
Los comedores de loto
Jan 20 2021
•Cast
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Ana Garcés
Lili

Dariel Herguedas
Marco
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Red Rooster
Ana returns to the village in summer with the intention of setting up a cinema in the courtyard of an old family house. One day she is working on her project and meets Lucía, an old acquaintance. She hasn't seen her for years but quickly starts to help Ana to make the cinema work properly. The screenings begin as the relationship between Ana and Lucia grows closer. Ana is worried about feeling integrated in the village, while Lucía suggests filming the different neighbours with her video camera so that they can appear in the screenings. The summer goes on and the village is emptying of people, while Ana and Lucía continue filming funny scenes. Soon it will be time for Lucia to leave the village and return to her life in the city, but Ana doesn't want to give up her new way of life in the village.

The Detectives
Three 13-year-olds start a detective agency and in solving their first case, learn about friendship and courage.

DAU. String Theory
Nikita Nekrasov is a scientist, a theoretical physicist who studies our world and other possible worlds. He refuses to make a choice between mathematics and physics, between one woman and another, as he ponders the existence of the multi-universe. At scientific conferences, attended by eminent foreign scientists and a rising younger generation of physicists alike, Nekrasov gets carried away debating the beauty of string theory. He attempts to explain to all of his women – Katya, the librarian, Zoya, the scientific secretary, Svetalana, the head of department – about the theory of his own polygamy, and the possibility of having enough feelings to satisfy everyone.

Why Be Good?: Sexuality & Censorship in Early Cinema
Before the G, PG and R ratings system there was the Production Code, and before that there was, well, nothing. This eye-opening documentary examines the rampant sexuality of early Hollywood through movie clips and reminiscences by stars of the era. Gloria Swanson, Mary Pickford, Marlene Dietrich and others relate tales of the artistic freedom that led to the draconian Production Code, which governed content from 1934 to 1968. Diane Lane narrates.