
After winning the championship cup, Jonsey and his team must survive the zombie apocalypse.

After winning the championship cup, Jonsey and his team must survive the zombie apocalypse.

Ingemar lives with his brother and his terminally ill mother. He may have a rough time, but not as bad as Laika – the russian dog sent into space… He gets sent away to stay with relations for the summer. While there, he meets various strange characters, giving him experiences that will affect him for the rest of his life.

It’s South Africa 1990. Two major events are about to happen: The release of Nelson Mandela and, more importantly, it’s Spud Milton’s first year at an elite boys only private boarding school. John Milton is a boy from an ordinary background who wins a scholarship to a private school in Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa. Surrounded by boys with nicknames like Gecko, Rambo, Rain Man and Mad Dog, Spud has his hands full trying to adapt to his new home. Along the way Spud takes his first tentative steps along the path to manhood. (The path it seems could be a rather long road). Spud is an only child. He is cursed with parents from well beyond the lunatic fringe and a senile granny. His dad is a fervent anti-communist who is paranoid that the family domestic worker is running a shebeen from her room at the back of the family home. His mom is a free spirit and a teenager’s worst nightmare…

American Dream‘s plot synopsis: “Academy Award-winning cinematographer Janusz Kaminski (Saving Private Ryan) directs this intense thriller about the brutal struggle for success. Desperate for cash, entrepreneurs Scott (Luke Bracey) and Nicky (Michiel Huisman) turn to Russian mobster Yuri (Nick Stahl). After they refuse the funding he offers, Yuri gets revenge by trying to take over their construction project. The partners are terrified until Nicky’s tough Russian girlfriend Ana decides to take action herself.”

A rancher on the Arizona border becomes the unlikely defender of a young Mexican boy desperately fleeing the cartel assassins who’ve pursued him into the U.S.

Loved and applauded for its satirical Irish humour, “The Mrs Brown’s Boys” TV series made its debut on BBC ONE in February of this year and proved an automatic ratings smash for Mrs Agnes Brown, so much so that Auntie Beeb has already commissioned a second series which will return later this year. It’s infectious style of satire has been indulging audiences and fans alike with a hedonistic cocktail of “Father Ted meets The Royale Family!”

“Don’t Read This on a Plane” is a drama-comedy about a novelist hitchhiking across Europe to complete her book tour after her publisher goes bankrupt.

With the peak of his career long behind him, an actor clings to his past glory — until a sudden wake-up call forces him to face who he’s become.

Elliot is going to the island of Eden to live out his submissive fantasies, but inadvertently photographs diamond smugglers at work. Smugglers, and detectives, follow him to the island, where they try to retrieve the film. Elliot begins falling in love with Lisa, the head mistress of the island, and Lisa must evaluate her feelings about Elliot and her own motivations.

James Garner shows how the West was won — in a card game! – in the comic adventures of Maverick. Wisecracking ladies’ man Bret Maverick (Garner) and his more serious brother Bart (Jack Kelly) – two handsome bachelors on the loose in the Wild West – have more success at the game of poker than the game of love. Yet they keep trying their luck in one frontier outpost after another. And though cardsharps Bret and Bart would just as soon slip out of town quietly as face a gunman, when it’s time for a showdown, don’t bet against a Maverick.

An alien cop from the distant Reticulum star system is forced on a dangerous deep space mission.

Bailey and Drew are a 40-something couple much like other couples. They have two kids, two jobs, and one boob with cancer. With only two weeks until their daughter Scout’s eighth birthday party, Bailey just wants to check things off of her massive ‘to do’ list. This isn’t her first rodeo with Breast Cancer and she’s determined to handle it as efficiently as possible. Drew wants to fix Bailey. He decides the best way to do this is to ‘work’ her well, taking any handyman job that comes his way. But Bailey doesn’t want to be ‘fixed’-she wants to be WELL. Their family fights for normalcy, attempting to keep their sense of humor intact, as Bailey juggles her misplaced anger, wayward Boot Camp clients and her father’s mental decline while Drew enlists the help of his friends Lance and Alan to make Scout’s party proof that they “got this”. When Bailey’s ten-year-old son, Max opens up that he knows the truth, Bailey finally realizes she can’t control everything.