A couple in crisis after the birth of their first son rekindles their love during a trip to Norway.
You May Also Like
From the biggest festival to the smallest church social, Kenny Smyth delivers porta-loos to them all. Ignored and unappreciated, he is one of the cogs in society’s machinery; a knight in shining overalls taking care of business with his faithful ‘Splashdown’ crew.
Baris, Cenk and Deniz prepares a surprise party to celebrate Ayhan’s birthday. Ayhan is lack of love, unemployed and he doesn’t have a goal in life. Baris is engaged and has to do his military service. Deniz has to marry a girl, whom his pious father arranged for him. And Cenk is about to be a father soon. These four men who are in different stages in their adult life, start to eat, get drunk, tell stories to each other, get blue, get angry, fight each other, confess their sins and sing songs to the sky on the raki table which was set in the sea at an Aegean bay from dusk till dawn.
A Wall Street investment banker who has been set up as the linchpin of his company’s mob-backed Ponzi scheme is relocated with his family to Aunt Madea’s southern home.
A Yorkshire Terrier, competing in a televised singing competition, is separated from her owner by an opportunist dog pound worker.
An awkward, unemployed man who can talk to the dead teams up with a rebellious bartender to find the vengeful ghost that’s been terrorizing their town.
The town sheriff and a madame team up to stop a television evangelist from shutting down the local whorehouse, the famed “Chicken Ranch.”
Self-made man Dhruv and social media star Anya fall in love and decide to marry. Just one problem – he’s an orphan because Anya will only marry a guy, who has an adorable family, so the only solution – arrange a ‘fake’ set of parents.
Based on the semibiographical novel by Jun Miura, Oh My Buddha is the classic summer coming-of-age story that is burned to a crisp with teenage angst, youthful dreams and that warm sense of folk zeitgeist of the 70s. The narrator is a first-year student at an all-boys Buddhist school. Jaded by his dull, ordinary life, he longs for the type of creative, liberal and forward life his idol Bob Dylan leads, writing rock songs alone in his room, imitating his hero’s signature croon, until one day he got invited on an island trip of sexual liberation with his fellow liberal friend.
Mirco von Juterczenka’s novel “Wir Wochenendrebellen” is the story of a father and his ten-year-old son, who is Asperger’s autistic. The boy has set his mind on finally finding his favourite football club. But his selection criteria are very specific and besides, he wants to experience all the clubs (no matter in which league they play) live in the stadium.