- The Movies That Made Me: Antonio Campos
- The Movies That Made Me: Sterlin Harjo
- The Movies That Made Me: Roger and Gala Avary
- The Movies That Made Me: Titus Welliver
- The Movies That Made Me: Boots Riley
- The Movies That Made Me: Scott Alexander
- Collectible Magazines
- The Movies That Made Me: Robert Krzykowski
- The Movies That Made Me: Brit Marling, Part II
- The Movies That Made Me: Casper Kelly
- The Movies That Made Me: Glenn Howerton
- The Movies That Made Me: Alex Scharfman
- The Movies That Made Me: Sean Byrne
- Hundreds of Hits Only $8.78
- The Movies That Made Me: Scott Cooper
- Save With Our Recent Hits Roundup
- Region Free Imports for Collectors
- The Movies That Made Me: Daniel Bessner
- Array of Award Winnners
- Amazing Action Sale
- Fear Favorites for Less With Our Horror Sale
- Marked-Down Mysteries in Our Suspense Sale
- Buys on Franchise Favorites
- Page to Screen Sale
- Flip Over These Fan Favorites
- Favorites on 4K Ultra HD
- Martial Arts Mayhem and More from 88 Films
- Film Finds from Fun City Editions
- Better looking than ever on Blu-ray!
- Tons of TV Treasures on sale!
Described as a "poet", an "athlete", or a "philosopher" of photography, Garry Winogrand harnessed the serendipity of the streets to capture the American 1960s and '70s. His Leica M4 snapped spontaneous images of everyday people, from the Mad Med era of New York to the early years of the Women's Movement to post-Golden Age Hollywood, all while observing themes of cultural upheaval, political disillusionment, intimacy and alienation. Once derided by the critics, Winogrand's "snapshot aesthetic" is now the universal language of contemporary image making. Garry Winogrand: All Things are Photographable is the first cinematic treatment of Winogrand's work, including selections from the thousands of rolls of film still undeveloped upon his unexpected death in 1984. Interviews with Tod Papageorge, Matthew Weiner and more attest to Winogrand's indisputable influence, both as artist and chronicler of culture, while archived conversations with Jay Maisel highlight the gruff, streetwise perspective of "a city hick from the Bronx." In the tradition of Robert Frank and Henri Cartier-Bresson, Winogrand's candid, psychological style transports us to a bygone world, one where image lacked the editing and control possible today.

