Defeated in combat, Ángel returns home to his village in a remote part of the Peruvian Andes. When he arrives, however, he finds the place has completely changed. What was the 18th century is now the present day. What has become of the ideals of the revolution he fought for? The people who live in Peru today, what are they fighting for?
Eighteen-year-old Da-seul was spending an ordinary life helping her father run a traditional makgeolli (rice wine) brewery. However, because the origin of the 'nuruk' (the yeast) that determines the taste of the makgeolli was unknown, their makgeolli could not be officially distributed, and they ended up secretly selling it only to the local villagers. Her older brother, Da-hyeon, who wanted to modernize the brewery, secretly threw away the old nuruk and replaced it with a commercially available one without telling their father or Da-seul. He thought no one would notice—but from that day on, Da-seul fell ill as if possessed, saying "the nuruk is gone." At first, Da-hyeon found it absurd, but as Da-seul's condition worsened, he began to take it seriously. He eventually discovers traces of the nuruk in an unexpected place, and through a chaotic episode involving homeless people, Da-seul and Da-hyeon come to face a truth they had long turned away from.
Jérémy meets Baptiste. Their shared baldness takes them to Istanbul, where clinics claim to reverse the course of time. Amid shifting winds and silent unrest, they search for meaning in a city not their own. Day by day, a fragile bond forms, in the hope of change.
Young, troubled teen, Ash, dies unexpectedly after having a little too much fun at a party, and she must experience and process their own death and the unimaginable journey it takes her through.
In a world where marriages have an expiration date, a couple arrives at the courthouse to renew their contract — only to find the process reveals more than they expected.
Art student Ian Jing impresses the realism-loving art teacher Mrs. Hui from the get-go. Following her advice, he draws exactly what he sees, straining his eyes in the process. To Mrs. Hui’s horror, Ian’s artwork gets progressively blurrier. In turn, his online fame skyrockets, as art critics on social media praise his unique style as an abstract artist. They ascribe deep, profound (pretentious) intentions and meanings to his stylistic choices, when all he's actually doing is drawing exactly what he sees.
"If you can see the future, can you then change it?" Born with the ability to see the fragments of the future, Šime must piece them together to prevent a tragedy—before it’s too late.
Ham, a 15-year-old boy gifted in music, is forbidden by his mother from playing piano after his father abandon the family from his music career. Ham must choose between following his dream or protecting his family’s fragile bond.
Max and Jura are teenage friends growing up on the streets of Zagreb. In an effort to become independent from the family home, they also seek financial independence by reselling designer clothes and shoes. They come to an arranged meeting with two older guys, Tony and Black, to buy tennis shoes from them. But the differences between the friends are increasingly coming to the fore - one is cautious, the other is impulsive. The situation gets complicated when Jura does not bring his share of the money. Money, trust and the boundaries of friendship are at stake.
The film adaptation of Kafka’s Gibs Auf! is a live-action animation surrealist odyssey through the confusion of life in the modern world. The director’s deeply personal and referential work preserves Kafka’s absurdism and pays homage to Weimar cinema of the 1920s, but elevates the text to an existential meditation on authority, purpose and human helplessness. Put simply, it is a cinematic magnum opus that triumphs on all fronts.
Two deeply connected partners “Ton” and “Prim” reunite again, 2 years later in Prim’s house party. Tying loose ends with their different perspectives in life, facing the uncertainty of the future.