Episode list

Evil Twins

Big Boy Killers

Wed, Mar 26, 2014
Twin sisters Jas and Tas Whitehead are the apple of their mother's eye. These beauties seem to have it all, until they turn from fun girls to belligerent teens. When their mother tries to set them on track, the twins push back with deadly consequences.
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Green-Eyed Monster
As children, Darlene and Charlene Shuler lived modest lives in South Carolina. But as adults, they lived very lavishly. Insatiable greed and deceit between the sisters ran rampant. Eventually, their bond would be shattered by a single gunshot.
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Sacrificial Lamb
Gretchen and Gloria survived a terrible childhood. Gloria goes on to lead a happy life, while Gretchen turns to drugs and prostitution.
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Deadly Doppelgangers
Jerome and Tyrone Page grow up in the mean streets of Baltimore. The lure of a quick fix and a fast buck leads to years of criminality that will come to a head in a night of brutal violence. Their shared DNA will eventually pit one twin against the other.
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Honor Roll Killers
Twin sisters Jas and Tas Whitehead are the apple of their mother's eye. These beauties seem to have it all, until they turn from fun girls to belligerent teens. When their mother tries to set them on track, the twins push back with deadly consequences.
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Mile High Monsters
When a young mother disappears outside Denver, an investigation leads police to the home of identical twins Daniel and David DeWild. The brothers claim to know nothing of the crime, but their pact of silence will end when one twin betrays the other.
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Edit Focus

Fortynine

Fortynine

Between 1996 and 2006 Michal Kosakowski produced 49 short movies on the subject of killing. 49 killings, dreamed up by inhabitants of the metropolis of morbidity - Vienna. In 1996, Kosakowski began to inquire into fantasies of killing - at first among his relatives and friends, then widening the circle to include artists, musicians and, eventually, actors. Within a decade, Kosakowski made 49 short movies, an essential element of which is the fact that these killing fantasies were put into practice with the complicity of the respondents themselves and depicted in the 49 videos. The collaborations between Kosakowski and his fictitious killers and victims in scripting, acting and staging the films could not have been closer or more intense. Michal Kosakowski himself was in charge of directing, camera, editing and special effects for all 49 films. The fantasies of violence, all of which seem to feed on the explicit violence omnipresent in film and television, are stunning. Not a single one of the 160 performers has a criminal record or was ever involved in any real acts of violence. And yet poisoning, torture, suicide, execution, ritual murder, violence by and against women, men, and children, murders motivated by sexual, political, and mental aberration come face to face with the recipients' emotions, naked and uncensored. The video-installation FORTYNINE is a 5x4x3 meter mirror-walled cube. Visitors who enter the cube are confronted by a 49-part HD split-screen that mirrors their reflections to infinity. The fact of interpersonal acts of violence, here anchored in present-day aesthetics, is also reflected in the emotions visible on the faces of the visitors, which are equally mirrored to infinity. 49 examples of fictitious killing collide head-on with the real emotions of the installation's visitors. The collective experience of any emotion generates intimacy - and it is precisely this intimacy that acts as a further constitutive component of FORTYNINE: the confrontation of the individual with itself, in the face of the most atrocious examples of violence. What Michal Kosakowski grants us is the rare occasion to experience a genuine taboo of our times and our Western society - death. A death that, for the time being, seems to present itself exclusively in the contemporary guise of the incessant violence staged by the media.

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