
Sequel to the hit Manitou’s Shoe. Abahachi and Ranger fall into a trap set by a gang but are saved by Dimitri the Greek and his new employee, Mary. This rescue, however, reveals a larger plot, leading our heroes into a brand new adventure.

Sequel to the hit Manitou’s Shoe. Abahachi and Ranger fall into a trap set by a gang but are saved by Dimitri the Greek and his new employee, Mary. This rescue, however, reveals a larger plot, leading our heroes into a brand new adventure.

In Javanese culture, Gowok is a term for a woman who is hired to teach household and sexuality to teenage or pre-marriage boys. The groom’s family rents a gowok for their son before marriage.

In 1915 France, Major Brand commands the 39th Squadron of the Royal Flying Corps. The young airmen go up in bullet-riddled “crates” and the casualty rate is appalling, but Brand can’t make the “brass hats” at headquarters see reason. Insubordinate air ace Captain Courtney is another thorn in Brand’s side… but finds the smile wiped from his face when he rises to command the squadron himself. Everyone keeps a stiff upper lip.

Victor ‘Beki’ Labrador and Enrique Santillanes were once high-school sweethearts. Years later, Beki is shocked to discover that Enrique’s final will grants him half of the estate and control of the family business- with one outrageous condition: he must move into a mansion and live with Enrique’s orphaned sons and their sharp-tongued grandmother. What more could possibly go wrong?

Ricky Gervais tackles life, death and the state of the world in a brutally honest special that spares no topic, even his own mortality.

A live streamed, publicity stunt, filmed inside London’s most famous scare attraction takes a terrifying turn as the event awakes an evil spirit. Something relentless and seemingly unstoppable starts stalking the celebrity guests through the claustrophobic halls of this maze of terror.

A group of cosplaying friends trigger a zombie apocalypse and are forced to traverse a zombie-infested Los Angeles to save their loved one.

Mia, who is a great beauty but also very young, is ready to do what it takes to please her husband and keep him, despite their age difference. Her best friend Cla, who has decided to pursue life’s pleasures where and when she can, suggests a unique and uninhibited “role play” with the couple that is sure to shake things up, as long as they agree to give in… Caught up in a sexual whirlwind, little by little they surrender to every vice. Without a doubt, this is the film of the year!
Brian De Palma’s “film noir” has all the aspects of a great film: detectives, guns, murder, a beautiful blonde, an Oscar winning brunette, and a boxing match. It involves violence, money, pimps, porn, and “the most notorious murder in California history”.

Two boxers-turned-cops – Lee “Mr. Fire” Blanchard (Aaron Eckhart,) and Bucky “Mr. Ice” Bleichert (Josh Hartnett) are morally tested as they pursue the killer of a young would-be actress, grappling with corruption, narcissism, stag films, and family madness along the way. L.A. Confidential turned Ellroy’s heated prose into a taut, compelling movie.

Tells the story about strangers who show up at the same apartment to collect cash they’re both owed. The pair, one of whom is hiding a terrible secret, are sent on a journey across New York City.

Robert Mapplethorpe’s portraits, images of calla lilies, and chronicles of New York City’s underground BDSM scene remain touchstones of 20th-century photography even now, nearly three decades after his death from complications of HIV/AIDS in 1989. Mapplethorpe revisits the titular photographer’s legacy, beginning at the moment just before he takes up residence in the Chelsea Hotel. There, Mapplethorpe begins to amass a portfolio of images-and, at the same time, to explore his formerly suppressed attraction to men. But Mapplethorpe’s relentless ambition-as he says in one early scene, “I can’t just be Mapplethorpe the photographer,” fancying himself a “modern Michelangelo”-threatens to tear apart the relationships he cherishes the most. From the early ’70s until his untimely death at age 42, the film explores the intersection of his art and his sexuality, his struggle for mainstream recognition, and, looming above it all, the specter of the emerging AIDS crisis. Featuring Matt Smith (Doctor Who, The Crown) and Marianne Rendón, the biopic offers a nuanced portrait of an artist at the height of his craft and of the self-destructive impulses that threaten to undermine it all.

Stanley’s last shift at his fast food job takes an unexpected turn when he befriends a young African-American work employee.