Angry Indian Goddesses
A young woman living in Goa invites her longtime –yet seemingly different– friends because she’s getting married.
A young woman living in Goa invites her longtime –yet seemingly different– friends because she’s getting married.
Master of None is the fictionalized scripted version of Aziz Ansari’s life, following a late-twenty’s 2nd generation Indian-American who makes ends meet doing TV commercials while trying to make it big.
A boy who is obsessed with puppets falls in love with a doll-like girl, whom he grooms to be his, but she grows unruly.
Years after the passing of his parents, a little boy saves a baby girl from the same monsters that tried to kidnap him as a child. On his way to safety, he sets free the Monkey King.
Tired of seeing how women seemingly get a better treatment than him, Kiran wishes that roles could be reversed in contemporary India.
Is it possible to write a nonsensical story with a purpose? Jeffrey Lau’s early millennium period comedy -sometimes wuxia sometimes musical- of ‘imprisoned’ Imperial siblings that meet their destined lovers in the outcasts of a tiny village during the Ming dynasty seems to prove it.
Fresh of her mother’s divorce, Arisugawa Tetsuko hears about the mysterious murder of a student, and meets the peculiar shut-in girl named Hana with whom she’ll form a unique friendship of misheard words and quirky plans gone wrong.
An orphan with a crippled leg gets impregnated by a Queen Monster and gets aided by a female Monster Hunter who just wants to make a quick buck with a baby turnip monster.
Ozon begins his story with the tale of two girls who were practically born to be best friends forever, until death did them apart.
A teenage boy accidentally time-slips back to the Warring Era period, where he discovers historical figure Oda Nobunaga looks just like him.