In a near future where artificial intelligence controls society and emotions are deemed dangerous, Gabrielle decides to purify her DNA to eliminate strong feelings. However, she unexpectedly meets Louis and experiences a profound connection that transcends time and lives. This genre-crossing melodrama unfolds across three different time periods, 1910, 2014, and 2044.
A series of lawsuits and allegations have legendary rap mogul P. Diddy on the ropes. TMZ has the troubling inside story from people who were there.
When a family is cursed by a witch and transformed into monsters, they embark on an adventure to find a cure and become human again. Along the way, they encounter various creatures and face personal conflicts within the family.
Feels Good Man is a documentary that explores the origins and impact of the internet meme 'Pepe the Frog'. The film follows artist Matt Furie, the creator of Pepe, as he navigates through the unexpected transformation of his character into a symbol of hate and white supremacy. It delves into the culture clash and the battle to reclaim Pepe's original positive meaning.
A documentary investigates widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election, claiming Trump won swing states through coordinated deception. It presents evidence of cellphone users making multiple trips to drop boxes to deposit mail-in ballots in key swing states.
On the 2-year anniversary of George Floyd's death, Candace Owens investigates the violent aftermath and the financial activities of Black Lives Matter. This documentary uncovers the truth behind the media narrative and the $90 million raised by BLM.
A lonely and marginalized young man becomes increasingly suspicious and paranoid about the world around him, leading him to fall into a dangerous obsession.
A lonely Omaha, Nebraska security guard named Marcus dreams of establishing some human connection, when he isn't watching cable porn in his apartment and obsessing over his weight.
TFW No GF is a documentary film that delves into the world of internet culture, memes, and the incel subculture. It focuses on the experiences of young individuals as they navigate through these digital realms and the impact it has on their lives.
Pitch Black takes us inside the claustrophobic worlds of three young men immersed in the online black-pill subculture, as they struggle to reckon with their actions.
Sam is a reclusive young man who finds solace with those who share the same self-described title as him: Incel. When his countless real-life efforts at love fail, Sam turns to this anonymous community of the “involuntarily celibate” for help, but instead finds himself increasingly pushed towards extremism.
A maladjusted cart pusher at a dying grocery store has a brief, yet confusing, romance with an underage cashier during the final months of a suburban New Jersey summer.
On 12 August 2021, Jake Davison shot and killed five people before turning the gun on himself. How did a seemingly normal young man turn into one of Britain’s most lethal killers?
A mother's love for her son is tested by his increasingly alarming behaviour.
Faced with the threat of blackmail, sixteen-year-old David is forced by Owen the incel to get him a date with his crush Sierra. But when the relationship proves impossible, David teams up with Sierra to take him down.
Danielle is your average college student getting ready to graduate. At a party she seems to become drunk, passes out and wakes up in the spare bedroom of a man named Edgar. Edgar seems nice but it soon becomes clear that his intentions are anything but benevolent. As she desperately tries to escape she finds that an heirloom may give her an unexpected advantage.
In 2018, a user called AnathematicAnarchist published a suicide note in an online forum for incels – a subculture of heterosexual men whose self-pity, misogyny and fantasies of violence dominate the internet in many places and trigger offline actions in some. Did he really take his own life? Is America responsible for his death, as he claims in his text? A search for clues in the darkest corners of the net, an essay about pain and loneliness in the age of algorithms.