Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
29th Jan 64
⭐81.17%
: 29
Vertigo
28th May 58
⭐82.00%
: 36
Moonlight
21st Oct 16
⭐74.00%
: 31
Fight Club
15th Oct 99
⭐84.38%
: 135
Reservoir Dogs
2nd Sep 92
⭐81.00%
: 56
The Shining
23rd May 80
⭐82.00%
: 91
The Thing
25th Jun 82
⭐80.64%
: 64
Amélie
25th Apr 01
⭐79.15%
: 59
Interstellar
5th Nov 14
⭐84.48%
: 310
Kill Bill: Vol. 2
16th Apr 04
⭐79.00%
: 67
Bohemian Rhapsody
24th Oct 18
⭐80.00%
: 44
GoodFellas
12th Sep 90
⭐84.58%
: 78
Taxi Driver
9th Feb 76
⭐81.39%
: 59
Sleepers
18th Oct 96
⭐76.04%
: 36
The Terminator
26th Oct 84
⭐76.63%
: 82
BlacKkKlansman
9th Aug 18
⭐75.05%
: 25
Midnight in Paris
11th May 11
⭐75.27%
: 43
Casablanca
15th Jan 43
⭐82.00%
: 37
No Country for Old Men
13th Jun 07
⭐79.44%
: 65
Create with Love ❤️ by Zaw Myint
No Casts
The Buffalo Creek Flood: An Act of Man
⭐51.00% /
31st Dec 75 /
Documentary
In 1972 a coal-waste dam owned by the Pittston Company collapsed at the head of a crowded hollow in southern West Virginia. A wall of sludge, debris, and water tore through the valley below, leaving in its wake 125 dead and 4,000 homeless. Interviews with survivors, representatives of union and citizen’s groups, and officials of the Pittston Company are juxtaposed with actual footage of the flood and scenes of the ensuing devastation. As reasons for the disaster are sought out and examined, evidence mounts that company officials knew of the hazard in advance of the flood, and that the dam was in violation of state and federal regulations. The Pittston Company, however, continued to deny any wrongdoing, maintaining that the disaster was an “act of God.”