Key visual of Running Fence
maimovie

Running Fence

1977-10-01 | Documentary
995 AI "Keytalks" from People:

Click "Keytalk" you liked to discover Movies of you taste

Second in the series by the Maysles brothers documenting the monuments/sculptures of Christo, whose art projects are landscape-scaled, and more "pop" performance art designed to question how we relate to art in the public sphere, especially when it's as oblique, non-political (at least, that is what he would claim), and neutral as running a fence through a landscape.

Streaming Services

Ratings

7.4
-
-

People's review rating

Positive 71%
Negative 29%

995 Movie prompts Related to Running Fence

Maimovie AI learns movie taste from social media, search keywords, and other diverse crowd data. As a result, our AI has characterized this movie with the following movie tastes:

Cast

Acting & Cast

Character

View Live Cast Profile

Visual & Sound Taste from Video

What people actually say about
icon Visual & icon Sound

“Key Talks” from People

  • Ranked #11,237 / 14,342 Movies

  • Ranked #22,379 / 59,474 Movies

  • Ranked #22,714 / 60,051 Movies

Concept & Idea Taste from Photo

Photo from Running Fence

Running Fence photo 1

What people actually say about
icon Concept & icon Idea

“Key Talks” from People

  • Ranked #9,562 / 12,183 Movies

  • Ranked #20,051 / 37,690 Movies

  • Ranked #26,164 / 77,576 Movies

Search Keywords

Touch to Google the following Keywords:

Top 20 Movies Similar to Running Fence

Movies Similar to Running Fence

Running Fence FAQ

The director of Running Fence is David Maysles.
The release date of Running Fence is October 01, 1977.
On May 13, 2024, the IMDB rating of Running Fence is 7.4/10, Rotten Tomato rating is 0/100, Metacritic rating is 0/100, TMDB rating is 6.0/10.
On May 13, 2024, there were 995 public reaction to Running Fence including gung-ho, diorama, obtuse, technical feat, like Nomadland.
The runtime of Running Fence is 58 minutes.
The genre of Running Fence is Documentary.
Second in the series by the Maysles brothers documenting the monuments/sculptures of Christo, whose art projects are landscape-scaled, and more "pop" performance art designed to question how we relate to art in the public sphere, especially when it's as oblique, non-political (at least, that is what he would claim), and neutral as running a fence through a landscape..