Good Grief Suicide Hotline (2015)
Genre: Comedy
Director: Sam Carter
Actors: Becca Beton, Clayton English, Dane Davenport, George Faughnan, Marten Carlson, Theodore Abner
Country: United States of America
The Wrong Guy (1997)
Nelson Hibbert expects to become the new president of Nagel Industries, but Mr. Nagel gives the promotion to another employee. When Nelson barges into Nagel’s office to confront him, he…
Park (2006)
Park takes place all in one day in a public park in Los Angeles, as 11 disaffected Angelenos find both love and loss in unexpected ways
Rich and Strange (1931)
Believing that an unexpected inheritance will bring them happiness, a married couple instead finds their relationship strained to the breaking point.
Bathroom Stalls & Parking Lots (2019)
Far from his home country of Brazil, a gay man goes on a San Francisco adventure with his friends in order to find the right hookup.
Upgraded (2024)
Ana is an ambitious intern dreaming of a career in the art world while trying to impress her demanding boss Claire. When she’s upgraded to first class on a work…
The Hairdresser’s Husband (1990)
The film begins with a flashback from the titular character, Antoine. We are introduced to his fixation with female hairdressers which began at a young age. The film uses flashbacks…
Cockneys vs Zombies (2012)
A group of Cockneys arm themselves to rescue their elderly relative and his retirement home friends who are trapped and fighting off a zombie attack during a zombie apocalypse in…
The Wedding Ringer (2015)
Doug Harris is a loveable but socially awkward groom-to-be with a problem: he has no best man. With less than two weeks to go until he marries the girl of…
Soft Focus with Jena Friedman (2018)
Reporter Jena Friedman finds an unexpected way to educate men about campus rape. Later, a cop’s online cannibal fetish ruined his life, but can Jena salvage his love life?
The Cheyenne Social Club (1970)
Two cowboys inherit a “social club” specializing in satisfying men.
Mo Amer: Mohammed in Texas (2021)
In his hometown of Houston, Mo Amer takes on pandemic panic, disappointing Bradley Cooper, hummus appropriation and the subtle art of cursing in Arabic.