The current full list of video essays by Shooting Down Pictures is given below, but also check out the video index Lee maintains at YouTube where these and many other videos by him, or fabulously 'mashed up' by him, are hosted.
- Alexander
- …And God Created Woman
- America, America
- And the Ship Sails On (feat. Michael Joshua Rowin)
- Aranyer Din Ratri / Days and Nights in the Forest (1970, Satyajit Ray) - featuring Preston Miller
- Born on the Fourth of July (feat. Matt Zoller Seitz)
- Burnt by the Sun (feat. Andy Horbal)
- Dames
- Duel
- El Cid (1961, Anthony Mann) with Mike D’Angelo
- Evil Dead II
- Grey Gardens (1975, Albert and David Maysles, Ellen Hovde, Muffie Meyer) with commentary by Vadim Rizov
- Hour of the Star/A Hora da Estrela
- Il Posto (feat. Keith Uhlich)
- Inferno
- JFK
- La femme infidele feat. Dan Sallitt
- La Haine
- Le boucher feat. Dan Sallitt
- Louisiana Story
- Nicht versöhnt oder Es hilft nur Gewalt wo Gewalt herrscht / Not Reconciled or Only Violence Helps Where it Rules (1965, Jean-Marie Straub) featuring commentary by Richard Brody
- Nixon (feat. Matt Zoller Seitz)
- Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid
- Peter Ibbetson
- Sugar Cane Alley
- The Draughtsman’s Contract (1982, Peter Greenaway) with Karina Longworth
- The Heiress (feat. Cindi Rowell)
- The Saragossa Manuscript
- The Sun Shines Bright (1956, John Ford) featuring Jonathan Rosenbaum
- The Vanishing
- "The Wire and the Art of the Credits Sequence” video essays on the Moving Image Source (Watch Part One; Watch Part Two - feat. Matt Zoller Seitz and Andrew Dignan)
- They Died with Their Boots On (feat. Matt Zoller Seitz)
- Tobacco Road
- Un coeur en hiver / A Heart in Winter (1991, Claude Sautet) with Mike D’Angelo
- Unfaithfully Yours
- U samogo sinyego morya / By the Bluest of Seas (1936, Boris Barnet) featuring commentary by Nicole Brenez
- While the City Sleeps
- Woman in the Window (feat. Girish Shambu)
After a recent flurry of literally feverish activity, Film Studies For Free is going to take a richly-deserved, two-week break so that its cold-ridden author can become fully healthy once more, and go off to deliver a talk on her own work (which is not totally unconnected to the focus of today's blog post, as it happens). In the meantime, FSFF leaves you with a little video essay by Lee and Dan Sallitt on another of this blog's favourite filmmakers (alongside Buñuel), Claude Chabrol. Adieu, pour le moment...