Passarinho (Rafael Brandão) is a homeless teenager who lives invisible to society, facing all the adversities of life on the street, lack of food, money and feeling of loneliness. But from the contacts he has with the theater, he will try to change his reality by making his art, in his own way. He will face oppression against art and will endure another day of survival in this difficult journey.
Passarinho (Rafael Brandão) is a homeless teenager who lives invisible to society, facing all the adversities of life on the street, lack of food, money and feeling of loneliness. But from the contacts he has with the theater, he will try to change his reality by making his art, in his own way. He will face oppression against art and will endure another day of survival in this difficult journey.
2020-10-01
10
The seminal Argentine punk rock group Attaque 77 deserved a feature film that portrayed their nearly thirty years on stage, and that's how "More than a million" was born, a title that alludes to one of the band's songs and their intention to continue in the history.
A music clip OVA using full versions of songs that were from the anime.
Aerobics has finally grown up...to the sensually delightful EROTICISE. What is EROTICISE? Simply the most uninhibited exercise session you've ever witnessed, a new film fantasy featuring a bevy of beauties who sweetly stretch and bend their way right out of their leotards - and into your heart. Join them as they sway to the beat - or pull up an easy chair. Either way, you're in for the workout of your dreams!
After losing her husband to death following a troubled marriage, a woman unexpectedly travels back to the moment before their first meeting, allowing them to reconnect and rekindle their romance.
The time is 20 years and a few months to the millennium, and the unrecognized, self-proclaimed genius Orm Odins has to deal with the age-old existentialist dilemma that is teenage hood. With his final exams looming, his hormones in overdrive and love just around the corner what can a great poet do to survive? Our setting is Reykjavik in the eighties, a city that is going through a growth spur not unlike our eloquent hero. The mullet is just about to put its mark on a unsuspecting generation, there is no TV on Thursdays, only one radio station, beer is still and outlawed commodity and somewhere within the city limits the first female president in the world will see has a dream.
Historian Lucy Worsley restages the 1840 wedding of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. Aided by a team of experts, Worsley recreates the most important elements of the ceremony and the celebrations, scouring history books, archives, newspapers and Queen Victoria's diaries for the details. She reveals how every moment was brilliantly stage-managed for maximum effect. Woven into the recreation of the wedding day is the story of Victoria and Albert's courtship and engagement, and its political importance.
The film opens in the lobby of a small hotel, where the desk clerk/owner (Budd Ross) is addressing three members of staff: the cook, the waiter and the bellboy. It is obvious from their reactions, particularly the cook (Leo White) that whatever was said did not go down too well. His animated arms knock down the man standing behind him repeatedly until all three servants simultaneously quit. They storm off into the adjoining kitchen where a slavery maid (Blanche White) is on the floor scrubbing the floor. The men all trip over her, moan briefly and then leave.
Two shipwrecked astronauts struggle over how to get rescued from an alien desert.
A young gay couple travels to a house in the country to escape the prejudice from society. Things start getting strange when they can't be left alone.
An old lady, Shobharani Basu, is found dead in her apartment. A self-appointed private investigator calls it a murder. What could be the cause of her death?