Five years after the events of the first film, Christmas is once again just around the corner. In a crazy turn of events, possibly brought on accidently by the brothers themselves, the director of Luke’s son Thomas’ school holiday musical steps down. Luke, desperate to make his son’s stage dreams come true, enlists the help of his brothers Taylor and Stephan. The trio also find themselves meeting their mother's new boyfriend and the brothers grapple with their own feelings about this relationship. In true Brenner brother fashion, they are all in for a Christmas they will never forget.
Sofía goes to her family doctor because she continues to have severe menstrual pain. The results indicate that everything is fine and normal, but the normality lies in the paternalistic tone and treatment she receives from her doctor, Martín. And to make matters worse, she receives the same treatment from the viewer.
A long-term relationship can seem picture-perfect on the outside, but as this couple celebrates their fortieth anniversary, we see that life isn’t always as rosy as it appears.
A lowly bookkeeper (me), shot entirely on videotape (Sony Hi8), recites a poem about Tuesdays (derived from Old English Tiwesdæg, meaning ‘day of Tiw’ (the Norse god of law)). More info here: https://en.tuespedia.org/wiki/Tuesday
When his girlfriend dumps him in his final year in college, Varun Verma struggles through his indecisiveness and overthinking to find some magic in his life- with a little help from a genie in a bottle.
Three friends fight over the last slice of pizza, leading to an absurd showdown of increasingly ridiculous challenges, culminating in a game of Smash Button where things don't go as planned.
A sniper and a photographer find themselves deep in conversation about what it means to capture the "perfect shot." As they exchange perspectives, their words seem to align, but neither realizes they are speaking about completely different things.
A new year, and with it the start of Kamal Kharmach's sixth end-of-year conference. With no fewer than 1.3 million viewers on TV last year, Kamal is back this year, with a tongue sharper than the knives politicians stick in each other's backs.
The somewhat peculiar but spontaneous Maria (28) who wins 250,000 SEK on a scratch-off lottery ticket on TV. She dreams of a typical "Svensson" life, which refers to a common, ordinary Swedish family, but she's not quite sure how to get there. So, when the TV host asks her what she will do with the money, she says, "Anyone who wants to have coffee with me will receive 1000 SEK." Her calendar quickly fills up with people who want to have coffee with her, and one thing leads to another, and somewhere over there, perhaps that ordinary life she desires exists, or maybe not.
Dato Azmi and his family move into the old mansion left behind by his late father, which had been abandoned. The mansion is inhabited by two rival gangs of jinn: Geng Busut and Geng Gayut. These two jinn gangs constantly fight over control of the house, scaring away villagers who try to approach it. However, the arrival of Dato Azmi and his family sparks a series of strange and comical events as the jinn attempt to drive them out.
Hey Siri Ve Siri is the uproarious comedy, a clash of cultures ensures when a UK based elite family brings their desi Punjabi servants from India to live with them in Birmingham. The stark contrast between their lifestyles leads to hilarious situations and misunderstandings. As tensions rise and divorce seems imminent, it is up to Sir, the half servant, half partner character, to save the day.
Peter Kay performs some of his funniest moments from his world record-breaking comedy career, with classic routines from one of Britain's best-loved comedians.