Close
Top Videos
Top Searches
Moods
Black Lives Matter
Chill
Christmas
Commute
Energy boosters
Feel-Good
Focus
Party
Pride
Romance
Sad
Sleep
Workout
Genres
African
Arabic
Blues
Bollywood & Indian
Christian & Gospel
Classical
Country and Americana
Dance and electronic
Decades
Family
Folk and acoustic
Hip-hop
Indie and alternative
J-Pop
Jazz
K-Pop
Latin
Mandopop & Cantopop
Metal
Pop
R&B and Soul
Reggae and Caribbean
Rock
Soundtracks and musicals
Was EYES WIDE SHUT re-edited after Kubrick's death? Jan Harlan answers.
03:31
|
Download MP3
Related Videos
33:51
Life after Romulus. Suggestions for the next ALIEN movie. By Rob Ager
29:49
ALIEN ROMULUS is boring / bad / awful - review Rob Ager
1:19:01
Rob AGER (Jungian archetypes, Kubrick films, and James Bond)
32:20
Rob Ager - 100 movies & TV shows that changed me (part one)
1:00:58
12 delusions about the future of humanity - utopia transhumanism capitalism space travel - Rob Ager
14:47
Foreshadowing in THE SHINING - film analysis
1:38:49
Exploring Carl Jung's THE UNDISCOVERED SELF - book review by Rob Ager / Collative Learning
4:10
THE EXORCIST beggar scene - Pazuzu appears (film analysis Rob Ager)
8:32
Spot the subliminals in THE TERMINATOR punks scene
55:01
Sami Haddadin -- The Great Robot Accelerator: Collective Learning of Optimal Embodied AI
20:44
ALIENS (1986) - what the haters missed - film analysis / review
24:27
THE SHINING - Wendy Theory debunked by Rob Ager
1:41
TO THE DEATH - Steam game trailer - developed by Rob Ager / Collative Learning
32:50
Jungian psychology in MAD MAX 2: THE ROAD WARRIOR - film analysis / review by Rob Ager
16:43
The binary universe of BLADE RUNNER and THE MATRIX film analysis by Rob Ager
37:20
GOODFELLAS / FOODFELLAS gangster psychology (film analysis)
11:14
THE SHINING - KUBRICK'S GOLD STORY pt1 film analysis by Rob Ager
9:28
Silent motives of the T-1000 in TERMINATOR 2 (character analysis)
3:02
FIGHT CLUB's reverse psychology marketing (film analysis by Rob Ager)
1:43:30
Symbolic environments of EMPIRE STRIKES BACK - It's still the best!! (film analysis by Rob Ager)