FEEL IT.STREAM
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Sheila McLaughlin

Acting

Known For

Seduction: The Cruel Woman
5.5

Wanda, a dominatrix who runs an S&M gallery on the Hamburg waterfront, must choose between her lesbian lover and an American trainee.

Seduction: The Cruel Woman

1986
Born in Flames
6.1

In near-future New York, ten years after the “social-democratic war of liberation,” diverse groups of women organize a feminist uprising as equality remains unfulfilled.

Born in Flames

1983
The Big Blue
10.0

Not to be confused with Luc Besson's film of the same title from the same year. Documentarian Andrew Horn's second narrative feature.

The Big Blue

1988
She Must Be Seeing Things
5.5

Agatha is an international lawyer, Jo a filmmaker. The two women are lovers. While Jo is on the road showing her films, Agatha discovers and reads her diaries. Problems ensue as Agatha's transgressions lead to jealousy and a spiraling cycle of sexual obsession.

She Must Be Seeing Things

1987
The Meadow of Things
6.0

Clonetown 1974 to 1979: a terrorist defector named Charon sits on the edge of oblivion and commentates on the imminent putrification of an abducted car dealer.

The Meadow of Things

1988
Ordinary Sentence
8.0

An experimental German film

Ordinary Sentence

1982
No image
6.0

Over three silent sequences, the short film shows moments of sustained, internal tension just before an emotional outburst on the part of the protagonists.

Inside Out

1978
No image
N/A

With HOW TO FLY, Bowes abandoned plot entirely, finding other forms of structure. He wanted to show that stories do not have to obsessively organize and explain data, and that television’s hundreds of simultaneous, fragmented narratives – news, fiction, commercials, sports, etc. – had prepared audiences for this new type of structure. — Charles Ruas

How to Fly

1981
Splits
N/A

Based on “Emma Zunz,” a short story by Jorge Luis Borges, the film moves through the internal voices of Emma’s character, whose evolution between crime, revenge and justice assumes—read from the context of the social struggles of the 60s and 70s—a decidedly political character.

Splits

1978
Committed
8.0

Stylized, black and white biography of Frances Farmer by author Lynne Tillman and Sheila McLauglin.

Committed

1984