Blog

  • Soft Targets

    Stephen Poliakoff’s parody of the spy-thriller genre. A Russian diplomat becomes convinced that he is at the centre of a Foreign Office plot.

  • Perverted Swap, Woman Licks

    Pinku distributed by Million.

  • The Villain from Edo Kochiyama Soshun

    Kotiyama is a swindler and extortionist, the head of a whole gang of crooks, usually posing as a poor monk; once he really took vows, but he was kicked out of the monastery long ago. He is enterprising, smart and not too cruel, so his accomplices love him. Posing as an envoy from the abbot of the Kennei Temple, Kotiama plays a show in front of Lord Matsue with an income of 150,000 koku, and extorts money from him. The film is based on the famous play by Kawatake Mokuami.

  • Gopurangal Saivathillai

    Murli, a stylish and handsome young man, is forced by his father to get married to Arukani, a village girl. To escape from his wife and father, he takes a job transfer to Bangalore, where he falls in love with Julie and gets married. Murli does not reveal his past to Julie, however, Arukani ends up at his house in Bangalore.

  • Las locuras de Parchís

    When the Parcheesi kids return from Disneyland, they learn that Vicky, Don Atilio’s daughter, will be their new group mate. But Don Atilio opposes Vicky’s relationship with Gemma, Yolanda, David, Tino, Frank and Carlitos, so he sends her to a nuns’ school run by Don Atilio’s sister.

  • My Part-Time Dad

    The new misadventures of single mother Svetlana, her 12 year old son and (still) part-time worker Siniša. Siniša’s plans to marry Svetlana are ruined when her ex-husband comes back from Germany, persuading her to start their new life together.

  • Crimson Street

    Sally (Sally Yeh) is a club singer, caught in a love rectangle between three men: Stone (Kenny Bee), a bank robber newly released from prison, club owner Paul King (Michael Chan Wai-Man) and Pow (Melvin Wong), a policeman.

  • A Matter of Facts

    Starting with a scene from Squat Theatre’s “Mr Dead and Mrs Free” shot in their storefront theatre on West 23rd Street, Chelsea, New York, “A Matter of Facts” draws a parallel narrative which follows the characters from the theatre into real life.

  • Hammett

    Chinatown, San Francisco, 1928. Former private detective Dashiell Hammett, a compulsive drinker with tuberculosis who writes pulp fiction for a living, receives an unexpected visit from an old friend asking for help.