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- A nearly wordless visual narrative inter cuts two main stories and a couple of minor ones.
- A wannabe journalist investigates a London brothel. This film aims to bring awareness of the horrors and issues of human trafficking.
- At death's door, George Frederic Handel reflects, rages, and narrates his life. From his womanizing youthful days, to his rise in fame as a composer, God Rot Tunbridge Wells! pulls no punches in this wild romp of a biopic.
- Filled with undeniable style, the vibrations of local sound systems and rhythmic Jamaican patois, Julian Henriques' urban odyssey is an energetic declaration of British Caribbean Dancehall culture, shot on location on the North Peckham Estate. The cast of local artists glide between realism and whimsy using improvised dialogue and musical performance, with the titular Ragamuffins using musical innovation to sidestep the negative aspects of urban life. This film is regarded as a prelude to Henriques' ragga musical Babymother.
- Kate is a talented photojournalist. She risks her life to deliver powerful images to the waiting world until a photograph of a Girl changes her life forever.
- An elderly man has his dental appointment confirmed, he walks there from a group of tall apartment blocks, has a mould made of his teeth, it is rejected and another made. That's it. Filmed in retro scratchy and spotty sepia throughout.
- English language teaching series featuring many company board meetings and business deals.
- Thursday morning. Zagreb, Jerusalem, London, Cologne, Prague. Five people. Getting up. Going to work. In five cities-hives, like bees. Looking for the sweeter life then the one they are living now.
- To celebrate the online release of the British Council's Film Collection - an archive of 120 short documentaries made throughout the 1940s to showcase Britain to the rest of the world - we invited three contemporary UK filmmakers to respond to the Collection. John Akomfrah, Penny Woolcock and Mark Cousins each took a different view. 'But Then Again, To Few To Mention: A Life Of Bob' is Mark's response.
- Vaguely based on 'Hamlet' by William Shakespeare
- How Harris Tweed is made by the islanders in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.
- Bury It tells the tale of a blind football fanatic who along with his over zealous father, stumble across a group of builders playing a five a side football match. The builders are not amused until, Psycho the leader of the gang invites the imposters to play. The father and son soon realize that Psycho's intentions are not as friendly as they first appeared, and that they are going to have to do more than just play football to get through this game.
- A sardonic tale of love, sex and female perversion - a succulent slice of modern sin.
- Ed and his friends have a night out. While they are out his cartoon creations come to life causing mayhem.
- A teenage carer is determined to find a better life for herself and her little brother, no matter what that takes.
- A group of young people face their own personal challenges while attempting to explore issues of human rights through music.
- A submergence into the vivid realities of three Transgender sex workers living in Cape Town, South Africa during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Macy is a teenage girl. She has devised a cunning way to get out of school and instead, spends part of her day going with men for money. But on this day, Macy's double life comes crashing down on her. The school has written to her aggressive mother and Macy walks home to a heavy confrontation. But Macy has planned an escape from her miserable home, for herself and her young brother. However, she has to meet a client first. The evening turns nasty, bringing back memories of her abused childhood. Alone in a hotel, Macy phones for help - at last