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A struggling film student races against a looming deadline as isolation and creative pressure begin to blur the line between reality and imagination. When his work starts to take on a life of its own, he finds himself trapped in a spiralling battle with his own thoughts, where every word written pulls him deeper into something he may not be able to escape.
The film IDIOT is a story of two completely different young men. Rene and Emil are brought together by their desire to get something from each other's world. As if without making any promises, they suddenly find themselves in situations where it seems that the only way out is to escape. Emil, who seems to have been given everything in life, continues to disappoint his father and overcomes all the limits of suffering. Now he is faced with a life where he has to take responsibility for everything himself. He meets Rene, from whom Emil decides that he wants to learn a lot. Rene, however, tries to keep him away from mistakes that he can no longer fix himself, but he cannot remain confident enough. Everything starts to develop too quickly and, despite Rene's warnings, Emil ends up turning the situation against both of them. They still have to work together to find a solution. Fear has overcome the boys.
A film that boldly ventures into realms of intimacy that cinema rarely addresses so directly. Its creator, Dr. Diego Semerene – a non-binary Brazilian filmmaker and scholar of queer media at the University of Amsterdam – made a film essay twenty years ago as a deeply personal conversation with his father about growing up, sexuality and the search for masculinity. Their father had never seen this until now, watching it for the first time as a 71-year-old man. The film returns to that material, confronting the past with the present through an extraordinarily honest dialogue between father and child. It is a story about a queer childhood in Brazil, about the emotional tension between the desire for acceptance and personal identity, and about how memory and family intertwine with our deepest longings. Hypnotic, demanding and remarkably brave cinema that invites a conversation about the boundaries of intimacy.
The Untold Story of Bun Bun is a found footage short film, pieced together from a recovered tape that was never meant to be seen
Coach Higgins, the incompetent yet passionate coach is off to train his team, before having his job replaced by his Highschool nemesis.
A young wolf from southern China discovers a new world through his screen, but is he losing his identity? This boundary pushing experimental short film is the hottest thing this summer!
A second remake of the vignette chamber piece "Kitchen/Sink".
Bunkers—whether they are piles of rubble from a war that is gradually fading into oblivion, or spruced-up local history museums—the monuments to Germany’s wartime past still stand. A cautious and evocative exploration on the edge of Europe. J.S.
Who picks up when you dial 112? In Berlin, it’s the staff at the fire department’s massive emergency call center. Newcomers are finding their way or giving up, while veterans provide support from the background. Anything can happen at any moment. And then New Year’s Eve arrives.
In a single, unbroken drift through the night, a solitary figure moves between fragments of life—intimacy, conflict, and celebration—never quite entering any of them.
A small town's violent annual tradition is put in jeopardy when it decides upon the newest winner.
Carving Lines is a visual diary of a printmaker depicting a popular ski touring zone through her art medium of print making.
Authors of the informal literary group Ri Lit as protagonists guide the audience through the road trips of their characters.