Alex Ross Perry’s new film “Videoheaven” is a unique achievement – an ode to video stores that elegantly charts the rise of the local video store, its expansion and corporatization and the ultimate ...
The small joy of getting lost in a video store for hours has become harder and harder to come by over the past decade. It’s this feeling, trying to recapture a once key part of movie culture, that ...
A documentary by Alex Ross Perry examines how movies and TV have portrayed video store culture. By Ben Kenigsberg Part spoof and part serious, the film is about mythmaking as much as it is about music ...
Streaming platforms for Not Getting Stoned with Alex Ross Perry haven’t been announced yet. Check back soon for updates on where you can watch it online.
Director Alex Ross Perry and editor Clyde Folley tell IndieWire about putting together their video essay film on the rise and fall of the video store. Perry and editor Clyde Folley have watched movies ...
This week on Overanalysis Theatre is Videoheaven (now streaming on The Criterion Channel), director Alex Ross Perry’s nearly three-hour documentary about the depiction of video stores in films and TV.
“This is not my favorite band,” exclaims filmmaker Alex Ross Perry about the indie rock group Pavement, who is the subject of his documentary Pavements. That’s not a ding. The Stockton, CA born band, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. "Stranger Things" (Credit: Netflix) Alex Ross Perry’s new film “Videoheaven” is a unique achievement – an ode to video stores that ...
The worlds of Alex Ross Perry tend to thrive on confrontation. In 2014, the writer/director arrived at Sundance with Listen Up Philip, an acerbic comedy that showcased his knack for characters at once ...
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