They call it karma. If you spread enough bad energy in the world, it will hit you sooner or later with the force of the butterfly effect. Karma works more accurately than you know, it's better than the wisest of judges and it doesn't know the meaning of mercy. Sometimes your perfect life is built on others' suffering. Your career is founded on the hard work of those who stay overtime, your personal life consists of more and more jilted women who come back at your slightest apologies. You pay for psychological help as you cannot find any friends to support you. What more do you need? Maybe a vampire kiss to make you crazy and a little bit more dead inside? Maybe a little thirst for blood and a vampire lover to expose your real nature? For Halloween connoisseurs, Vampire's Kiss.
We quickly realized that school education gives you a limited outlook on life. It provides theoretical knowledge, which has little to do with practice. For the latter, we should spread our wings, learn something about the world, and travel. Among hundreds of traveling vlogs and National Geographic highly awarded documentaries, giving you little tips of where to go, what to eat, and how to behave, you can rarely find the most interesting bits and pieces put into your repertoire for the nasty. A hilarious comedy, providing exaggerated stereotypes, awkward situations, the American perception of Europe, and something which still makes you willing to explore the unknown. Plus, some songs to hum, for whatever reason. Pure fun for the open-minded, Euro Trip.
It seems that some professions are treated with respect higher than is given to any others. By the cover of God, some are able to commit the worst crimes, cover the biggest lies, conduct any business fraud on a big scale and crush the lives of those who will be forever silenced by their trusted assassins, being at their most vulnerable. We all have some relationship with the Church: positive clashes with condemnable, high morale lose with the overall hypocrisy of those who cannot keep their promises of abstinence and celibate. Few practice what they preach, but the deeply rooted cause of many problems of the Church is still pushed under the carpet. Generations will pass until the problem is solved and this film is a sign of these changes. One story about a few priests. Who is the hero and who is the villain, and aren't we all people doomed to sin? Kler.
It's nothing new that in the realist universe of everyday repetitive actions we look for parallel universes. If our minds can imagine it, the concept may as well be true. Our world can be just one of the options. Our laws might not be laws obeyed everywhere and our species may be just one among numerous intelligent beings with nature, habits, and beliefs of their own. If you haven't already fallen in love with the world of Azeroth where the armies of humans and Orcs wage battles and wars, where honor and tribal traditions are of bigger value than you can imagine, where love is loyal, full of sacrifices, and surprisingly real in the high fantasy surroundings. Finally, where magic, evil, and death are your everyday bread and butter, then enter the World of Warcraft. And even if you're not a fan of computer games, this is still a spectacle worth noticing. Another world, another war, another Warcraft. Enjoy.
The contemporary world made it possible to steal someone's ID and in this way rob someone of one's identity. But making banks, internet services or car sharing companies believe that you are someone who in reality you are not, is one thing. But making people believe that you are a princess from a distant country, with different habits, customs, language, and religion, and making them act as you wish, is a talent in the making. How deceived we are because of appearances, why showing off is still one of our biggest vices, and how easily a witty servant can make fools of the entire British society. Based on a true story, Princess Caraboo.
Our lives consist of obsessions. We grow up being fans of certain people for certain reasons. We idolize some for achievements we would like to accomplish or for the talents we would like to have. We dig deep into the personal lives of our idols, out of curiosity or to compare if their happiness resembles our own. Willingly we enter a one-sided relationship which can last decades and is as consuming as the real one. We seem to be connected. But what if the obsession with one particular singer overshadows the real life and the real relationship? What if the object of your admiration all of a sudden becomes attracted to your second half? And why do we make so many relationship mistakes in search for the right person? It's never too late for celebrity disillusionment and falling in love. Based on Nick Hornby's novel, warm and funny, Juliet, Naked.
We all need to believe in love. It makes us heal from all these tragedies that hit with an impact of the end of the world, it makes us move from one place to another, it makes us flee from one broken heart to the arms of something new budding in the distance. It inspires us, makes us who we really are or who we were meant to be. We also need romantic comedies to prove that this love really can happen, regardless of our life stage and expectations. What if a teenager's secret love letters were sent and one of the recepient was the sister's boyfriend? What if while being in love with someone, you fell in love with someone else and your old crush turned into something real? Every generation has its love story, To All the Boys I've Loved Before.
We were raised in the cult of the omniscient, skillful, and handsome agent of the British Intelligence, who is able to fight any villain and win any beautiful lady. Literally: any. Not everybody can be equally charming as James Bond in all of his editions, but some can at least be placed in the same circumstances. They prevent the evil men of this world from stealing precious national treasure, overtaking the world, or simply being showed in good light as opposed to the light that rightly belongs to them, meaning shade. Reminding us all the comedic brilliance of Rowan Atkinson, engaging us in the British state of affairs and triggering the most unexpected laughs: from 2003 Johnny English, through 2011 Johnny English Reborn, to 2018 Johnny English Strikes Again. Prepare your tea and biscuits, and enjoy.
Are only genes responsible for our intelligence, skills, predispositions or personality traits? Or are we, as children, born a blank page and our childhood, upbringing, and actions stimulate our growth to the extent that we can be entirely different beings than our family members and distant ancestors? Some were willing to take part in quite an engaging experiment to check whether you can raise a child in a pre-scheduled way so that he or she could become someone specific. For all these parents who instill in their children their unfulfilled ambitions, for all families, which struggle due to unfulfilled expectations, and for us all an outlook on parenthood and growing-up. Can, finally, human beings be devoted for the higher purpose of science, or don't we all have the right to the so-called normalcy? Birthmarked.