A ride-share driver finds himself transporting the man who is secretly sleeping with his wife.
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Masaharu Fukuyama reprises his role from 2008’s “Suspect X,” playing the physicist-cum-detective Manabu Yukawa. The scientist-sleuth arrives in an oceanside town to speak on a panel. But when a man turns up dead outside the inn where he’s staying, Yukawa begins to unravel the connections that tie the victim to the activist daughter of the innkeepers, and a precocious boy who first appears on a train—and keeps popping up. It’s a Sherlock Holmes mystery with an environmental twist, and one that should please fans of a classic whodunnit.
“Ben 10: Race Against Time” has Ben back in his hometown of Bellwood. Even though he’s back in school and leaving his hero adventures behind him, it seems that Ben will be facing his greatest challenge yet.
Journalist Brea and her boyfriend John are off on a romantic weekend. On their way up the coast, they are accosted a group of men on motorcycles. Barely avoiding a fight, Brea and John continue their trip, unaware that they have inadvertently come in possession of a cell phone, which the bikers are desperate to retrieve. In their isolated rental home, Brea and John must defends themselves against the bikers, who will stop at nothing to destroy the phone and kill anyone who would tell their secrets.
Elise and her husband Allan have finally found the perfect home: it’s secluded, on a lake, and the two can finally enjoy a little quiet while Elise works on her novel. A few weeks later, a couple moves into the vacant cabin next door, and Elise goes to greet them, only to realize – she knows them. The new neighbors are Elise’s former best friend, Geena, and Lee, the man Geena stole from Elise years ago. The couple feels guilty for how their relationship ended and want to make things right – but unbeknownst to Elise, Lee will do anything to get Elise back.
The story centers on paroled white supremacist who has just killed a cop, and takes a black family hostage. Within hours of being released from 14 years of solitary confinement in maximum-security Pelican Bay State Prison, Garrett Tully is on the run again. When he finds a house off a dirt road and takes a family hostage, he thinks the Aryan Brotherhood has his back–and his kidnap victims are black. The family’s patriarch, Mr. Walker, is a jaded ex-con who hates cops so much he disavowed his own son for becoming one. Seeing a familiar desperation in Tully, Walker refuses to call the authorities for help, causing familial tensions to escalate, and soon grave missteps are made.
The film wryly expresses the changes in hierarchy, caste and the power equation when water, the most important resource, vanishes and how the oppressed become the oppressors. The story is told through two villages which were split based on caste and money but never through water. In the current situation, through reversals of fortune, the old world order has been broken and water becomes the biggest game changer. It has a domino effect on everything from social order to economics, even love and marriage. The film takes a satirical look at respect for resources, caste divides, and rural life against the backdrop of a traditional love story but all set in a realm where water is the new currency.
A journalist tries to balance the duties of marriage and motherhood while researching a piece on college women who work as prostitutes to pay their tuition.
When the groom’s oldest friend, Cole, (Jack Quaid) finds out his best friend, Jason, (Jared Wernick) is getting married, he escapes from the institution he has been incarcerated in and makes a surprise visit to serve as the best man. Something does not seem right between bride, Gretchen, (Justine Magnusson) and groom. None of their friends seem to fully support the marriage and have secrets of their own. Unresolved about their relationship and endlessly obsessed with the groom, Cole stirs up everyone and everything, making it a weekend to remember.
Alienated teen Pauline struggles with the pressures of fitting into high school, pleasing her mother and a burning desire to lose her virginity. With a grotesque curiosity for the darker side of life, Pauline is considered a social outcast by everyone around her. Enticed by flesh, she retreats into her own fantasies and hopes to become a great surgeon – that is, if she doesn’t go insane first.