The Borinage through the eyes of the painter van Gogh, in From Vincent’s House in the Borinage.
The Borinage through the eyes of the painter van Gogh, in From Vincent’s House in the Borinage.
In Inhambane, several stories get interlaced: Nyo Vweta Nafta.
The director writes a letter to his late grandmother, in Num Globo de Neve.
A mysterious cartography of Oporto, in Ubi Sunt.
Ironic and colorful sketches about the circus: Circo.
The blind experience a famous painting, in Antão, o Invisível.
Faced with the possibility of an ending, the director decides to create a time capsule made of images – iconic and banal, public and personal – aimed to a future intelligent species, and starts out an exploration of places, images and ideas.
Toxic oil spills, transgenic plants and androids appear in Semente Exterminadora.
A couple buys a house on the island of Pico, in Azores. The construction is halfway through when the wife arrives. They haven’t seen each other for a long time. But where love is supposed to celebrate yearning, it is fear that takes root.
Humanity cycles and nature’s persistence interplay in Um Campo de Aviação.
A sweet portrayal of suburban neighborhood life, in Tudo o que Imagino.
In O Homem de Trás-os-Montes, a director looks for a film in the north of Portugal.
Memories embedded in an abandoned space: Limoeiro.
Taking as its starting point the photographs taken by the Portuguese political police (1926-1974), including a mug shot of a woman holding a child, Luz Obscura seeks to reveal how an authoritarian system operates within the family intimacy.
Miragem Meus Putos is composed of three stories about youth.
Bound by a silent pact, five students make a secret trip to the country for what seems to be an initiation ceremony. In threatening landscapes and abandoned ruins, they submit to the strange rituals of their leader, the Dux.
A boy learns what it means to die: Cidade Pequena.
In Cape Verde the vulcano is father and executioner: Na Cinza Fica Calor.