Revolution’s Daughter (2025)
A powerful portrait of exile, identity, and the courage to speak when silence is safer. Through Alina Fernández’s story as Fidel Castro’s hidden daughter, the film amplifies the voices of Cuban artists, activists, and survivors who carry their homeland’s pain and hope across the ocean. It is not just about Cuba’s past, but about the people who left, the lives they rebuilt, and the longing that never disappears. We rate it an intriguing 4 out of 5!
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Loving Karma (2025)
A tender return to Jhamtse Gatsal, where former monk Lobsang Phuntsok continues to raise children shaped by abandonment and hardship. Twelve years after Tashi and the Monk, we see Tashi grown, guiding two new little Karmas through the same storms she once weathered. The film is gentle, honest, and full of small acts of care that show how healing happens in community. We rate it a moving 4 out of 5!
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The Lives of My Father (2026)
A gripping, stranger‑than‑fiction investigation as filmmaker Didrik Hallstrøm digs into his father’s past and discovers a life tangled in espionage claims, half‑truths, and global intrigue. What begins as a search for answers becomes a moving portrait of a complicated man and the emotional cost of living behind stories that may or may not be real. We rate it an eye-opening 5 out of 5!
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Love Birds (2025)
A charming and funny retelling of the 1972 discovery of female‑female seagull pairs by biologists George Hunt and Molly Warner. What began as routine fieldwork exploded into national headlines, queer rights debates, and unexpected pressure on the couple’s relationship. We rate it a sweet 4 out of 5!
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Let Our Mountains Live (La Fjella Leve) (2026)
A tense, clear‑eyed look at Sámi reindeer herders fighting to protect their grazing lands after a wind farm was built illegally across Fosen. Even with a Supreme Court win, the government stalls and corporations hold firm, leaving the turbines standing. A powerful reminder that justice means little when profit takes priority. We rate it a unifying 4 out of 5!
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Cagnat, Drawing or Nothing (Cagnat, le dessin sinon rien) (2024)
A moving look at French cartoonist Jean‑Pierre Cagnat as he revisits 17,000 drawings he abandoned after the Charlie Hebdo attack. Guided by his daughter Alice, the film becomes a tender study of silence, memory, and the slow return of an artist finding his way back to the page. We rate it an exposing 4 out of 5!
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Chicken Ghetto (2025)
A tender, eye‑opening portrait of Mable, a teenage girl in Kampala living with sickle cell disease and the stigma that surrounds it. Chicken Ghetto follows her resilience, her music, and the love that holds her family together, revealing a young woman who refuses to be defined by illness or poverty. We rate it a simple 4 out of 5!
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For Life (2026)
A powerful and intimate portrait of Hind, a Palestinian woman determined to have a child while her husband serves a life sentence. For Life follows her dangerous, hope‑driven journey to “free” his sperm from prison and undergo IVF, revealing how love, faith, and resilience persist under an occupation that reaches into even the most private corners of life. We rate it a determined 4 out of 5!
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Sole (얼) (2026)
A gentle, contemplative portrait of a Korean immigrant cobbler whose quiet daily work becomes an act of love. Sole follows Song as he trades ambition for devotion, turning a small workshop into a space shaped by acceptance, faith, and care. We rate it a restrained 3 out of 5!
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In the Path of Giants (2025)
A sobering and deeply layered documentary about human–elephant conflict shaped by forces far bigger than wildlife. In the Path of Giants reveals how starving elephants, displaced Rohingya refugees, and marginalized Indigenous communities are all caught in the fallout of violence in Myanmar. We rate it a thoughtful 4 out of 5!
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Modern Whore (2025)
Bold, stylish, and completely driven by Andrea Werhun’s magnetic confidence, Modern Whore blends vivid reenactments, humour, and heartfelt honesty to explore sex work through the eyes of someone who has lived it. Visually striking and emotionally grounded, we rate this a standout 5 out of 5!
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The War Below: Restoring Hope in the Solomon Islands (2026)
A powerful and urgent documentary revealing the hidden danger beneath the Solomon Islands, where thousands of WWII bombs still injure and kill families eighty years later. Through survivor stories, community advocates, and the tireless work of deminers, the film exposes a crisis the world has ignored and a people fighting for safety, justice, and hope. We rate it a heartbreaking 5 out of 5!
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Molly vs The Machines
Molly vs The Machines follows a grieving father uncovering how social media algorithms quietly pulled his daughter into harmful content she never sought out. What begins in a teenager’s bedroom expands into a confronting look at the systems shaping young minds, revealing how engagement‑driven platforms can push vulnerable users toward darker material. We rate it a heartbreaking 4 out of 5!
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The Life We Leave (2026)
The Life We Leave follows the rise of the world’s first human‑composting facility, turning a bold environmental idea into a new kind of deathcare. What begins as a business venture grows into a compassionate space where families can grieve, connect, and return their loved ones to the earth with intention. We rate it a thoughtful 5 out of 5!
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The Werewolf in the Waves (2025)
A tender comeback story turns heartbreaking as Shifty Shellshock slips back into addiction, leaving Soleil Moon Frye to document the slow disappearance of someone she loves. With its raw intimacy and early‑2000s nostalgia, the film becomes a quiet portrait of hope, relapse, and the ache of watching someone drift out of reach. We rate it an enlightening 4 out of 5!
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The Death of Robin Hood (2026)
A brutal opening gives way to a slow, contemplative character study about a man facing the weight of his own violence. Hugh Jackman subverts expectations with a quiet, haunted performance that turns the Robin Hood myth inside out. Not an action film, but a thoughtful meditation on regret, legacy, and the hope for peace after a lifetime of bloodshed. We rate it a divisive 3 out of 5!
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The Baker’s Hotline (2026)
A cozy, heartfelt documentary about the real baking hotline where simple recipe questions turn into unexpected moments of connection. From sourdough crises to conversations about loneliness and hope, this short celebrates the kindness, patience, and community that rise when people reach out. A wholesome 5 out of 5!
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The Revolution Against Death (2026)
A surreal and striking documentary set in a faded pastel resort where hundreds gather to defy aging and mortality. Funny on the surface, quietly devastating underneath, it reveals the fears, hopes, and fragile dreams behind the desire to outrun death. We rate it a captivating 4 out of 5!
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If You Don’t Like It, Look Away (Au bain des dames) (2025)
A warm, funny, and quietly rebellious portrait of older women claiming space on a Marseille beach. Sun, salt, gossip, nostalgia, and zero apologies. A joyful reminder that aging does not dim confidence, humour, or desire. We rate it a quietly humorous 3.5 out of 5!
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Elon Musk Unveiled – The Tesla Experiment (2025)
A gripping look at the gap between Tesla’s promises and the reality on the road. Through whistleblower leaks and emotional stories from affected families, the documentary reveals how ambition and innovation can collide with real‑world consequences. We rate it an eye-opening 4 out of 5!
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