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  • Woman Who Exposes Herself

    Toriko is a sexually frustrated wife who gets involved in swapping games with her neighbors.

  • Body Heat

    In the midst of a searing Florida heat wave, a woman convinces her lover, a small-town lawyer, to murder her rich husband.

  • Al Mawardi Cafe

    Hassanein Abu Sunna is released from prison after committing a murder. He persuades Ghobasha to rent his furnished apartment to the rich Radwan as the journalist Ahmed documents the changes taking place in the neighborhood in his articles.

  • Caveman

    Disgraced and cast out of his tribe for lusting after Lana, the mate of the tribe’s head muscle man, Atouk stumbles along gathering other misfits and learning a bit about the world outside of his cave. Eventually he and friends Lar and Tala learn the secrets of fire, cooked meat, and how to defend themselves from the brutal, yet very stupid dinosaurs.

  • Blue Lagoon: A Summer Experience

    With summer vacation, Chiaki, a high school girl, is just passing each day without getting along well with her boyfriend, Masahiko and her first experience.

  • Juan el enterrador

    Wanted by the police, a drug-smuggler goes into hiding, passing as a priest in a small town.

  • Summer of Demon

    A former retainer to a noble family kills his wife’s father when he tries to expose his past crimes. When he begins an affair with the daughter of another clan’s retainer, her father tries to poison him but the substance instead claims an innocent victim…

  • Charlie’s Bubble

    The poetry of teenagers in love is one of the most endearing and enduring traditions in cinema. Philip Chan made his solo directorial debut with a film based on his own adolescent fantasy, about a secondary school student who falls in love with his teacher. The teacher happens to be pregnant and, after the kid makes the vow to help her take care of the child, the father reappears to assume his responsibilities…Is teenage bubble going to burst? Chan had the foresight – or was it luck? – to hand over writing chores to Alfred Cheung, who turned the potentially controversial story into a script of nuanced emotions and morality while managing to avoid the sensational. Charlie’s Bubble, which escaped critical attention in its initial release, is a work that deserves a second look.