A kaleidoscope of events, incidents, and moments from the everyday life of a village in the southern Pindos mountains. during an impromptu football tournament. The documentary aims to create, through observation, an "impressionistic" portrait of a small community in its summer aliveness. A portrait with light and shadows, charming and sometimes frightening, which, despite its contradictions is above all unexpectedly alive and genuine.
Daughters, sons, mothers and fathers want to break the decades-long silence in their families. They search for files, go to archives, rummage through documents and study photo albums. They come up against powerful authorities, prejudices, overburdened families and desperate struggles of mothers for their children.
Auntie Hu in Chongqing makes a living by running an extremely low-priced small inn. Although her life is modest, she sometimes helps guests out of difficult situations. She also built a vibrant garden from discarded waste, using this poetic space to achieve self-redemption and comfort her ill son. The footage in the film spans nine years, authentically reflecting the spiritual world and life resilience of the mother and son.
After decades of silence, in 2020 a family regains the house that was taken from them by Franco's regime in 1936. Through stories, archives and expanded cinema, the film reconstructs a history of plunder, inherited silences and everyday resistance, giving voice to invisible women and a house that finally speaks.
Witness the majesty of Shenandoah National Park through this mesmerizing, grand, and personal documentary. In 2019, Shenandoah National Park granted Virginia’s Orange Frame Productions exclusive access to film anywhere within the park. During this time, the OFP team scuba dived into mountain caves to film the elusive American eel, climbed cliff faces to witness a peregrine falcon’s first flight, and ventured far off the beaten path to discover the endangered Shenandoah salamander.
Golden hour in the fields and who better for a soundtrack than the Queen of Disco - Sophie Ellis Bextor in her full performance from Kendal Calling 2025! Directed by John Surdevan.
Danny Ghosen investigates the heated asylum debate in the Netherlands. He speaks to people who are concerned or angry, asylum seekers who are uncertain about their future and that of their children, people who remain in the Netherlands illegally, and volunteers who support them through thick and thin. The documentary hopes to give a face to the different perspectives.
A short study on liminality, reversing the common experience of such a space by forcing engagement and contemplation over its subtle details and hidden memories.
The Eye explores silent landscapes where nature and absence coexist. Between the memory of places and resilience in the face of time, the film oscillates between beauty and existential vertigo, capturing what persists and what fades.