Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-6 of 6
- Giulio, a teenage boy lives with his father. He is in love with his mother, Agnese because her hands were the first to welcome him. He reminds the last weekend they spent together. She takes care but doesn't love, she's lost in her thoughts and doesn't let anyone get closer, not even him. Two days to understand each other, two days to love each other, and to leave in the end. At her funeral, he steals the hearse and drives away.
- Superficial, homophobic lesbians.
- In the wake of Trump's muslim ban, Tandis Shoushtary examines her mother's camcorder footage taken during her visit to Iran in 2009, the first and last time she visited her parent's home country. Presented as a series of vignettes, Mother's Tongue is a rotoscoped animation consisting of over 800 hand painted frames, a meticulous attempt to reclaim, remember and editorialize the only connection to her Iranian passport. One does not have to understand the context or words that are spoken in the familial moments depicted- these are universal experiences. However, to a Farsi-speaking audience it discloses a second meaning: the vignettes reveal instances of misunderstanding and miscommunication, emphasizing an obvious cultural barrier between the children depicted and the space they exist in.
- About an ex-con Simone (25) who wants to know the truth behind her mother's death. She was framed for the murder and has just been released. She is currently adjusting to her everyday life as she has been away for 3 years. She visits her friend and psychotherapist Dr. Sarah Gooding (30) for regular sessions. Simone is suspicious of the Doctor after her first session at her office.
- A short CG animated film about Kit, a spirited 3- year-old who is coping with the loss of her dog, Biscuit. When Kit's Dad bakes a loaf of bread and the spirit of her lost friend is awakened, Kit is able to forget her grief. Things are looking up until Dad intervenes and Kit gets one more chance to save her friend from impending doom.
- This insightful portrait shows how Steven Judd indigenizes the popular everyday to allow our young to see themselves in all aspects of life, while at the same time making his own dreams a reality through his passion and zest for life.