Amin's grandmother is sick. and his uncle, who owns a beach motel wich served several guests who they are foreign engineers , asks Amin to take care of the motel for only two days so that he could visit his mother before dies. And this is the beginning of physical, mental and spiritual maturity for Amin.
2022
The outcry of ants
It's The story of some lost people in this century
Without Aban
Aban is a forest ranger who has to get married in another month. In a chase with wood smugglers, he finds a little girl on the road who has died. Everyone doubts that he must have had an accident with the child, but Aban does not admit it, but admits that he killed a girl 15 years ago in such a situation and secretly buried her. The police ask him for a sign or a document, but he has no evidence, and even the place where he buried the child has become a highway …
ᎤᏕᏲᏅ (What They’ve Been Taught)
Filmed on the Qualla Boundary and Cherokee Nation, ᎤᏕᏲᏅ (What They’ve Been Taught) explores expressions of reciprocity in the Cherokee world, brought to life through a story told by an elder and first language speaker. ᎤᏕᏲᏅ circles the intersection of tradition, language, land and a commitment to maintaining balance. This film was created in collaboration with independent artists from both Cherokee Nation and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
07:00 AM
On a rainy night, Ashkan sees Hanieh and Raha in a taxi,who are not feeling well
Raha's mobile phone stays in the taxi Raha goes for a taxi to get her mobile
phone back Ashkan,who sees the street as lonely and dangerous,invites Haniyeh
Come to their house which is near.Maryam,Ashkan's fiancé,doubts the girls
by seeing their bad condition.
Ashkan tries to convince Maryam that there is no connection between her and the
girls But Maryam does not accept.
Echo
Ellie avoids verbal communication because she hears an ECHO of -what she thinks to be- the thoughts of the speaker. She survives thanks to her landlady. Manu moves into the apartment across. Day by day, their routines echo each others.
