2:43 a.m. An empty room. An unexpected calling.
A young man is drugged and abducted from a gay club, escapes and seeks to bring his tormentors to justice in a deeply conservative Bible Belt Oklahoma.
John is consumed by guilt after a reckless act that results in the death of his best friend, Isaac. Everyone in the town is wary of him, and Isaac’s younger brother attacks him, goaded on by his friends. It is only through reconciliation with the younger brother, however, that both he and John can process their grief and move on.
Alan’s jealousy drives him to foil his friend’s relationship and wrestle with where his passions really lie.
Təbəssüm
A school physician whose son is being bullied at school finds that he must conduct a routine medical examination of one of his son's chief tormentors.
A boy finds himself stalked and tormented by a malevolent force who has seemingly bigger plans for him. But is this entity real, or merely in his mind?
Kelly's Ashes is a short film directed by Andrew Hibbs
Joe is preparing to leave home, triggering flashbacks to his time with childhood friend Neill, through fun times, adventures, divisions when a girl comes on the scene and also the bad path that Neill goes down.
A police sketch artist who believes he has stumbled upon the suspect from one of his drawings becomes convinced he knows how to do the right thing.
Dániel, a male escort, attends a lunch at which his close friend Nori introduces her new partner.
An 18-year old meets a man of 29 in a chatroom and decides to have his first experience with him.
An immigrant's story about the love that is lost when a man's wife and son finally receive visas to join him in the USA.
Rape Card is a cautionary tale set in a chilling dystopian future where rape is legal. Frances tries to control her fate by planning her own assault, and targets a young boy who just got his rape card.
Based on an incident in the life of Beat icon Neal Cassady and his wife, the painter Carolyn, the film tells the story of a railway brakeman whose wife invites a respected bishop over for dinner. However, the brakeman's Bohemian friends crash the party, with comic results. Pull My Daisy is a film that typifies the Beat Generation. Directed by Robert Frank and Alfred Leslie, Daisy was adapted by Jack Kerouac from the third act of his play, Beat Generation; Kerouac also provided improvised narration.
Blossom
When John and his daughter Mia are attacked by zombies, they manage to escape to their apartment at the last second. But John was injured in the fight against one of the undead. Unsure whether he has been infected, there is only one test he can take: he must remember, because the first symptom is memory loss within five minutes. While the zombie horde tries to break into the apartment, John and Mia are faced with a terrible decision.
When Father Matthew discovers an intimacy between two of the other priests at a remote conversion-therapy centre in Northern Ireland, his attempt to do the right thing leads to a crisis of faith and feeling.
A dream of three television shows and the narrator’s identity suspended between them in a loop is keeping the protagonist awake.