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1-8 of 8
- A contemplation on the strategies of men and women involved with the creation of humanoid, android robots. Robots that will perhaps one day expand the human body and the human life.
- Taddy Blazusiak and Andy Noakley share their preparations for the 22nd edition of the Red Bull Hare Scramble in Erzberg.
- In the Red follows a group of Strike Debt activists in New York over several weeks, engages in intimate conversations with the group revealing the collective decision-making processes. The film explores horizontalism, a social way of organizing that brings out richness and democratic inclusion unavailable in predominately hierarchical structures.
- The Right of Passage focuses on struggles to obtain citizenship, while at the same time questioning the implicitly exclusionary nature of the concept. Interviews with Ariella Azoulay and Antonio Negri form the starting point for a discussion with a group of people living without papers in Barcelona.
- In recent years, Switzerland has become the global center for commodity trading. In no other country are more commodities bought and sold than in Switzerland; nevertheless, the crude oil, copper, aluminum, coal or wheat never reaches Swiss territory because the deals are carried out completely in a virtual world. The film 'The Visible and the Invisible' addresses a relationship of exploitation between the toxic industries and inhumane jobs in the global South - where the majority of commodities are being extracted - and the gigantic profits from commodity trading in the hands of a few persons in the global North.
- Goa is not India, says Leon about the quaint village Arambol Beach situated in North Goa - a place well known as a meeting point for neo-hippies, where people are searching for health and new inspiration in life, and where dropouts spend their time relaxing and chilling at the beach. With a cheerful touch of irony the Austrian film maker Rudolf Gottsberger paints the loving pictures of five dropouts, who are stranded in Arambol: a panorama of dreams, wishes and desires, sometimes even the search for spiritual enlightenment. But the documentary also sheds light on the smaller and larger challenges of everyday life, its protagonists have to deal with... but just to enjoy shanti times again, as Elena, the Russian owner of the Hempcafe in Arambol describes.