
When death is just the beginning, how important will it be to survive the end of times? Featuring 5 horrific tales from 5 up-and-coming indie filmmakers, Morbid Stories will become the latest horror anthology to die for this Halloween.

When death is just the beginning, how important will it be to survive the end of times? Featuring 5 horrific tales from 5 up-and-coming indie filmmakers, Morbid Stories will become the latest horror anthology to die for this Halloween.

The fates of Henry – a cynical American correspondent who has lost his soul – and Teresa, one of the Republic’s censors and in charge of overseeing the news that journalists can send abroad, cross in Gernika.

A socially awkward but highly enterprising teenager decides to acquire a “mail order best friend”; a sophisticated exchange student from France. Instead, he ends up importing his personal nightmare, a cologne-soaked, chain-smoking, sex-obsessed youth who quickly becomes the hero of his new community.

From the first time Zoe met her new teacher at St. Adeline’s Catholic School she knew something wasn’t right with Sister Sophia. Was it the red lipstick and refusal to recite the Morning Prayer? Or the way she eyed her brother Jason…like he was dessert? As Zoe’s suspicions grow so does the creepy bond between the “good” sister and her brother – a bond bordering on seduction. But who will believe her? After all, Sister Sophia is a woman of the cloth. Or is she?

Get The Gringo (How I Spent My Summer Vacation) directed by Adrian Grunberg is one of the finest movies to come out in the mid-2012 and one of the best Mel Gibson movies. A career criminal (Mel Gibson) nabbed by Mexican authorities is placed in a tough prison where he learns to survive with the help of a 9-year-old boy (Kevin Hernandez).

Celess and Tina play the game too well to be considered your average gold diggers. And they’re winning too. But when the jaw-dropping secret they both share is exposed, the same shovel that got them out of the dirt could very well bury them.

A broken heart consumes Nathan with bitterness blinding him from the true love of his life and stifling all his dreams. Sometimes finding love and happiness is as simple as opening up your heart.

In a not so distant future, where overpopulation and famine have forced governments to undertake a drastic One-Child Policy, seven identical sisters (all of them portrayed by Noomi Rapace) live a hide-and-seek existence pursued by the Child Allocation Bureau. The Bureau, directed by the fierce Nicolette Cayman (Glenn Close), enforces a strict family-planning agenda that the sisters outwit by taking turns assuming the identity of one person: Karen Settman. Taught by their grandfather (Willem Dafoe) who raised and named them – Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday – each can go outside once a week as their common identity, but are only free to be themselves in the prison of their own apartment. That is until, one day, Monday does not come home.

In 1953, two young Italian children are promised in marriage by their fathers. Twenty one years on – despite changing times, fading traditions and 70’s liberation – the pair are expected to marry, or face the consequences.

A Canadian POW major is rescued by a special British military unit made up of Germans to help lead an attack on a major Nazi fuel depot in Tobruk, Libya.

A couple who, in an effort to rekindle the spark in their marriage, head to a retreat. The path to their reconnection is met with hilarious farce, as they seek to find themselves and each other through their newfound sexual liberation.

The once beautiful Planet Kepler is now dry and near destruction after its precocious Callaro plant was exploited to extinction. Three brave space kids – Axel, Jono and Gaga – embark on a daring mission to rebuild their desolate planet.