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1-41 of 41
- A look at the trials and tribulations of the Compson family, living in the Deep South during the early 20th century.
- A love triangle involving a photographer, a director and an actress.
- 17-year-old Kelley falls in love with Christian, an older actor; her father tries to intervene before the relationship turns into a dangerous obsession.
- Something goes terribly wrong when a band of Latin sisters and their brother attempt a violent robbery in order to make their first indie film.
- Franco and one or more of his "fellow artists" discuss their favorite scenes from Hollywood cinema and then re-create them with a special twist.
- A young Tennessee Williams struggles to find his voice in 1930's St. Louis
- Lurid monologues about rape and murder.
- In the midst of the PA 2009-2011 teen suicide epidemic, this documentary follows the Palo Alto Teen Arts Council as they put on a play about the dark events in their community and coping with tough adolescent issues through the arts.
- Based on the eponymous poem by Spencer Reece, The Clerk's Tale is a psychological portrait of a gay man trapped in the monotonous routine of life at a high-end menswear store. For Spencer, every day is a sequence of mundane tasks and empty exchanges. He fits a customer, straightens a display, takes his usual break at his usual time. But all the while the presence of an aging gay colleague eats away at him. Watching this older man, with his affects and almost grotesque habits, Spencer becomes keenly aware of the future that awaits him.
- Franco plays both Michael Madsen's character, Mr. Blonde, AND Patrick Swayze's Johnny Castle in this showdown between captor and hostage. Because "nobody cuts Baby's ear off."
- In this parody, James Franco envisions what would have happened if Nicholson's ax chopped all the way through that door. Everyone thinks Jack's trying to kill his family in the iconic bathroom scene. But what if he just wants to be loved? Shot with the same dialogue and many of the original compositions, it's as if James was cast in the original - with a huge twist.
- In this parody of the famous dinner scene from Beetlejuice, the guests intermingle with super villains straight out of Gotham City.
- James spins the wheel for a scene remake in the silent film genre. When it lands on Taxi Driver, he knows he has his work cut out for him. This silent parody gives new meaning to "You talkin' to me?"
- in the emotional turning point of James Franco's parody, Titanic meets Wayne's World as Wayne and Garth fully explore their unspoken love through the many mediums of art.
- In this mashup of Forrest Gump and Back To The Future, James Franco plays Tom Hanks -- who was playing Forrest Gump and is now playing Michael J. Fox - who was playing Marty McFly.
- In a way that only James Franco could conceive, he's mashing up Grease with - Grease. Ahna O'Reilly joins him as Sandy for a one-of-a-kind musical performance.
- When James decided to remake whatever film the wheel spins in the Horror Porn genre, he never could have predicted that it would land on "The Godfather."
- When the mash-up wheel lands twice on "When Harry Met Sally" James proves that while sometimes you can fake it til you make it, the one person you can't fool is yourself.
- 2014–7.0 (12)TV EpisodeAt this point, where hasn't Twilight gone? Space, that's where. James is taking this franchise to the (animated) extreme.
- 2014–TV Episode