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- In the near future, an ex-jewel thief receives a gift from his son: a robot butler programmed to look after him. But soon the two companions try their luck as a heist team.
- A twenty-something comedienne's unplanned pregnancy forces her to confront the realities of independent womanhood for the first time.
- After being forgotten for 30 years, the filmmaker revisits Scorsese's lost documentary 'American Boy' and it's raconteur subject, Steven Prince.
- Daphne films her own, bare down to the soul, process of orienting herself in a world made incomprehensible by the loss of her 9 year old daughter Olivia and husband Holger. She, her son Espen and daughter Lilly are survivors of this family of five. The go to phrases "You have to move on, let go" and "Everything happens for a reason", only add to more trauma and pain. Her reaction is to simply do anything. Daphne's instincts push her to drive out onto familiar dessert roads with fifty of Olivia's Barbies. She retraces the last road trip she took with her children after doctors told her Olivia would not make it. They had lived in a cancer world for four years. This new adventure begins at the family's previous home in Milan, Italy. Daphne then gets a foot hold in Las Vegas and ends up deep in the canyons of Zion, Utah. She creates her own visceral vocabulary for trauma and healing on this powerfully raw journey and turns the idea of "letting go" upside down. Daphne takes us onto the literal and figurative road with her, weaving fragments of the past into the present, unearthing the extremes of loss and love while carrying us into the heart of what it means to be alive.
- This portrait follows preschoolers in Booneville, KY. With local employment largely limited to the school system, these children have caring and competent adults preparing them for better futures.
- This portrait introduces audiences to White Earth Nation in Minnesota. Preschoolers learn school readiness while engaging in tribal rituals, such as pow-wows, to prepare for kindergarten with a sense of identity. Former Tribal Chairwoman Erma Vizenor, herself an educator with graduate degrees, sums up the mission of White Earth early education as "a lifetime of choices instead of a lifetime of circumstances." She notes, "Education is our ticket out of poverty here; it was my ticket."
- Stories highlighting early childhood education as the key to realizing the American Dream.