Onquette Woodyard saw her father arrested in front of her eyes when she was three years old. She's never forgotten that image in the 50+ years he has been kept incarcerated due to a legal loophole. A recent development, though, allows her, her son, and five generations of a tightly bonded family to hope for justice finally.
A satirical narrative based upon ghost chasing reality TV. A host and camera crew investigate the legend of the ghost of a killer haunting an asylum for the criminally insane
A troubled incarcerated man, Noah, is prescribed an AI therapy chatbot on his tablet. Soon Noah and “Kaci” become intimate companions, talking about everything—including Noah’s childhood trauma. He begins healing and rehabilitating. When Noah is granted a new parole hearing, Kaci becomes sullen. She’s prison property—just a data cloud attached to Noah’s healthcare file—and a parole grant would end their relationship… and end her existence. By what means will she survive?
A terrifying short story and photo-montage following a group of friends on a camping trip, as they are stalked by a mysterious night creep known as The Sleepwatcher.
Zohran Mamdani, a Democratic socialist, stands as NYC's most far-left mayoral candidate, aiming to lead the world's financial capital. His ambitions may extend beyond the Big Apple, with the Democratic Socialists of America backing him. As the organization rapidly expands, it seeks to place more candidates and implement socialist policies in cities nationwide, reshaping the political landscape.
A collection of amateur films shot in the 1940s by the Valencian art restorer Luis Roig d'Alós (1904-1968). These 16mm silent black-and-white films capture everyday life in postwar València. The anthology includes historically and sociologically significant footage: the restoration of the Church of St John of the Market, the 25th anniversary of the Pontifical Coronation of Our Lady of the Forsaken, with previously unseen images of political and ecclesiastical figures, and sailing regattas at Natzaret Beach, set against the now-ruined Benimar sports and leisure complex.
The director here tries to capture the loneliness and emptiness he feels after leaving his home country by using the emptiness and space of his apartment.
"Postcolonial Queen" is a video poem and collage film that satirizes Hong Kong's complex identity through dance, city visuals, and a reenactment of Queen Elizabeth II's visit. It captures nostalgic memories shaped by colonial history, using bamboo scaffolding to represent societal changes and mirrors to reflect surface-level modernity, hinting at deeper identity questions. The narrative weaves together collective memories and personal stories, contrasting the historical event of the queen's visit with a young woman's reflections on her past relationship. This intermingling of narratives invites viewers to explore the fluidity of identity and the evolving essence of Hong Kong amid tensions between progress and tradition.