Walk-ins Welcome (2012)
Genre: Comedy
Director: Jonathan Stien
Actors: Franklin Roberto Lashley, Kevin Sean Ryan
Country: United States of America
Princes and Princesses (2000)
In this episodic animated fantasy from France, an art teacher interprets a series of six fairy tales (each involving a prince or princess) with the help of two precocious students….
The Ultimate Legacy (2015)
A self-absorbed young man is challenged to grow a conscience and change his ways in order to receive an inheritance.
Kidnapper (2013)
In today’s metropolitan life, with the rise of nuclear family, a child grows slowly but learns quickly. He learns that he has to study, build his career and survive in…
Love in Translation (2021)
Linguistics Ph.D. student Julie Walters can speak almost every language you can imagine. Things turn upside down for Julie when handsome Dan, the curator at the museum she dreams to…
Return of the Living Dead Part II (1988)
A group of kids discover one of the drums containing a rotting corpse and release the 2-4-5 Trioxin gas into the air, causing the dead to once again rise from…
The Portuguese Falcon (2015)
A satire on anti-communist paranoia in the days of fascist dictatorship in Portugal. The series follows the adventures of the “Lusitanian superhero”, the ultra-patriotic Captain Falcão, a man who follows…
School Spirit (1985)
The only thing keeping Billy Batson from the girl of his dreams is one little condom—or rather the lack of one. Lucky Billy finds one at an all-night roadhouse—but speeding…
House Party (1990)
Young Kid has been invited to a party at his friend Play’s house. But after a fight at school, Kid’s father grounds him. None the less, Kid sneaks out when…
Greg Davies: You Magnificent Beast (2018)
Greg is back with his first stand up show in four years, and biggest ever tour, You Magnificent Beast.
Lilo & Stitch (2025)
The wildly funny and touching story of a lonely Hawaiian girl and the fugitive alien who helps to mend her broken family.
Bogus (1996)
Recently orphaned, a young boy is taken in by his godmother who is shocked to realize that she can see the boy’s imaginary friend: a flamboyant, French magician named Bogus.