'All of My Feelings’ is a short multimedia anthology that traces the lives of five individuals: Jenn, Ethan, Jade, Faye, and Allen. Told in four chapters, each vignette unfolds around a distinct emotion, weaving a tapestry of human experience. At its core, this film explores connection—with others, with our feelings, and with ourselves.
The film tells the story of the Shendelev family, whose work is closely connected to the underwater world. For them, it is not just a job - it is a matter of the heart with a mission: to make the Baltic Sea, one of the most polluted environments in the world, cleaner and more alive. At the bottom of the sea lie not only sunken ships and planes, but also thousands of lost fishing nets - the so-called "ghost nets", which silently kill fish, seals, birds and other marine inhabitants. The family and their colleagues dive into the depths to find these nets and bring them to the surface. Their daughter Valentina follows in her parents' footsteps, but is still searching for her place in the world.
The film observes the time when robotics and artificial intelligence are becoming an integral part of everyday life in Latvia. It follows a society that – simultaneously curious and skeptical – learns to live with technologies that are inevitably becoming an integral part of everyday life in schools, shops, work and leisure, even in church. Without interfering, just being present and observing, the film captures everyday and often comical moments: how students get acquainted with a telecommunications robot, how an automatic holy water dispenser welcomes believers in church, and elsewhere someone learns to drive a car in virtual reality.
Introducing the Unsent Voice Mail!
This device connects to your phone and searches the cloud for any voice mails that were never sent!
What was your father’s last message to you?
What did your best friend really want to say before you lost touch?
What did Ally want to say to you on that last voice mail?
The New Women’s Prison in Limerick is regarded as the most state-of-the-art prison in Europe. With an innovative ‘trauma-informed’ design this is a brave new touchstone for the Irish Prison Services; one that indicates a tide change in how prisons operate in Ireland. But what does success look like in a facility like this and how does it reflect upon a modern Ireland? What is rehabilitation? Next to what social norms? What does this all say about a society where some may feel safer incarcerated, indeed, where some not even yet born are destined to end up ‘inside’?
Over the past year, three young scientists have found unusual colored frogs in the wild in Latvia that are not typical for our region. A green frog with unusual orange and black coloring—seen for the first time—as well as a strange red frog. Scientists are trying to determine the cause – whether these are "natural errors" in a few specimens, or whether the entire frog population is affected – with environmental pollution being cited as one of the reasons. In a parallel story the scientists are conducting research on the restored tree frog population, observing the results of a project implemented in the 1990s – at that time, the extinct tree frog species was successfully restored and is once again found on the Kurzeme coast.
A documentary that follows the OpTic Texas Call of Duty competitive team during the events of the 2024-2025 season of the Call of Duty League. Through hardship and perseverance, they make the impossible seem like something obtainable.
In 1980, 15-year-old Mika Taanila—soon to be a renowned filmmaker—recorded, under his then moniker Musiikkivyöry, a track titled We’re Becoming Blind. Here, played in reverse, it accompanies abstract 16mm film hand-painted by contemporary teenagers and fragments from Jean-Luc Godard’s Le Mépris (1963) and Ici et ailleurs (1976). Images and sounds echo across generations: a fragile dialogue of sight and blindness, of refusal and revelation.