Felipe Vargas (MILK TEETH) electrifies the subconscious in the stunning ZZZ (North American Premiere), which sees a widow (Julieta Ortiz), enlisting the services of a sleep dealer in desperate hope of spending time with her deceased husband inside a dream. It’s a work that packs one hell of a concept and distinctive visual effects that impress to no end.
When childcare falls through, Clara decides to brings her eight-year-old daughter, Dora, along on a nighttime mission, treading a thin line between danger and family outing.
Children overcome obstacles to play soccer in a tournament in Colombia.
Sister Jones is facing a life-changing decision: return home and disappoint her family or continue her Mormon mission in Mexico, risking her own happiness amid intense familial and cultural pressures.
Ten-year-old Joaquín observes the feminine and masculine world around him wordlessly. On the eve of Mother's Day in 2000, his teenage sister runs away from home, upsetting the fragile balance of the household. Perplexed, Joaquín wonders what his place is in this family reconstruction.
Andres, disengaged and apathetic, spends his school days immersed in social media, disconnected from reality. When his brother, Miguel, attempts to halt a bullying incident during lunch, he suffers severe injuries. Instead of intervening, Andres documents the brutal altercation, capturing the harrowing event on his phone, revealing a stark reflection of his detachment from the world around him.
At her son’s wedding, a mother worries how her relationship with him will change as he marries a woman from a different cultural background.