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1-27 of 27
- In post-war Germany, liberation by the Allies does not mean freedom for everyone. Hans is repeatedly imprisoned under Paragraph 175, which criminalizes homosexuality. Over the decades, he develops an unlikely bond with his cellmate Viktor.
- A newly formed family confronts challenges while pursuing individual goals and facing the intricacies of modern life, relying on love, trust, and resilience to guide them.
- When an ex-prisoner of the Great War returns home and finds his comrades brutally murdered, he decides to bring the serial-killer to justice.
- A lonely obese nurse, working at a hospital terminal ward, is reminded of her childhood friend Adrienn Pal and wants to track her down.
- Joy, a young Nigerian woman caught in the vicious cycle of sex trafficking, is instructed by her exploiter Madame to supervise Precious, a teenage girl who is not ready to accept her fate.
- When Georg loses his job, he conceals the fact from his younger wife Johanna, who wants a child with him. Instead, he embarks upon a campaign of revenge against his former boss and begins to renovate a roller-coaster with an old school friend.
- Yoel, a meticulous historian leading a significant debate against holocaust deniers, discovers that his mother carries a false identity. A mystery about a man who is willing to risk everything to discover the truth.
- Norman, who survived a fire as a child, is obsessed with light and haunted by its powers.
- A village mayor enacts a bold and futuristic monetary scheme to save his alpine community from global financial crisis and fascism's simple fix. The strength of a woman's love as much as its romance injects the power for the small but passionate hero to see it through.
- An unexpected letter forces siblings Bernhard and Lydia to confront each other and to deal with their family history.
- Communal property, free sexuality, dissolution of the nuclear family - these were the basic principles of the Friedrichshof, the largest commune in Europe founded by the Viennese Actionist Otto Muehl at the beginning of the 1970's. In my fathers, my mother and me the director Paul-Julien Robert, who was born into this commune, embarks on a personal journey into his past. Including archive material made public for the first time in this film, the director confronts himself and his mother with the question 'What is family?'.
- Don't dream it, be it: The Act of Killing goes Gender Frenzy. A psychedelically political psychogram of a right-wing transsexual and how he got to be what she is. Or so it seems.
- It showcases maternal anxieties.
- Vincent an insurance salesman of a corrupt corporation that bleeds every last dime from deceased debtors begins to rethink his stance on humanity after he meets someone who goes against the very system he has lived by for many years.
- This sensitive long-term documentary portrays the timid archeology student Sven who is one of the first pedophiles to face the camera without a pixelated face and distorted voice to openly talk about his difficult struggle against his forbidden desires.
- An 11-year-old Chechnyan refugee living in Vienna whose life is thrown into disarray when a friend of his deceased father materializes.
- In Africa, the European aids are overwhelming 3 countries Kenya, Mali and Tanzania. Africans always in need for the help of the white man and their desperate lives were supported by European agencies since decades.
- Two urban couples in their 30s decide to help Pavel, a Russian friend in trouble, escape to Austria. Though initially thrilled by the adventure, they soon find the foundations of their friendships and relationships are threatened.
- The mourning period MOHARRAM presents the religious highlight for SHIITE Muslims. This film follows four different groups of people in today's TEHERAN. Young religious men come closer to each other during this major event, ending in the DAY OF ASHURA - known for its traditional flagellation ritual. People are careful but surprisingly open to talk about politics.
- Guatemala. The war ended long ago. Though the people want to forget it, the violence continues, and it has spread throughout the society like cancer. Each day, journalists wait to report on the next murder victim, and a social worker helps the relatives of women who have been killed. The global hunger for cheap resources has been another cause of violence, and a war over bananas has taken on a life of its own. The society suffers from the aftermath of the 36-year civil war. Mass graves are found in the mountains, former rebels mourn their comrades, and a war criminal has nightmares about all the things he has done. Peace continues to elude Guatemala.
- The film is the personal story of three generations: the (late) grandmother, the father and the daughter, who is directing the film. It focuses on the trans-generational transfer of traumatic experiences. It's a spiritual road movie through deep and diffuse layers of feelings resulting from historical transformations in north-eastern Europe.
- A lonesome middle-aged bachelor, a divorced single mother, and a jovial young mullah are the protagonists of this intimate account of gender relations in Iran. Their stories revolve around the institution of temporary marriage, also called lust-marriage, a Shia practice that allows a man and a woman to legally marry for a fixed period of time ranging from one hour to 99 years. Religiously sanctified prostitution or a loophole for couples to have a relationship within the rigid Islamic laws? Religious dogma meets macho sentimentality meets female realities. A relentlessly honest, eye-opening, and sometimes funny account of Islamic sexual and gender politics.
- The protagonists of Seeing Voices may not be able to hear, but that doesn't leave them without words. They don't lament their inability to hear music or birds singing. But they are denied the right to their mother tongue. They employ different techniques to master their lives, walking the line between the hearing of the world - and refusing to be silent.
- Rudi wears a suit, Daniel rides a bike. But despite all the differences between the two brothers, they become interested in the same woman. For different reasons, however - as Nora soon discovers...A comedy with depths, about loyalty, family ties and manipulation.
- Twelve-year-old Ahmed's story is characterized by current topics in world politics: After a several year-long odyssey that started in civil war-ridden Iraq and continued in refugee camps in Syria 12-year-old Ahmed and his family are finally given asylum in the USA. Ahmed's father Jamal suffered a stroke while he was kidnapped and held hostage by Iraqi militias and has been wheelchair-bound since. His mother carries the burden of raising three children and caring for a disabled husband in a strange country all alone. Ahmed's everyday life in Dallas oscillates between moments of being a carefree teenager and the heavy burden of his personal fate, which forces him to grow up fast. Still, Ahmed dreams the American dream: He wants to learn English properly so he can study history at Harvard or Princeton. He still attends a special class for refugee children which seems like a melting pot for current crisis regions: His classmates are from Iraq, Somalia, Nepal - a reflection of world political conflicts. "You all bring the best parts of your culture to us" says Ahmed's teacher sympathetically. But the family's everyday struggle to finally become a part of American society shows how hard it really is to live the dream. Despite financial and personal support their life remains a fight for survival and Ahmed's world in Dallas seems to be as confined as it was in Damascus. Filmmaker Fritz Ofner empathetically documents the life of a refugee family in their fragile life situation - caught between longing for a long lost past and the hopes for a better future. Fritz Ofner was born in Styria in 1977 and studied ethnology and media studies in Vienna. Extensive travels through Asia, Africa and Latin America lead to his passion for documentary film making. At present he is finalizing his first feature length documentary called "The Evolution of Violence".