Gab and Tom are celebrating their one-year anniversary in a cabin in northern Quebec. But when their opposing views on love resurface, disillusionment sets in for this ultra-modern couple.
Twenty years after her mother’s death, Laura returns to the family home in Cauca, Colombia. Born from an absence, the film moves through women’s voices, silences, and echoes of the past. A gesture of remembrance, between lingering light and the darkness of oblivion.
After an argument in a pub, a young woman storms out and is persuaded by a blind man to deliver a mysterious package to a charity shop before it closes.
The film follows Alma on what should be a simple walk home. Capturing the quiet paranoia and everyday fear that women carry when navigating the night, a reflection on vulnerability, perception, and feeling unsafe.
Rux returns to Romania for her sister's wedding and tries to blend into her grieving family, as she navigates challenges with her gender transition and familial reconnection through a day that is marked by humour and drama.
Michael Greenberg is a defiant young visionary and climate activist in the US. With the timing of a stand-up comedian, lightning intelligence, and the charisma of a young Bob Dylan, he is rallying a generation in the fight for a livable future.
Filmed in Angus, Scotland, Soft Fruit follows migrant seasonal workers on an industrial berry farm as they pick, prepare and transport crops. Candid conversations and scenes of rebellious, collective gathering appear alongside observational footage in shifting visual formats – from high-definition video to 16mm, and CGI inspired by medieval Islamic cosmography – building a layered sense of time and place.
Lesson from Our Garden tells the story of Mélanie and Lucie, a queer couple seeking to become parents. Through their obstacles, this film is both a story of love and resilience and highlights a journey that is often invisible: that of a lesbian, cis, and trans couple on a fertility path.
Unfolding between a mine, ritual, Shakespeare, and a photo lab is a multilayered network of labor, power, and representation. Lisl Ponger asks how history becomes visible—and what remains invisible when images shape truth rather than depict it.