‘Theatre of Dreams’ is an experimental docufiction short film inspired by the true story of the courage and hidden sacrifices of the first Qatar Women’s National Football Team - a team that first debuted in October 2010, but has not played an official match in over 10 years, mysteriously disappearing in the same decade that the country was building up and poised to host a successful FIFA Men's World Cup.
Notes Unheard follows a young Chinese violist studying in the UK while remaining closely connected to his father in China. Through calls, rehearsals, visits, and repeated conversations, subtle shifts gradually emerge within their relationship.
In an over-mediated future, a lonely teenage girl gets to speak with her idol – but the encounter exposes a parasocial bond that tears her sense of self apart.
Within neglected multi-storey hostels, Sonder explores Black Zulu queer masculinities shaped by surveillance, violence, and desire, where fragile performances of masculinity, intimacy, and survival are constantly negotiated.
Bridging the devastation of the Masara landslide and the environmental transformation of Barangay Mapaang, the documentary tells a story of loss, renewal, and the power of communities to shape their own future.
A narrative voice, at first speechless, finds itself in an extraordinary film screening and is confronted with a flood of mysterious images that raise at least three question marks.
A feature-length documentary that explores the lived experiences of the LGBTQIAPN+ community in Goiás through intimate accounts of identity, belonging, and resistance. The film examines the shared threads that connect these personal journeys, as well as the challenges imposed by prejudice and invisibility. Through stories of love, resilience, and confrontation, the documentary celebrates the unique light of each individual and the collective power of existing, belonging, and claiming space within the city.
An intimate story about the construction of identity and the consequences of defying gender norms within Mexico's conservative upper-middle-class society. The Way You See Me traces a ten-year journey from hyperfemininity toward a defiant masculinity. What began as an experiment to challenge the idea that testosterone justifies male behaviour gradually evolved into something far more complex, confronting the filmmaker's body, voice, relationships and sense of self. But the personal keeps opening onto the political. Conservative upper-middle-class Mexican society doesn't just shape us into rigid gender roles; it recruits us as enforcers of those roles too, compelling us to monitor and regulate one another. Shot over a decade, this is one of the most comprehensive and candid explorations of what it means to transition, revealing the intertwined power dynamics between class, gender and systemic violence in Mexican society.
Abandoned by his wife and facing imminent eviction, a struggling father must navigate the streets with his child, holding onto the hope that their desperate endurance is seen by heaven. Inspired by Saksi Ng Langit Music Video by December Avenue.
"Storie di Genova" is a documentary that combines historical research with innovative technology through advanced techniques of digital restoration, animation, and the colorization of archival photographs. Its aim is to offer viewers a fresh perspective on the past and create a dialogue between history and the present.
Tattoo Medicine explores Pili's path as a brown indigenous Colombian person from the Muisca & Pijao people, highlighting the intersection of ancestral spirituality and healing in his tattoo practice. From his childhood struggles in Miami to being a resident artist at Fruit Camp, the most prominent queer-tattoo shop in Baltimore, the documentary delves into the challenges and triumphs of forging a unique, culturally rooted career in the world of tattooing.