
André Is An Idiot, Tony Benna’s documentary following André Ricciardi’s journey after receiving a terminal diagnosis, has been acquired by Joint Venture.

André Is An Idiot, Tony Benna’s documentary following André Ricciardi’s journey after receiving a terminal diagnosis, has been acquired by Joint Venture.
Huang Xi’s intergenerational drama Daughter’s Daughter is a portrait of motherhood shaped by grief and memory. Sylvia Chang stars as a mother who loses her daughter in an accident and has to make decisions about a frozen embryo she left behind.
CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp travel across the country, memorializing the bedrooms of kids lost to gun violence, in the short documentary film All the Empty Rooms.
Directed by Marie Losier, Peaches Goes Bananas is a free-spirited and intimate dive into the life of the provocative queer feminist icon/musician Merrill Nisker aka Peaches, alongside a rotating cast of her longtime collaborators and friends from the international performance-art world.
Some might say that the Christmas season is just starting to begin, but for the families in the documentary The Merchants of Joy directed by Celia Aniskovich, it begins way earlier than expected.
In 1985, the Chicago Bears, coming of a one-loss regular season, and seven weeks ahead of their win in Super Bowl XX, released a song “The Super Bowl Shuffle” which instantly became a viral hit.
Here is the first look – teaser trailer for Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, the science fiction film starring Sam Rockwell as a mysterious “man from the future,” joined by an ensemble cast including Haley Lu Richardson, Michael Peña, Zazie Beetz and Juno Temple.

Chris Moukarbel is set to direct a new documentary film exploring the life and career of singer/songwriter/producer Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds.
Reflection in a Dead Diamond, directed by Bruno Forzani and Hélène Cattet, centers on a retired spy whose quiet life on the French Riviera unravels after his neighbor’s disappearance forces him to confront the ghosts of his past.
Where Diary of a Wimpy Kid showed us Greg Heffley working his way up the middle school social ladder, The Plague turns this innocuous experience of adolescent mingling into a psychological horror.