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1-16 of 16
- An intense and solitary teenager, Paul finds himself caught up in a journey for freedom, full of violence, betrayal and hope. Abandoned by his father, torn between his mother, with whom he maintains a tender if tormented relationship, and his punk friends, with whom he hangs out at concerts, parties and street fights, he lives fully in the present. At a concert, Paul meets Louise and falls in love. But something is missing, and he continues searching for the father who never recognized him.
- Football match Real Madrid vs. Villareal, April 23, 2005, from the perspective of soccer superstar Zinedine Zidane.
- Follows the story of electronic music's female pioneers, composers who embraced machines and their liberating technologies to utterly transform how we produce and listen to music today.
- A portrait of an illegal immigrant Chinese child through the imaginary monsters that incarnate his fears and anxieties.
- In the aftermath of Fukushima, a mysterious fur covered creature performs in a ruined, deserted Japanese restaurant.
- A man with the girl to make voodoo dolls demonstrates his powerful will
- Two characters cut out of famous films meet in a netherworld.
- Follows the late French popstar Christophe. His real name is Daniel Bevilacqua.
- Dispatch from Przemysl is more than just a film, it is an initiative undertaken on the twenty-first day of the war between Ukraine and Russia to provide support in Poland and to deliver a suitcase of food and medicine to Ukraine. The film reports on the situation at the railway station in Przemysl, which is about ten kilometres from the Ukrainian border in south-eastern Poland. It is a collection of interviews that captures in the silver salts of the film stock the very breath of those fleeing the war and of those on their way to it. In the first part, the aesthetic of this black and white film brings to mind images from the Second World War, while the ones in the second part are evocative of the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina in the early 1990s. The content, however, which hinges on civil solidarity and the defence of democracy, belies this aesthetic, opening a gap between what is seen and what is said.