More than once, the protagonists in Mimang wonder where they are and where they’re going—it is a concrete, geographical question born from walking around the streets of Seoul, but as the film progresses, that urban journey also proves to be an existential one. We accompany the characters in some stretches of their path—many years separate each of the episodes that make up the film, and that distance reveals changes through what remains. This is not a film about earthquakes, but about small transformations, and the marks of time can be seen not only in the actors’ bodies, but also in that other omnipresent protagonist that is Seoul, whose vitality invades every shot. Like others before him (it’s inevitable to think about Truffaut or Linklater), here, Kim Taeyang reminds us that cinema is the best time machine that has been invented so far.
a high-strung teen who finds herself trapped on vacation with her free-spirited mom’s (Bush) corny boyfriend, Glenn (O’Connell), who is also her vice principal. The teen sets out to salvage the trip by secretly plotting to break the couple up.
When Great White Sharks storm a Cape Cod water park, a washed-up football star-turned-lifeguard and his ex-girlfriend police chief must uncover the shocking secret drawing in the ocean's biggest predators before it's too late.
As graduation nears, scholarship students at a party face a night of terror when the wealthy elite crash in, acting on dark childhood traumas. Trapped, they must survive the chaos and violence until dawn.
"Escravos da Fé: Os Arautos do Evangelho" é o título de um documentário investigativo da HBO Max para 2026, que explora as complexidades e controvérsias em torno dos Arautos do Evangelho, um grupo católico conhecido por seus hábitos medievais e pela devoção à Maria, simbolizada pela "escravidão de amor" a Jesus, uma prática baseada em São Luís Maria Grignion de Montfort, contra...