A young man named Ncup living alone in Kos Muhlis meets a Ustadz who claims to be a Ustadz from the future, sent to help him correct his bad habits (eating mie ayam) and improve his lifestyle.
Jim a paranoid pseudo-detective tries desperately to uncover what happened to Heather Tremont, a girl who went missing under bizarre circumstances; meanwhile someone close to Heather may be the key to understanding what happened...
Loose Ends follows a single charged night in and around a neighborhood bar owned by two estranged brothers. As a chaotic party spirals out of control, a web of small decisions, old grudges, and quiet resentments pulls a group of interconnected characters toward one another. A petty crime sets the night in motion, triggering tension between the brothers just as unresolved family issues bubble back to the surface. Meanwhile, party goers navigate their own turning points-moments of honesty, impulsivity, vulnerability, and self-sabotage. Across overlapping story lines, the characters collide in ways that reveal how easily relationships fray-and how difficult it is to tie things back together. By the end of the night, each person must confront what they're running from and decide whether to cut their loose ends or finally face them.
After a year of unemployment due to layoffs during the COVID-19 pandemic, Toyib is now a stay-at-home dad who spends his days taking care of the house and his daughter. Pressure from his wife, who is the breadwinner of the family, drives him to try to regain his pride and restore his family's unity. However, the difficulty of finding work and the threat of divorce lead him to a decision that causes his family to experience lifelong regret.
When she hears other children playing, a 6-year-old girl tries to leave the house, but the closed door forces her to decide whether to wait for her mother or invent her own game to regain her freedom.
The film builds itself as a noir narrative heavy with doubt, shadows, and suspicion making everything feel larger than it is. Parody slips in quietly. Beneath the metaphors and hard-boiled dialogue lies an absurd truth: it’s all about a missing office remote. Every line, every “pressure” and “control,” is just wordplay masking something trivial. At its core, the film is a satirical portrait of paranoia, control, and inflated self-importance—where nothing means much, yet everything feels fatal.
A down-on-his-luck day-laborer buys a used pickup with loans, only for his new helper to steal it. Desperate, he and his estranged high-school-age son track the truck through a shady resale ring, forcing a reckoning and a fragile reconciliation.