How to turn a street market into a railway!
A filmstrip that uses the Bible to solve the problems that dinosaurs introduce in the Creation story.
Shows housewives how to cook frozen beef (steak, beef rib roast, hamburger patties, stewed beef). Narrated by a faceless self-assured woman who we can only assume is our nation's Home Economist General.
Shows robots at the General Motors assembly line performing their tasks to the tune of the London Royal Philharmonic Orchestra's renditions of Carmen and the Nutcracker Suite. Nominated for an Oscar
This trippy tribute to our country's 200th birthday was funded by a Bicentennial Project Grant and animated by Vincent Collins who made other psychedelic cartoons. This film was produced by the United States Information Agency -the government's propaganda agency.
A girl narrates her first LSD experience and ends up talking to a hotdog about his family. Great!
Cosmos was the first science TV blockbuster, and Carl Sagan was its (human) star. By the time of Sagan's death in 1996, the series had been seen by half a billion people; Sagan was perhaps the best-known scientist on the planet. Sagan's own interest and enthusiasm for the universe were so vivid and infectious, his screen presence so engaging, that viewers and readers couldn't help but be caught up in his vision
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