Review: Look at Me (2020)
Look at Me is a hyperlinked triptych of short film stories revolving around the same characters and their brief connection at a subway station in New York.
Look at Me is a hyperlinked triptych of short film stories revolving around the same characters and their brief connection at a subway station in New York.
Industries of freedom shows the paradox of commercial entertainment, with the promise of happiness choreographed into tiniest detail.
While the realities that the film deal with are harsh and often painful, with Muraoka indulging in a self-reflection that is often brutally raw…
One of the central topics of Iranian daddy is the question of identity. Although raised and born in Denmark to a Danish mother, Karlsson was often confronted about her “origins” due to her looks
Despite of burgeoning love for the unborn, pregnancy is a long, hormonal, nerve-wrecking time that puts women in a bottomless pit of existential questions.
‘Jobs for All!’ is not a simple work of chronology or plot-driven storytelling in order to pass the message.
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