Kelsey Cook Mark Your Territory 2025 - Movies (Feb 11th)
The Witcher Sirens of the Deep 2025 - Movies (Feb 11th)
Nickel Boys 2024 - Movies (Feb 11th)
Hard Truths 2024 - Movies (Feb 11th)
Bring Them Down 2024 - Movies (Feb 10th)
Becoming Led Zeppelin 2025 - Movies (Feb 10th)
Marked Men Rule + Shaw 2025 - Movies (Feb 10th)
Street Punx 2024 - Movies (Feb 10th)
Fox and Hare Save the Forest 2024 - Movies (Feb 10th)
The Wish Swap 2025 - Movies (Feb 9th)
Heart Eyes 2025 - Movies (Feb 9th)
I Thought My Husbands Wife Was Dead 2024 - Movies (Feb 9th)
Better Man 2024 - Movies (Feb 9th)
Turn Me On 2024 - Movies (Feb 9th)
Melanies Grave 2024 - Movies (Feb 8th)
Reality Bites A Hannah Swensen Mystery 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Black Diamond 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Horror Able 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Fight Another Day 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Down Below 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Over The Red River 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Kelsey Cook Mark Your Territory 2025 - ()
The Witcher Sirens of the Deep 2025 - ()
Nickel Boys 2024 - ()
Hard Truths 2024 - ()
Bring Them Down 2024 - ()
Becoming Led Zeppelin 2025 - ()
Marked Men Rule + Shaw 2025 - ()
Street Punx 2024 - ()
Fox and Hare Save the Forest 2024 - ()
The Wish Swap 2025 - ()
Heart Eyes 2025 - ()
I Thought My Husbands Wife Was Dead 2024 - ()
Better Man 2024 - ()
Turn Me On 2024 - ()
Melanies Grave 2024 - ()
Reality Bites A Hannah Swensen Mystery 2025 - ()
Black Diamond 2025 - ()
Horror Able 2024 - ()
Fight Another Day 2024 - ()
Down Below 2024 - ()
Prostitutes of old age make their living in Praça da Luz, in São Paulo. Unusual and surprising accounts of five women who reveal in detail their experiences in all these years of profession.
DETECTION. Consideration of past, present and future of a small village in Germany. For over a century — wars and states went by — the military is the largest employer. The everyday life of the community is inextricably linked to the events on the nearby military training area. Diaries, daily instructions, petitions, letters and photos tell about daily life at different times.
During the last half-century, Cambodia has witnessed genocide, decades of war and the collapse of social order. Now, documentary filmmaker Rithy Panh looks at an irreparable tragedy that is less visible, yet no less pervasive: the spiritual death that results when young women are forced into prostitution. Angry and impassioned, PAPER CANNOT WRAP UP EMBERS presents the searing stories of poor Asian women whose lives were violated and their destinies destroyed when their bodies were turned into items of sexual commerce.
As the healthcare system in Venezuela comes crashing down and millions of people flee the country, a doctor, a pharmacist, an activist and two cancer patients struggle to survive amidst the chaos. They face the daily dilemma of choosing to stay or flee. Activist Francisco Valencia puts his life on the line to distribute medicines illegally, but how long can he keep it up?
James Wong and his female assistant visited various kinds of pleasure-houses, including invisible dens, high-tech private dens, smuggling blackpoints and famouse tryst places, both large and small ones, throughout Hong Kong. They also looked back to the Scientific Beauty in Lai Chi Kok Amusement Park, striptease in the Kowloon Walled City and the old stories in fish-ball stalls. There are also interviews of call-girls and grooms.
Buy Bye Beauty is a 2001 documentary film by Swedish director and performance artist Pål Hollender. The film is about the way Latvian sex industry and its being fueled by businessmen and sex tourists from Sweden visiting Riga. The film was shot in Riga in July 2000. The narration of the film is in English, with interviews conducted in Russian and Latvian.
The Chinese global machine has been invited to revitalise the ailing Swedish town of Kalmar. The town's mayor has invited a Chinese company to build a trade centre and 300 homes, but all does not go to plan. An amusing and deeply relevant film, which shows the fault lines that emerge when the tigers of the developing world try to expand into Europe.
1961 documentary about the history and seedy reality of the sex industry in London's Soho.
In Bettina Büttner’s exquisitely lucid documentary Kinder (Kids), childhood dysfunction, loneliness, and pent-up emotion run wild at an all-boys group home in southern Germany. The children interned here include ten-year-olds Marvin and Tommy. Marvin, fiddling with a mini plastic Lego sword, explains matter-of-factly to the camera, “This is a knife. You use it to cut stomachs open.” Dennis, who is even younger, is seen in a hysteric fit, mimicking some pornographic scene. Boys will be boys, but innocence is disproportionately spare here. Choosing not to dwell on the harsh specifics, Büttner reveals the disconcerting manner in which traumatic episodes can manifest themselves in the mundane — a game of Lego, Hide and Seek, or Truth or Dare. Filmed in lapidary black-and-white, Büttner’s fascinating film sheds light on childhood from the boys’ characteristically disadvantaged perspective — one not yet fully cognizant — leaving much ethically to ponder over.
Because of the poor employment situation in Finland, many families and single people decided to move to Sweden to seek employment in the 1960s and 70s. The move was considered temporary and it affected people’s ways of making themselves at home in the new country; they did not even try to adapt or learn the language of the country. At that time, the nicknames “Finnjävel” and “Hurri” were well-known to Swedish-Finnish youngsters: In Sweden, they were regarded as Finns; and the other way around. As neither nation’s citizens approved them as their own, the Sweden Finns had to create their own identity. But what kind of lives do these immigrants’ children and grandchildren live today? Jonas Karén was born in a Finnish family in Husby’s suburb 1980.
Tímamót, or Changes in English. An upbeat, heartwarming story about Gudjon, Sigurbjorn and Steinthor who lived together for decades along with several other inhabitants in the Tjaldanes Institution, in a peaceful valley close to Reykjavik. When a decision is made to close down the institution, their life takes an unexpected turn and they discover a new side to life and to themselves.