In a crowded city, a blue umbrella and a red umbrella meet and fall in love. However, their love is put to the test when a heavy rainstorm threatens to tear them apart. With no dialogue, this magical-realist film explores themes of love, resilience, and the power of connection.
In "Dear Angelica," a young girl named Angelica uses virtual reality to immerse herself in the memories of her deceased mother. Through this technology, Angelica is able to experience her mother's life and gain a deeper understanding of their relationship. The film explores themes of loss, mourning, and the enduring bond between a mother and daughter.
Waltraud was the name of an angel who had fallen from the sky. Her wings were too small and she just couldn't see how this had happened.
“A Love Story” continues Chipotle’s tradition of animated short films and innovative content that illustrates how competition among food businesses can cause them to become something that was not initially intended. The film was made by Chipotle in conjunction with Passion Pictures, a renowned animation production company that has won multiple Academy Awards, BAFTA Awards, Emmy Awards, and advertising awards for its feature films, television programming and commercial content, and CAA Marketing, and was directed by award-winning director, Saschka Unseld. The film is set to a remake of the Backstreet Boys’ 1999 hit song “I Want it That Way” recorded as a duet by GRAMMY Award® winner, Alabama Shakes’ lead singer Brittany Howard and GRAMMY Award® nominated My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James, and produced by GRAMMY Award® nominated producer Blake Mills. The song will be available for streaming on Spotify, Pandora, and SoundCloud.
In the movie Lost (2015), a group of people find themselves trapped in a virtual reality world. They must navigate through various challenges and obstacles to find their way back home.
This docu-dream is a story without words using the language of movement. Through a vivid and surreal landscape, each person encounters a series of distinct individuals and slowly rediscovers a larger collective body. Terrain is a dancing unison of difference. Our bodies bridge gaps between worlds, and with this we invent a new kind of non-verbal truth. This new interconnectedness propels us back to life again, essentialized by our shared sense of interbeing.
A boy plays by a train station and sees visions of deaths.
A frenetic short about weird mechanical future-bunnies racing through traffic to get to the theater in time to see “Every Bunny Needs Some Bunny.”
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