October Faction follows the story of a family of monster hunters who must navigate the challenges of fighting supernatural threats while also dealing with their own personal demons. As they uncover dark family secrets and face dangerous enemies, they must confront their own inner conflicts and learn to work together to save the world.
A writer and his pregnant girlfriend struggle with their dysfunctional family and marital issues. They decide to adopt a troubled dog, which leads to unexpected changes in their lives.
Brand New Life is an American comedy-drama series starring Barbara Eden and produced by Walt Disney Television that aired for five 60-minute episodes on NBC as part of The Magical World of Disney during the 1989–90 television season.
Tom & Viv is a biographical drama and romance film set in 1910s and 1930s England. It revolves around the dysfunctional marriage of poet T.S. Eliot and his wife Vivienne Haigh-Wood, exploring themes of love, flamboyance, insanity, and courtship.
Harry Enfield and Chums is a British sketch comedy show that aired in the 1990s. The show revolves around Harry Enfield and his various characters, including teenage boys, adult actors playing minors, and female actors playing male characters. The sketches often explore parent-child relationships and conflicts, as well as teenage angst and British culture.
Christmas Solo is a heartwarming holiday movie that follows the story of a teenage girl, Rachel, who moves to a small town with her father after her mother's death. Rachel, who is passionate about singing, auditions for the Christmas Festival's solo, but faces various obstacles, including online harassment and bullying. With the help of her new friends and a kind veterinarian named Stephanie, Rachel overcomes these challenges and learns the true meaning of Christmas.
Barbara Hug is a young radical lawyer fighting Switzerland's antiquated prison system in the 1980s. Walter Stürm is in and often escaping out of jail becoming known as the Jailbreak King. When the two meet an unlikely alliance is formed.
Little Vera is a teenage girl living in the Soviet Union during the era of perestroika. She rebels against her alcoholic father and falls in love with a visiting Soviet soldier, leading to conflict within her family.
Approved for Adoption is a poignant and visually stunning animated film that tells the story of Jung, a Korean artist who was adopted by a Belgian family after the Korean War. The film explores Jung's struggle to find his identity and reconcile his Korean heritage with his Belgian upbringing.
Deserted by their mother, a young boy and his sister discover the true meaning of family while living with their grandfather.
Why? (Czech: Proč?) is a 1987 Czechoslovak drama film directed by Karel Smyczek. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival. The film deals with the hooliganism in Czechoslovakia, particularly with the fans of football club Sparta from Prague, whose supporters were the pioneers of the football fan riots in Czechoslovakia, starting with hooligan actions already in the 1960s, like breaking the trains in which they travelled when they went on Sparta's away games. The film deals with one of such episodes
A middle-class Mexican family is forced to hire the services of a funeral home with a dubious reputation, without imagining the danger that the owner of the business will put them through.
A divorced private eye keeps in touch with his son and spies on an actress who has jilted him.
Unforgivable (2011) follows a writer who is haunted by his dark past when a woman he had an affair with resurfaces. As he navigates his relationships with his current wife, ex-lover, and daughter, secrets and betrayals come to light. This suspenseful drama explores themes of guilt, redemption, and the consequences of past actions.
After Mum and Dad announce an imminent, split custody separation, Yakira--the oldest daughter in a broken family - kidnaps her estranged younger sister and takes to the road, in an attempt to reconnect before they part.
The mechanic Behnke wants to join the Nazi party to secure a good living. However, after his Jewish neighbors have been taken away, he changes his views. Trying to remain "a non-political man," he withdraws from reality and becomes a Nazis laborer.
Family is a 2001 movie that explores the ups and downs of a family's relationships. Set in Austria-Hungary, the story follows their lives as they navigate through moments of happiness, death, quarrels, and secrets. Amidst the beautiful snowy landscape, the family must confront their deepest fears and face challenges such as suicide, skiing accidents, and cancer. This deeply emotional film explores the complex dynamics of mother-son, mother-daughter, father-son, and father-daughter relationships, as well as the enduring bond between siblings. It showcases the strength and resilience of family ties, even in the face of tragedy and concussions caused by drunkenness. Family will take you on a rollercoaster of emotions as you witness the avalanche of emotions that come with being part of a family.
For all Frits, a farmer's son, knows, his mother died when giving birth to him. He and his father make up a strong team. In the literal and figurative sense, because his father not only teaches him to milk the cows and hunt, he is also the coach of his soccer team. The happy tide turns when the boy turns eighteen and is scouted as a promising soccer talent. Suddenly, Frits's future is no longer with his father on the farm, but on the green grass of the Nijmegen soccer club NEC. His son's splendid soccer career may be the crowning glory of the farmer's hard work, but he is afraid he will also lose his only child. Desperate, he reveals the lie with which he raised his son. Frits is bewildered and makes a dramatic decision.
The Dutch Roos and the Turkish Rana are two adolescent bosom friends who divulge all their secrets to each other in a diary. Whereas the philandering Roos is more interested in boys than in school, the reserved Rana tries to make the best of her study. The girls are very different, but share the desire to become famous, as well as the fact that at home nobody understands them. Roos' single mother is working all the time and Rana is completely fed up with her mother's traditional upbringing. When Rana's brother reads a passage from the girlfriends' diary to his mother, the situation escalates. Rana is put under house arrest and is no longer allowed to associate with Roos. For the girls, this is the limit: they take the first train to Turkey. The long journey becomes one great adventure, which not only puts their friendship to the test, but also brings about great changes on the home front.
What do you get when over the course of 2 days in an unassuming brownstone in Brooklyn with 30 women across sexualities and transfolk of color? History.