A meditation on the imbalanced relationship between people and the nature surrounding them. Join the hiker on a trek through forests visibly altered by human activity.
A boy grows up constantly taking selfies, unaware that he’s neglecting his surroundings. When a dramatic incident changes his life, he realizes something is missing.
"Vite: The Documentary" explores the rapid rise of the Vite framework. This CultRepo documentary details its origins as a response to slow build times, showcasing its evolution and impact on the JavaScript ecosystem. The film features interviews with key developers and examines the collaborations and rivalries that shaped its success.
Kieran and Katie, two amoral queers in their 20s, host an open house at their Bushwick apartment in a desperate attempt to find a subletter. There’s just one catch…the apartment is infested with bed bugs.
A documentary filmmaker follows five Colombian families for 14 years as they struggle to get ahead in a country where moving forward does not always mean progress. In this uneven playing field, some are born with wild cards, others with marked cards. The documentary explores how one's starting point can influence destiny, but not determine it. With an intimate gaze, it reveals the decisions, frustrations, resilience, and small victories of those who are committed to changing their path, even when the rules are not the same for everyone. Faced with a structure that rewards some and punishes others, these families become a mirror of a country where social mobility is the real game. What happens when chance deals a bad hand, but the will to play remains intact? THE GAME OF LIFE is a story of struggle, dignity, and hope, told from the heart of Colombia.
A young newspaper photographer, driven by ambition, captures a notorious criminal in the act of murder. Obsessed with advancing his career, he overlooks the consequences of his discovery, drawing himself into a treacherous world of media corruption and organised crime.
Nabil is set to deliver a meal inside the offices of a major bank, but the receptionist curtly denies him access. Moved by the young man's visible distress, a security guard opens a fire escape for him. Nabil slips deeper into the building's hidden depths.
The characters in the film embody typical reactions to torture: denial of the problem, the conviction that “it must have been deserved,” and indifference. But torture concerns everyone — you can choose to ignore it, but that doesn't make it go away.