Set during World War II, Kapo tells the story of a man who is heartbroken and forced to work in a prison camp. There, he forms an unlikely bond with a 16-year-old girl who helps him find solace in the midst of the horrors of a concentration camp. As they face the brutality of their captors, they must navigate the complexities of survival, escape, and the loss of their humanity.
After discovering the dead bodies of multiple versions of himself in his apartment, a man must confront the strange phenomenon and unravel the mystery behind it.
Abandoned by his wife, Mitch finds respite from his depression by spying on beautiful new neighbor Jack; next thing you know, the pair becomes intimately acquainted. But trouble lies ahead: It seems that Jack's lover has ties to Manila's underworld, and Mitch soon finds himself in grave danger.
The Boy with a Camera for a Face is satirical fairy tale about a boy born with a camera instead of a head, whose every moment is transformed by the fact he is recording it. Accompanied by a voice over narration read by Steven Berkoff, the film tells an epic story in fifteen minutes about the way we live today.
"This film is about depression, although it's not that depressing. I suppose it has a message of faith and hope in it ... it does for me .... But then again my interest may not match yours. It was shot in San Francisco and in Central Oklahoma with a cast of one man and four women. Crushing emotions are indulged in against a massive meteorological background that brings inspiration and terror to the characters involved."
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