The Lady From Shanghai (USA, 1947)
Written, directed and starring Orson Welles. It is supposed to be a film noir but it is more of an Orson Welles movie: the script has holes (possibly intentionally left there by Welles) and it feels more like a nightmare than a film noir. Photography, acting and direction are top notch, at times (the shootout in the hall of mirrors) it feels like a film from the 60s, way ahead of its time.
Personally, I also got annoyed by Welles at times. He wanted to be noticed a lot, and the result is closer to a European auteur movie than a Hollywood one. No wonder Mike Todd, the producer, was furious with him.
An interesting note is that Welles was estranged with Rita Hayworth while filming. Convincing her to have her hair cut and bleach them might have been some sort of perverse act of vengeance on his ex-wife.
Ukraine on fire (USA, 2016)
Documentary produced by Oliver Stone on the current crisis in Ukraine; it was not directed by him and it shows. It was not well received by English language media as it claims that the events of 2014 were an American coup and that Ukrainians of Russian descent consequently had the right to self-determination. The IMDb reviews are either 1/10 or 9-10/10 - it's a polarizing film.
I'm sympathetic to some of Stone's views, esp. on the resurgence of Nazism in Ukraine. IMO Stone shows some facts that Western audiences often dont know about, esp. regarding the involvement of Western Ukrainians with the Nazi and the Holocaust during WWII, and how Nazis are venerated today. Ukraine has literally made statues for the likes of Stepan Bandera.
The film had obvious weaknesses (the history part was sketchy and you can easily skip it), but the interviews with Yanukovych and Putin might be of interest even to ppl who disagree with Stone's claims. The late Robert Parry was a pleasure to watch.
It's freely available online.