
A young couple travels to a deserted town to try and find their mysterious uncle, only to discover that ghosts are real and very dangerous.

A young couple travels to a deserted town to try and find their mysterious uncle, only to discover that ghosts are real and very dangerous.

Susan Cooper is an unassuming, deskbound CIA analyst, and the unsung hero behind the Agency’s most dangerous missions. But when her partner falls off the grid and another top agent is compromised, she volunteers to go deep undercover to infiltrate the world of a deadly arms dealer, and prevent a global crisis.

A psychopath uses a family’s high tech security system with a ticking time bomb to terrorize them for 90 minutes demanding an answer to his question; ‘WHO AM I?’

In the spring of 1942, following the blockade-run that took General Douglas MacArthur and his staff from the Philippines to the safety of Australia, the survivors of a bombed-and-sunk PT Boat make their way to shore. The skipper tells his men they have top priority passes if they can make their way to Del Monte airfield 200 miles away, and advises them to split up into pairs. Ensign Chuck Palmer and crewman Jim Mitchell finally reach Tacloban on the island of Leyte. In an American mission school, Palmer meets Jeanne Martinez, who is urgently trying to see the officer in charge with a request for help for a relative, and he also learns that the Japanese have captured the airfield. Palmer tries to make Australia by a boat that sinks in a tropical storm and has to swim for shore. All through 1942, Palmer and the other survivors dodge enemy patrols while living off of the land.

When John Connor (Jason Clarke), leader of the human resistance, sends Sgt. Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back to 1984 to protect Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) and safeguard the future, an unexpected turn of events creates a fractured timeline. Now, Sgt. Reese finds himself in a new and unfamiliar version of the past, where he is faced with unlikely allies, including the Guardian (Arnold Schwarzenegger), dangerous new enemies, and an unexpected new mission: To reset the future…

When Drake lost in a bet, his best friend wanted him to court a girl in a month and ask her to be his girlfriend. After she said, “Yes”, he will tell her that he doesn’t love her and all that happened between them was a game. But what if Sophia, the girl his best friend chose, is clever than they think she is? What will happen if she knows something about their pretty little secret?
An intense, harrowing documentary look at the mistreatment of mental patients. It’s profoundly revealing and insightful. This is probably the most disturbing film you’ll ever see. Warning: Contains repulsive realities that forces us to contemplate our own capacity for callousness.

This is easily one of the most disturbing films ever made. The state of Mass. blocked distribution of this film for well over a decade after its release because it was simply too honest and unflinching in its portrayal of the horrific systemic abuses of this institution. What makes the film so very important is not simply its evidence about this particular institution, but, the light it sheds on the kind of society that would treat the least fortunate of its members in this dehumanizing and cruel way. There is political analysis offered by the patients themselves that brings in the rather obvious connections to the police state, colonization, and genocide.
Rated 8.1 /10 Stars at IMDB

One night at a party a man falls for a woman. She initially rejects his advances. Finally she gives in. They walk through the night in Madrid, sharing their desires, secrets, and maybe a few little lies. By night the woman finds him funny, charming, insistently declaring his love for her. A romantic comedy? Not quite. In the morning everything has changed. He’s not the same man. Or maybe she’s a different woman? This is no longer the romantic world of movies but the harsh one of psychological games and power struggles. A powerful script written by a man and a woman, played by a man and a woman, about a man and a woman in the battlefield of the sexes.

1942, Nanjing (Nanking). Following a series of assassination attempts on officials of the Japanese-controlled puppet government, the Japanese spy chief gathers a group of suspects in a mansion house for questioning. A tense game of “cat and mouse” ensues as the Chinese code-breaker attempts to send out a crucial message while protecting his/her own identity

Recorded live at Hammersmith Apollo, Russell questions the values of heroes and leaders. ‘Messiah Complex’ is a disorder where sufferers think they might be the messiah. Did Jesus have it? What about Che Guevara, Gandhi, Malcolm X and Hitler? All these men have shaped our lives and influenced the way we think. Their images are used to represent ideas that often do not relate to them at all. Would Gandhi be into Apple? Would Che Guevara endorse Madonna? Would Jesus be into Christianity? He concludes it’s all a load of rubbish and encourages the audience to stop voting, ignore advertising, look to the transcendent within themselves and others…and kick over some bins on their way home. Plus there’s sex. Obviously.

Dave’s a petty criminal living on drugs and violence in London. When his actions kill his best friend, he’s propelled into feelings of shame and remorse. Discovering Islam, he begins to find peace but his old life comes back to test him.

After going broke, Gwen Stevens is forced to return to her abandoned childhood home hoping to pick up the pieces of her life. Among the relics and memories of her past, she discovers someone is living in the house and they don’t want to leave. In the New Mexico desert, miles from safety, Gwen must fight to protect the only thing she has left. Her life.