Silent Streets
Bahbah, Shiha, and Sanqur are three colleagues working in a newspaper whose editor-in-chief, Amer, stipulates that he should not be married to work there. Each of them was married and concealed his marriage. The three go to a hotel in Helwan to recuperate. There they meet Hosnia, who is searching with her uncle for a wealthy groom, and begins to set her nets on them, and events escalate.
Threatened with deprivation of inheritance, Mohsen travels from Istanbul to Cairo to forcefully marry his cousin Samira, who disguises himself as a maid to escape this marriage. He also disguises himself as his servant, but they fall in love.
After his concert tour in Spain, perfectionist composer Aram Khachaturian anticipates a meeting with absurdest painter Salvador Dali.
An intense erotic work depicting the confrontation between a female investigator and a sadist.
A quirky group of extras determined to do anything to become famous actors or getting a bigger role in Malaysia.
Le Malade Imaginaire, the last dramatic work written by Molière, is a comedy-ballet in three acts and in prose, created on February 10, 1673 by the Troupe du Roi on the stage of the Palais-Royal in Paris. Argan, an "imaginary patient", wants to marry his daughter Angélique to a doctor, Thomas Diafoirus. His second wife, Béline, would like to send her daughter-in-law to the convent in order to recover a nice inheritance. Angélique loves Cléante, and Béralde, Argan's brother, tries to reason with his brother so that he sees more clearly in Béline's game, and so that he accedes to his daughter's wishes.
Vindictive spirits, lurking dangers and a peculiar shrine terrorize unsuspecting students who tangle with the supernatural in this horror anthology.
In this end of the year special, Joost Vandecasteele profiles himself as a correspondent of the only war everyone is involved in, including Aunt Trudy, namely the culture war. Prepare for sharp jokes, blunt insults and unnecessary outpourings.
In order to find your muse, you have to open your mind. Sometimes, you have to lose it.
Kemiti Bhulibi Mun
In an art gallery, a secret agent meets a contact to exchange information about the imminent collapse of the Eastern Bloc.
In the 1990s, a talented young magician faces one of the most important performances of his career.
It’s a family affair, and Rory is on familiar ground. He knows each burly man who comes in for a mid-dance piss break, and his dad is playing the fiddle in the band. But Dan, his visiting boyfriend, couldn’t be further out of place – and there’s something Rory hasn’t told him. Once Rory manages to coax him out the cubicle, previously unaddressed questions over masculinity and communication are brought to the fore and their conversation unfurls into a flaming row, paused at regular intervals by urinating family friends, and incongruously underscored throughout by the rising ceilidh music coming through the wall.
Jiwo (Angga Dwisaputra), a village boy, meets Maria (Vonny Kristianda), the daughter of a nobleman, when they are in junior high school. But Maria had to separate from Jiwo because forced by her parents. A few years later, they met again with the same question: will their love last this time?
A young Punjabi couple doesn't reveal their relationship to their parents, but then the girl's parents find an NRI groom for her. To make matters worse, mobile networks shut down in the area for three days.