This week of cinema faces great challenges: “Piggy”, the butcher’s daughter, takes her destiny in hand. Alice and Kurt try to enjoy “The Golden Years”, together or alone, and in “Mother Teresa & Me” a young pregnant woman tries to find her way.
Sara must choose whether to save her tormentors or leave them to their fate of certain death.
In the spirit of one alex church has Spanish Carlota Martinez-Pereda created a closely observed and superbly captured horror satire. She uses elements reminiscent of the “Carrie” material to also tell a story about bullying, the emancipation of a young woman and the constricting morality of a rural setting.
it is exceptional Carmen Machi in the role of the lion mother, who protects her daughter from everyone on the outside, but at the same time is hard on her.
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He prefers to do nothing, she would like to travel: the turbulent start of a Swiss couple’s retirement.
Moving to a new stage in life isn’t always easy. Not even when two people like Peter and Alice had been happy together for years before. And when they reach the point where others usually separate, we leave Key holder Alice embarks on a new adventure with an eye to the future.
The main roles are played by the bright ones Ester Gemsch and the convincing in sensitive play Stefano Kurt. “The Golden Years” is sometimes dramatic, often humorous, sometimes delightfully abstruse. Despite its lightness, the film takes seriously what should never be lost in life: the courage to make personal changes.
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A British woman of Indian origin discovers that her existence is linked to that of Mother Teresa.
A British woman of Indian descent becomes pregnant with a man with whom she cannot imagine her future. If she keeps her child, she quarrels with her parents, who traditionally want to marry her, and her ethical concerns prevent her from having an abortion. To help his protagonist out of the dilemma, the director sends Kamal Musale she in her old homeland, where she learns a lot about her origins.
This is a beautiful setting for this film, which is essentially about something else: Saint Teresa of Calcutta, her charity work and its continuation.
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