ChooChoo McGovney, a dimwitted metalhead man-child, finds out some very exciting news. In this raw, awkward, old-school style slapstick Comedy, follow ChooChoo on his journey running into some very random ass characters on his search for his daddy.
Fourteen year old Linda is taking her grandmother to the forest to perform a final show. Distressed, Linda reflects over the forest's potential beasts who might lurk in the thicket and cause her harm.
Edgy, entitled, spazzy content creator Violet Strom enforces paper airplanes as the topic of the next video she and her collaborators will upload, which just might be their last.
Two brothers mourning the loss of their father discover a camera which seems to harness abilities beyond their comprehension, yet fate is close behind.
When a member of their fantasy football league vanishes on his wedding day, a motley group of friends recount the lead-up to his chaotic bachelor party.
A Greek getaway for five friends turns into a hilarious detective story when suspicions rise around one of their partners — who may be a famous con-man.
During Christmas Eve, Dr. Tere tries to get to her daughter's house for dinner, but her plans are frustrated by numerous insufferable patients and an unexpected stomachache.
Burned-out ex-baseball player Hank Thompson unexpectedly finds himself embroiled in a dangerous struggle for survival amidst the criminal underbelly of late 1990s New York City, forced to navigate a treacherous underworld he never imagined.
Since the death of her boyfriend, Harriet has been traversing the hell that is the online dating scene but to no avail. Following yet another bad date Harriet finds a Ouija board in the basement and an idea forms - why move on when you can just channel your dead boyfriend and keep the relationship going? But as is the case with love and loss, it’s never a straight line and what follows is a night of speed dating with the dead until eventually Harriet finds what she wants; but is it truly what she wants?
Rumbling in the distance. Concentrated harp playing. A barricaded apartment. David does his best to shut out the rest of the world so he can practice in peace. A neighbor knocks his door and wants him to seek safety in the basement, but David is not interested. He believes in art, not war.
"Closing" is a film almanac made up of nine verses. Instead of a rap beat, there is beer, rain, a beach, a zoo, random conversations, and a city that lives its own life. These are not stories with a beginning and an end, but statements written into the rhythm of the festival, where cinema becomes a way to be together and a way to be alone. Any almanac is a film cypher: everyone goes to the microphone, says their piece, and leaves, leaving room for someone else. "Closing" is exactly that: a collection of voices in which you can hear laughter, fatigue, love, and meaninglessness. This is a film about how cinema closes the day and opens the night.