Zira was united with Amer for 172 very memorable days. Fate separated, Amer left too soon, leaving many sweet memories for Zira.
You May Also Like
Corrine Burns retreats far into plans for her band, The Fabulous Stains, after her mother’s death.
As it happens, everybody – Pooh, Piglet, Eeyore, Roo, Rabbit, Owl – is busy preparing a suitable winter home for Eeyore. When everything they do seems to get undone by Tigger’s exuberant bouncing, Rabbit suggest Tigger go outside and find other tiggers to bounce with – a notion Tigger finds ridiculous because, after all, he’s “the onliest one” Or is he?
After a breakup with her boyfriend, a young woman moves in with her older brother, his wife, and their 2-year-old son.
In 1927 Kansas City Pete Kelly and his jazz band play nightly at a speakeasy. A local gangster starts to move in on them and when their drummer is killed Kelly gives in…
Firefighter Gordon Brewer is plunged into the complex and dangerous world of international terrorism after he loses his wife and child in a bombing credited to Claudio ‘The Wolf’ Perrini.
Ben Sanderson, an alcoholic Hollywood screenwriter who lost everything because of his drinking, arrives in Las Vegas to drink himself to death. There, he meets and forms an uneasy friendship and non-interference pact with prostitute Sera.
A struggling musician moves in with his gay best friend in order to restart his life only to find himself falling in love with their lesbian roommate.
Ken Park focuses on several teenagers and their tormented home lives. Shawn seems to be the most conventional. Tate is brimming with psychotic rage; Claude is habitually harassed by his brutish father and coddled, rather uncomfortably, by his enormously pregnant mother. Peaches looks after her devoutly religious father, but yearns for freedom. They’re all rather tight, or so they claim.
Joaquim Pinto has been living with HIV and VHC for almost twenty years. “What now? Remind Me” is the notebook of a year of clinical studies with toxic, mind altering drugs as yet unapproved. An open and eclectic reflection on time and memory, on epidemics and globalization, on survival beyond all expectations, on dissent and absolute love. In a to-and-fro between present and past memories, the film is also a tribute to friends departed and those who remain.
A family friend of Kaila’s an NRI girl has come to stay in his house during her visit to Punjab to get married. Kaila’s sons and grandsons try to impress the girl in order to marry her and migrate to America. But she considers them just good friends and marries someone else. Kaila then urges his family to think about the girl whose life would have become hell if she married anyone of the idiots.