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1-26 of 26
- Fran likes to think about dying. When she makes a guy in the office laugh, he wants more - a movie date, a slice of pie, a conversation. But if dating him means learning to live, she's pretty sure she can't do that.
- In his quest to become the world's greatest air-drummer, a small-town dreamer must overcome obstacles and ridicule to save the day.
- Four friends head to Senior Week in Ocean City, Maryland, to celebrate high school graduation.
- The documentary follows five kids who stutter ages 9 to 18, from all over the United States, who after experiencing a lifetime of bullying and stigmatization, meet other children who stutter at an interactive arts-based program, The Stuttering Association for the Young, based in New York City. Their journey to SAY find some close to suicide, others withdrawn and fearful, exhausted and defeated from failed fluency training, societal pressures to not stutter or the decision to remain silent. Over the course of a year we witness first hand the incredible transformation that happens when these young people of wildly different backgrounds experience for the first time the revolutionary idea at the heart of SAY: that it's okay to stutter.
- In 2007 USA Today's 25th anniversary issue ranked the 25 most influential people on earth since the paper's founding in 1982. Ryan White was listed in the Top 10, between Pope John Paul II and the protestor who stood in front of the tank in Tiananmen Square. Poster Child is the story of how, after contracting HIV/AIDS at age 14 through his tainted hemophilia medication, Ryan White took on his school board, the corporate media complex, and even the president of the United States, Ronald Reagan, in his quest to convince the world to fight the disease, not the person afflicted by it, and in so doing changed the world.
- Mary Baker tries to get over an apocalyptic break-up with 13 varied partners.
- On the Shoulders of Giants explores the lives of the older generation of hemophilia. Blood brother Wayne Cook embarks on a journey around the country to reunite with fellow survivors in their respective towns as they reflect on lives lost, the joys of family and friends, and untold stories of how hemophilia has affected their personal lives today as they age. It's an inspiring heartwarming story of a community's legacy, and their longing to reunite and be there for each other, again.
- A mockmentary about a lovable idiot with hemophilia named Spencer leading a patchwork office at a dysfunctional non-profit for people with bleeding disorders.
- Parker is content with the persona she has constructed for herself - until her dying father fails to recognize his only daughter.
- TURTLE HILL, BROOKLYN is a funny, sincere, slice of life about a couple just trying to figure it out. Mateo and Will invite their friends over for Will's 30th birthday. After a few surprise visitors, they get through the day, but realize that doubting your partner isn't nearly as scary as doubting yourself.
- After bombing their L.A. debut at the Troubadour, a band battles demons, exes, and excesses at an afterparty in the Hollywood Hills on the eve of their first West Coast tour.
- Sara has two vaginas. She's never been intimate with anyone... except her pillow. But when love peeks through her window (literally), Sara will find the courage to reveal herself.
- In an attempt to complete the Seven Summits, a do-or-die mountaineer with a severe bleeding disorder risks his life in order to shine a light upon the disturbing lack of access to life-sustaining medicine around the world.
- Comedians to chefs, celebrated personalities and everyone in between - guest celebrities discuss how they learned to overcome the obstacles they faced during career growth in their respective industries.
- Five friends are trapped in a dorm by a blizzard on the last night of the semester, while a psychopath attempts to manipulate them into killing each other.
- Larry Keel is recognized by many as one of the most progressive bluegrass musicians of our time, yet he remains largely unknown outside the bluegrass community. Beautiful Thing is a year in the life of Larry Keel. The film follows Larry and The Larry Keel Experience as they canvas from coast to coast, playing night after night in search of bigger and better crowds during 2002. Audiences range from a handful of disengaged people to standing ovations at world-renowned bluegrass festivals. Larry Keel remains somewhat obscure to audiences because his style, his interpretation of bluegrass and roots music is so personal that it is almost impossible to define, and subsequently, it is almost impossible to market. So Larry battles on, night after night, city after city, slowly generating a following of true believers, fans who sit and stare and smile in awe of this beautiful thing. Beautiful Thing is a glimpse into the life and spirit of a true artist, during his many tours and performances of 2002.
- Helping Hany is a stop-motion animation series that examines some of the psycho-social components of what it means to be a female with a bleeding disorder. We see our lead character Hannah Braswell (aka Hany) at different stages of her life coming up against various challenges presented to a woman with a bleeding disorder.
- Two low-level drug dealers plot and scheme to build a pornographic DVD empire.
- Black mothers are dying in childbirth at 4x the rate of all other birthing peoples, and in the midst of a global pandemic and a national race reckoning, black midwives around the United States are opening birth centers and demanding justice for Black mothers. In Los Angeles, Kimberly Durdin and Allegra Hill, owners of Kindred Space LA, are part of a growing group of black midwives challenging the most complex and expensive health care system in the world by creating solutions for the Black maternal crisis, on their own terms. Following their journey to raise money, educate the public, and support expectant moms of color, we witness horrifying stories of the systematized dismissal of Black women's pain and agency, tracking the current crisis all the way back to the cruel and monstrous experiments of "The Father of Modern Gynecology," J Marion Sims, who experimented on enslaved Black bodies without anesthesia.
- Explore the inspiring journeys of resilience from around the globe as individuals triumph over bleeding disorders and daunting obstacles. Through these five extraordinary tales, witness the impact of community support, shedding light on the profound influence it holds in navigating the practical and emotional challenges of living with hemophilia. Join us on a compelling journey where collective solidarity triumphs over adversity.