On the evening of their arrival in the Swabian province, which has been touted to them as the "promised land of work," three young Turks, Erol, Mehmet, and Ümmet, arrive at a migrant workers' bar. There they meet the charming Lena, who lives in the apartment across from them and shows them to their lodgings. In their room, they find a milk bottle with a large pig on it. Do Germans really drink pig's milk? Without any knowledge of German, it proves extremely difficult to verify Ümmet's grim premonition.
Anita and Marion realize that an abandoned baby they sneaked into an orphanage was kidnapped from a ...

The teacher at school made a scientific experiment - he put two rats in different cages. One of the ...

Costante dies and leaves his wife Torella his computer discovery. Torella entrusts the disk to her h...

A man is sick and he doesn’t show himself. Three people don’t go to visit him and they show themselv...

According to Muslim practice, burial ought to occur within 24 hours of death — so after Manny’s immi...

Moses searches for history into palletes.

A chilling short horror film about two young strangers waiting for the bus and getting entangled in ...

The Pani company employs a dark-skinned supplier. The young Karim gets into a difficult situation th...

The washing machine bites the dust: turning the humdrum life of a young couple upside down.

Two teenage couples are spending a weekend together in a house by the sea. When new feelings develop...

We all have secrets. We all have family. We all search for happiness. What if we share our secrets a...

Morgan loves fly fishing in the river near her home. She also likes boys. But boys don’t like girls ...

Sometimes you don't realize how thirsty you are until it's right in front of you.
George Bonicelli, an unassuming, naive accountant, has his routine '9 to 5' existence turned on it's...

He's a mild mannered accountant from out of town; She's an extraterrestrial from the planet Ultra Te...

The extremities of a middle-class being ramble on, reflecting poetically on the wretchedness of mod...