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1-11 of 11
- A coven of witches mask their true identity by operating the "Sin and Skin" strip club in, "The Witch's Sabbath". To keep the coven as one, they must behead 666 victims before the arrival of their Dark Lord on Halloween.
- The story is told by a young Black man named Mitch, and is a flashback to his childhood in the United States in 1969, when he was eight years old. Mitch lived with his struggling white single mother, Louise. One day, Louise decides to pack up the family's meager possessions into their aging Cadillac and set out on a cross country journey, promising Mitch that it will be the "Best Month Ever!" The reason for this sudden change is tragic: Louise is terminally ill and has less than a month left to live, so she wants to find a safe home for Mitch to live in after she dies. Mitch and his mother bond over the ensuing few weeks against the social, economic, and racial turmoil of late 1960's America.
- An investigation of the 9/11 events by a Russian-American journalist and a father of a 9/11 victim implicates the US government in the attacks. Alex Prokop, a successful journalist, receives a rare 9/11 video tape revealing new information about the attack. The footage was sent by Paul Cooper, a driven researcher, whose daughter died on 9/11. Sensing a good story, Prokop travels with Cooper to New York and Washington, DC, where they uncover suppressed information implicating the US Government in the attacks. As Cooper introduces Prokop to key eye-witnesses, the facade of the "official story" begins to crumble. Prokop hears accounts of underground explosions in the Twin Towers moments before their collapse and discovers that the firm providing WTC security was run by the President's brother. We follow Alex and Cooper as they investigate the inexplicable collapse of the 47-story WTC Building Seven, disprove the implausible airliner "attack" on the Pentagon, and uncover the illegal destruction of physical evidence from Ground Zero. The pressure builds as the FBI intimidates Alex's editor, McGuire, to reveal key sources - while the magazine's corporate investors threaten to kill the entire story. Plagued by the ghosts of his Communist childhood and trying to uphold the independence of American journalism, Alex's search for the truth leads to a dangerous and shocking realization! The Reflecting Pool is an intense, sobering investigation into the most controversial tragedy of our time. Drawn from established sources and based on verifiable facts, The Reflecting Pool is a thought-provoking study of a search for truth and the profound consequences of not looking for it any further than the nightly news.
- Feeling responsible for his wife's accidental death, Robert embarks on a cross-country trip with his infant son in search for the baby's estranged grandfather. Along the way they encounter a gallery of colorful family members and strangers, each providing a stepping stone toward their destination. The father-son bond grows each day, but the guilt and loneliness deepen the man's despair. As the landscape changes from the autumn colors of the Northeast to the barren terrain of Badlands and Utah, the man begins to entertain the notion of giving his son up for adoption. The plan to abandon the child takes an unexpected turn upon discovering the grandfather's dwelling in Northern California.
- The distinction between sanctioned killing and plain murder gets blurred for a War-on-Terror veteran.
- An adolescent boy draws the shortest lot in a grim dystopian children's game in which he must hunt down a mythical man-beast, WILDMAN, and bring back a lock of its hair before the other children find him. Under chase by the other children, the boy abandons the path for the deep woods. As he journeys, the forest comes alive around him culminating in the figure of the Wildman, an injured and vulnerable creature made of leaves and sticks.
- Suburbia 1967. Eleven-year-old Susan Bradley has only one thing on her mind, and it's not schoolwork. It's Mike Nesmith of The Monkees, the popular pop group made famous in the television sitcom of the same name. Susan, with "boyfriend" Nesmith, lives in a daydream, a sixties riot of psychedelic colors and goofy, soft-focus, teenage-girl love scenes. Her well-meaning parents try to snap her back to reality, but it takes an informative copy of Teen Life to finally open Susan's eyes.
- When two Ukrainian soldiers of two opposite sides of the front of contemporary war find themselves in one house, there is much more at stake then just who is going to win.
- Five identical brothers embark on a life-long struggle for personal independence from one another.