Mother’s Day (2016)
Director: Garry Marshall
Actors: Britt Robertson, Jason Sudeikis, Jennifer Aniston, Julia Roberts, Kate Hudson, Sarah Chalke
Country: United States of America
Cuban Fury (2014)
Beneath Bruce Garrett’s under-confident, overweight exterior, the passionate heart of a salsa king lies dormant. Now, one woman is about to reignite his Latin fire.
I Think My Babysitter is an Alien (2015)
A world-famous astronaut returns home from his latest mission, bringing home a small asteroid that hit his space station. When strange things start to happen, his nine-year-old daughter is convinced…
Joe Rogan: Talking Monkeys in Space (2009)
‘Talking Monkeys in Space’ captures Rogan breaking down cultural taboos; exploring his subjects with a raw honesty that is as engrossing as it is hilarious. Exuding a mad joy for…
Shipyard Sally (1939)
A lancashire singer buys a pub in Clydebank and hits money troubles when the shipbyards are closed. She takes a petition to London to try to get them reopened.
Baby Bulldog (2020)
Animal loving Amber is racing the clock and taking on city hall for her new dog Shadow and learning that you can’t judge by what you see.
Big Bully (1996)
A writer returns to his hometown where he faces the childhood nemesis whose life he ultimately ruined, only the bully wants to relive their painful past by torturing him once…
Vera and the Pleasure of Others (2024)
Seventeen-year-old Vera earns money by secretly renting out an apartment to teenagers seeking privacy, all while eavesdropping from behind a closed door. As she listens, her own desires awaken.
A Lot Like Christmas (2021)
Jessica Roberts owns the most popular Christmas Tree lot in the picturesque New England town of Hudson Springs. But when big-city marketing executive, Clay Moore moves a “Big Box” store…
She Hate Me (2004)
Fired from his job, a former executive turns to impregnating wealthy lesbians for profit.
All This and Rabbit Stew (1941)
Bugs heckles a black hunter and escapes from a bear. One of the “Censored 11” banned from TV syndication by United Artists in 1968 for racist stereotyping.