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- In 1973, five men and six women drifted across the Atlantic on a raft as part of a scientific experiment studying the sociology of violence, aggression and sexual attraction in human behavior. Although the project became known in the press as 'The Sex Raft', nobody expected what ultimately took place on that three month journey. Through extraordinary archive material and a reunion of the surviving members of the expedition on a full scale replica of the raft, this film tells the hidden story behind what has been described as 'one of the strangest group experiments of all time.'
- From the first camera to 45 billion cameras worldwide today, the visual sociologist filmmakers widen their lens to expose both humanity's unique obsession with the camera's image and the social consequences that lay ahead.
- "Profetia" is a metaphysical Multi-plot epic about love, life and death in the harsh North West parts of Copenhagen. A woman stands by a fire, burning the stories about love she has written down over the course of a lifetime. One by one her stories seem to come true and converge around her. People, bound by love & blood, will meet and confront each other over the course of one single day. Can they change what seems to be written?
- The rise and demise of the gay porn brand in the Czech Republic of the mid-1990s.
- What is the meaning of life, death and all the rest? Max Kestner gives an energetic and imaginative answer in his adventurous film, which begins with the killing of a young giraffe from Copenhagen.
- A successful rock band from Greenland? Yes, it's not a lie. In 1973, the Greenlandic Sumé released a debut album, which record time made it to all the households on the icy island. But Sumé's success was not just due to their catchy beat rock, but also to the band's ability to put words to the zeitgeist, where Greenlandic culture was slowly fading away.
- In Copenhagen, a triptych of love stories come to vivid life. Framed with a prying naturalism, these tales through the seasons tackle the ever rising tide of loneliness and self-doubt that can come in the face of new love.
- In 1945 Irene, Ewa and Joe were among the nearly 30,000 survivors rescued from German concentration camps to the peaceful harbour town Malmö, Sweden. Here they started life again. In unique archive footage we see 10 year-old Irene at the harbour taking her first shaky steps in freedom. We see newborn Ewa carried from the boat by her mother. And we meet Joe, who arrived as a lonely child without his family. In Harbour of Hope they tell their amazing stories from the moment of liberation to the unsolved mysteries in present time. A film about dealing with war memories, the importance of a helping hand and finding a "harbour of hope".
- Three girls hang out after basketball practice but things end up kind of heavy.
- When a peace agreement between the FARC rebel movement and the Colombian government looks like it will put an end to half a century of conflicts, 30-year-old Yira visits her mother in Colombia after spending 10 years in exile in Cuba. Yira has herself become a mother and wants to give her daughter the family she never had. She confronts her mother, Ruby, with a neglected childhood in the shadow of her parents' political struggles and persecution.
- Sick of being bullied, two boys decide to take matters into their own hands.
- In 2006 Antony and the Johnsons and Charles Atlas took their collaborative performance TURNING to major cities in Europe. This documentary film explores the heart of that performance.
- An intimate peak into the love lives of 20 young people. Through vulnerable conversations about their personal experiences, they tell a modern, poetic and realistic story of love in 2021.
- Pioneers of video art, The Vasulkas are lifetime hackers and grandparents of the "YouTube" generation. They are struggling in their retirement years to archive their body of work. By a fluke they are rediscovered by the art world that had forgotten them. People and institutions are all of a sudden fighting over who will represent them when they are gone.
- In Danish smalltown Skjern in the 80s, two very different lives intersected and together they had a daughter, Nicoline. Kim, the down-to-earth North Jutlander with a passion for angling and local football, met Annette, the restless soul from Zealand, who rolled through town in tight jeans on roller skates. After 10 years of marriage, the family splintered under the weight of disappointments, lack of closeness and abandonment. Nicoline grew up in the classically troubled reality of the child of divorce, with half-hearted relationships, forgotten appointments and rare, awkward family celebrations. The past cannot be undone, but its influence on the present can. Nicoline wants to confront the monsters of her childhood and find answers to the many questions that still hang over her. With a strong will and indomitable optimism, she invites her parents to a meeting on neutral ground. For the first time since their break-up in 1997, the three of them will talk honestly. On film. Fantastic Family is a personal and universal story of divorce, betrayal and the longing for reconciliation. It is the story of how a child - now an adult - tries to pick up the pieces of her family history and create a new understanding of what it means to belong together, despite everything.
- A sociological meditation on the different exits that young Palestinians choose, in order to cope with life in the refugee camps.
- An open minded and emotionally strong film about gender identity.
- Did Ida's grandfather live a double life as a secret agent during the cold war? Ida and her father believe that their beloved father and grandfather worked directly for the CIA during the Cold War in Denmark.
- Serbia and Kosovo's border dispute is Europe's last territorial conflict and must be solved. It is chief negotiator Robert Cooper's challenge and the stakes are high.
- When Erik looks at pictures of himself as a child, it's like seeing a twin sister. A sister who's disappeared, with Erik taking her place. It's a reminder of the past, and the anxiety is palpable. Prince of Dreams takes us on a pilgrimage to the end of the world where the protagonist, Erik, looks back on his life. The bullying and feeling like an outsider at school. The artistry. But most of all the battle to accept yourself and believe that others can actually love you for who you really are. Erik, born as a girl, has for a long time struggled with gender dysphoria, with a past characterised by a feeling like an outsider and by vulnerability. As an 18-year-old, Erik starts the process of gender reassignment. Prince of Dreams is filmed over 10 years, following Erik from the age of 17 and until he turns 27. Despite the serious topics covered in the film, it is brimming with humour and love.
- The entire world praised the military and Aung San Suu Kyi, when power was passed on to the democracy icon after 50 years of military dictatorship. One year later she defended an ethnic cleansing and had isolated herself from the public. This film tells you why.
- The fishing village Maniitsoq is promised the largest project in the history of Greenland when an American company decides to build a plant. Greenland might be economically independent. But then silence. How long to wait for "the future"?
- 120 hopeful teenagers who've never met before, embark on a life-changing journey as they begin at a Danish boarding school.
- With a hypnosis session on the outskirts of Copenhagen serving as the collision point for several people's lives, the action quickly escalates in this moving one-shot film.