100 Cries of Terror
Mexican feature film
Mexican feature film
Who Am I To Stop (WAITSI) is a semi-observational exploration of isolation, art, and transformation after traumatic brain injury. We follow a young, mixed-race woman, a young, white man, and a middle-aged, white woman from the Pacific Northwest with brain injury. Despite vastly different experiences, all are beginning to test the waters of public performance and re-define a new life path as artists. Rather than define brain injury survivors by their deficits and limit their narratives to crash and recovery stories, we allow them to examine their lives, struggles, triumphs, self-doubt, goals, and personal agency. The film reveals art-making not as rehabilitation but a way to reconnect to a sense of purpose and pride, to protest disability stigma and social isolation, and to contribute to society. Brain injury survivors are not individuals on a private journey of healing; they are rooted in society, one that is often inaccessible and not understanding or accommodating.
After being wrongfully convicted of his daughter's murder, a father search for the killer wreaks havoc on a quiet Missouri town.
Story Where the Stars Live Movie Poster Where the Stars Live Cast & Crew Production Company: Country: Language: Adult: No Genres…
Mexican feature film
Miguel is a great graffiti artist who gets release from jail after a two year sentence for allegedly destroying his desert border town with his alias name Kilroy. When he gets back home, he realizes that nothing has change. The historic name form Second World War told by his passed away father, has reappear in the city during a political elections campaign. Miguel is now facing so many challenges in his new life and wants to break away from his past. His only hope is to win the City Sponsor Graffiti contest and leave behind all the sorrows and pain that the name Kilroy has created for him.
Daniela is going through deep sorrow after disclosing her fiancee's betrayal. She falls into a state of loneliness and dejection to the point of losing her job, and therefore the ability to cover her basic expenses in order to live decently. Hence, she begins a process of detachment and simple services such as gas, electricity, internet are no longer part of her life. Eventually she begins to see the light within the darkness of her tunnel, she grows stronger and is able to see her pain through a different pair of eyes.
Mexican feature film
Mexican feature film
Carlo Scarpa's 1963 Showroom for Dino Gavina: a series of details captured by Stefano Miraglia in 2021 and by Ellis Donda in 1985.