Tag: woman director

  • Three Men and a Cradle – 18 Years Later

    Marie (and her three fathers) are taking A-levels. Marie passes. She spends the summer in the country with her mother, Sylvia, who has returned from America with her Californian husband who has two sons. Marie falls in and out of love for the first time in front of her alarmed fathers, who see Marie’s innocence slipping away at frightening speed, and their relationships with the two women become even more complicated.

  • Civil Brand

    Forced to work under slave-like conditions in a “prison for profit” program, the inmates of a mostly-African-American female prison, Whitehead Correctional, try to take over the institution.

  • Wild Berries

    A portrait of an ordinary family that turns unstable when their frivolous son Shuji returns home after a long absence.

  • Fast Food High

    Fast Food High tells the story of Emma Redding, a young fast food restaurant employee who musters her inner Erin Brockovich and tries to start a union. When new management takes over the local fast food restaurant, favoritism, unstable hours and sexual harassment come with it. Eager to do something about it, Emma risks losing her job, her boyfriend, and her status with the “in” crowd as she squares off against big business in the greatest challenge of her young life.

  • Hidden Track

    Pu Pu is dumped by her boyfriend whom she loves. Before she moves out, she asks to listen to “their song” just one more time, that is the hidden track by Jay Chou. Then she leaves him and goes to her sister’s place in Hong Kong. All the while she is there, she searches for the same song, the “hidden track”, and from this it leads her onto a journey of discovering love and a new beginning. Despite the whole movie revolving around Jay Chou’s song, Jay Chou plays only a cameo part.

  • Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin

    Documentary on Bayard Rustin, best-remembered as the organizer of the 1963 March on Washington.

  • Tupac: Resurrection

    Home movies, photographs, and recited poetry illustrate the life of Tupac Shakur, one of the most beloved, revolutionary, and volatile hip-hop MCs of all time.

  • Blue Car

    Meg is a gifted but emotionally scarred 18-year-old who finds solace in writing poetry. Mr. Auster, her English teacher, recognizes her talent and encourages her to enter a national poetry contest. As tension at home escalates and Meg struggles to find a way to get to the poetry finals in Florida, Auster’s role in her life becomes increasingly complex.

  • The Last Cowboy

    John William ‘Will’ Cooper is a modern-day rancher, maintaining his ranch in hard times along with his friend and foreman Amos Russell. When Will’s estranged daughter Jake returns to the ranch for her grandfather’s funeral, father and daughter clash over how to run the ranch and over the death years before of Jake’s mother, which she blames on Will. Crisis comes in the form of insurmountable debt, and it is only by working together that Will and Jake have any chance of saving their home and their family.

  • Japanese Story

    Sandy, a geologist, finds herself stuck on a field trip to the Pilbara desert with a Japanese man she finds inscrutable, annoying and decidedly arrogant. Hiromitsu’s view of her is not much better. Things go from bad to worse when they become stranded in one of the most remote regions on Earth.