Her final university party ended in a twelve-hour blackout. Waking up in her room with a terrifying blank, Mithila is convinced something horrific occurred—and now, trapped by her own fractured memory, she trusts absolutely no one.
The Stone That Remembers interprets the Durga Mahisas-uramardini statue’s journey from its home, the Singhasari Temple, to the hands of colonizers, and various museums. The film follow the patriarchal displacement of a woman that represents the Durga, exploring the parallels between the fate of the statue and many women today.
Who But When, How is an autobiographical work that traces the director’s return to Israel in the midst of its traumatic moment and horrific acts in Gaza. As his aging father suffers the onset of dementia, Sharim’s poetic meditations on loss are juxtaposed against the conflicted, agonizing histories of Palestine and Israel, and a destabilized future.
In a world of uncertainty, two narrators lend their voice to the dreams, fears, and hopes of Latin American youth. Who has the right to dream and at what cost do we lose our dreams of the future?
How to capture the violence that remains on the walls? How to address absence, more than forty years after the events occurred? Memory that seeks its place amidst the blood and broken glass.
A drift between two cities: Berlin and Quito. A sensitive voice challenges the boundaries of reason through questions born from the everyday: Have you ever thought about how many calculations you make in a day? Prices, distances, inflation, schedules. Do you see your breasts beneath the blue robe? Why did they leave me the necklace but take my underwear? The audiovisual narrative seeks to reach the point where the meaning of hegemonic logic fractures, blending the documentary code with rhetorical elements characteristic of science fiction.
The scissor dance is a 16th-century magical-religious dance and ritual in which the dancers act as mediators between humans and deities. It originated in the Ayacucho, Apurimac, and Huancavelica regions and began to gain popularity in Lima in the 1980s, during the waves of migration from rural areas to the city.
La Tunga Tunga is a murga that is committed to a creative, collaborative, and community-based process, organizing itself to take part in Carnival with the aim of giving voice to collective grievances. In 2025, the national and local government are questioning cultural practices and artistic collectives. In this context, they are defunding culture and, in particular, the neighborhood carnival parades (corsos). La Tunga Tunga resists through humor and dance, asserting celebration as a right and public spaces as territories of struggle.
Ulises wakes up in a hospital "with no memory". Now he'll reclaim the life he lost: the ex who keeps to stalking her, the business that was stolen from him, and the house of his dreams; however, not everything is as he remembered it.
Paula is a 20-year-old girl who has received comments about her body since she was a child. As she has grown up, these comments, combined with other factors, have caused her to develop an eating disorder. Marcos A. Miró and Ines Socias have decided to tell her story. In the documentary, we listen to Paula to better understand this disorder and teach society that it is not just about “stopping eating.” Throughout the documentary, we observe overcoming, accepting, and living with an eating disorder.
Lito is a capybara who, with his mate gourd and thermos, is always ready to make friends with the local wildlife, creating new discoveries, games, and ideas to the rhythm of chamamé music. Always near the river, he encounters ducks, herons, armadillos, jaguars, and caimans.
Counterpoint with the Devil is a story set in the Paraná islands, conveying a fantastical love story. Pepe Olga, nicknamed Tape, falls asleep on a cattle trail in the reeds and gets into an argument with the Devil, the owner of those trails. It's a story that shows how ingenuity and creativity can defeat even the Devil himself.
Camila has just moved and decides to resume her exercise routine. As usual, she uses an artificial intelligence app. However, what begins as a daily routine starts to feel strange. Amidst unpacked boxes and the echo of loneliness, technology opens a crack into the unknown.
16-year-old Abigail's pregnancy scare gives her a new perspective on the 'Virgin Mary' despite the anger and disillusionment she has for the Catholic Church.
A heartfelt drama following Casie, an international student who buries herself in parties to avoid confronting her grief and disconnect from her culture. With a high-stakes presentation on her home traditions, she is determined to excel and she would do it–except an invisible elephant keeps creating chaos in her life and ignoring it only makes it worse.