In 1920s San Francisco, crime fiction writer Hammett gets pulled into a dangerous investigation when a mysterious Chinese woman asks for his help in finding her missing friend. As he dives deeper into the case, Hammett uncovers a web of deceit, corruption, and betrayal that threatens to consume him.
The House I Live In is a powerful documentary that delves into the devastating consequences of the war on drugs in America. Through personal stories and expert interviews, the film examines the deep-rooted issues of systemic racism, social class disparity, and the prison-industrial complex. It sheds light on the destructive cycle of criminalization, recidivism, and the overall failure of the criminal justice system. The House I Live In also raises questions about the moral implications, political opportunism, and hidden motives behind the drug war.
Kids for Cash is a documentary that exposes a shocking case of corruption and injustice in the US juvenile justice system. It tells the chilling story of a judge who was found guilty of taking bribes to send children to a private prison. The film uses home movie footage, archive footage, and interviews to reveal the devastating consequences of this scandal and the impact it had on the lives of young students.
Two show-business women leave Los Angeles for Las Vegas, but phoney state troopers abduct them in the desert and they are taken to a laboratory/prison. Here, males come to experience sexual fantasies, which it is the job of the two girls and other attractive captives to flesh out. The captors force an hypnotic drug upon them to aid their performances. Then a country hitchhiker they met earlier at a gas station decides to rescue the girls.
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