Charlotte finds herself caught up in the affairs that her late brother left behind. With the help of her brother’s best friend, Finn, the duo must outrun a pair of hitmen before their grief consumes them.
After her two kidnappers leave for a two-week vacation, Chacha is left alone in a locked room, tightly bound so she cannot move or escape. Day by day, she endures hunger and thirst with no one to give her food or water. Ironically, her suffering grows even worse when the house becomes silent without her captors’ presence. Weak and confined, Chacha has only two choices: survive until her kidnappers return, or find a way to free herself before it’s too late.
TJPW Grand Princess '26: Fate in Ryōgoku was a professional wrestling event promoted by Tokyo Joshi Pro-Wrestling (TJPW). It was held on March 15, 2026 at Ryōgoku KFC Hall in Tokyo, Japan.
A forgotten musical record connects Caracas to Tehran, revealing untold stories of oil, not as a commodity, but as a political leverage for the liberation struggles in Palestine and building Pan-Arab solidarity between 1960-1970.
A weak rooster forced into cockfighting discovers the dark secret of bodies dumped in Taal Lake, and must find the courage to use his final weapon — not his claws, but his crow — to fight back.
An audiovisual essay constructed from Super 8 footage filmed during camera tests for the short film ‘La Trampa’. Through gestures, light, and silences, it reflects on what the image reveals and what it leaves unsaid.
In February 2026, milet held a concert at the Nippon Budokan, her first performance there in three years. milet named this performance "Ray of Water" with the hope of "bringing a ray of hope to those who watch the live show." Various installations were used to transform the iconic Budokan stage into a fantastic space where light and water intersect and interact. The performance on February 14, 2026 was broadcast exclusively on TBS-1 with all songs uncut. Original behind-the-scenes footage from the program was also included.
A man in his late 20s sets out to take revenge on someone he believes has wronged him. As his pursuit unfolds, the lines between rage fueled vengeance and the truth start to blur.
“Before It’s Too Late” is a short film about teenagers facing bullying, heartbreak, and the pressures of growing up. Peter, a sensitive and struggling teen, and Lara, his friend, navigate the challenges of friendship, relationships, and personal hardships. Through moments of despair and hope, the story highlights the importance of support, understanding, and faith in Jesus Christ during life’s toughest moments.
Blending candid interviews, experimental moments, and reflective narration, this 55-minute personal doc explores what it means to grow up when the people who love you also struggle to accept who you are. Through screen-recorded calls with friends, street interviews, and distant footage of everyday life, I examine my upbringing as a queer non-binary trans person—where love, expectation, and shame often coexisted—among a sea of other stories about adolescence. Anchored by a conversation with a close friend and fellow artist, the film sits in the tension between care and rejection, asking if anyone is even really special—or maybe all of us are.
A nine-year-old boy, Kido, goes to meet his older sister at a protest camp fighting against the land grabbing of farmlands in Nueva Ecija—bringing her a frog and a squash as his simple gifts.