What’s Your Name follows a girl from childhood to adulthood, revealing the quiet moments when her right to choose, to be heard, and to be respected is taken from her. Each silent loss shapes her fate, until she’s left bruised, voiceless, and burdened by all she was never allowed to say.
Walking home after training, Ainur’s mind plays a cruel game, imagining the dangers women face — harassment, stalking, kidnapping. Reaching home, her relief fades as violence echoes inside her house. In her books, she finds light—education as her only escape from darkness.
Every day for a woman is a sprint to «be the best and give your best», riddled with obstacles and injustices. Every day for a man is an ordinary day, where you don't have to earn recognition. By 2025, we're still not equal. And the most dangerous thing is to get used to this prolonged inequality.
In eastern Congo, young women are on the brink of inequality. Between poverty and tradition, they refuse to give in. A call for justice and hope, this film reveals their courage and their ability to transform their survival into change.
And it puts concrete proposals into action.
The film’s main purpose is to break stereotypes about inequality. It still exists, but to a much lesser extent than before, which means we must not stop striving to achieve high goals, even if it seems that the chosen field is considered more masculine than feminine.
Bea, an aspiring filmmaker, has an toxic relationship with her partner, John. While she deals with the symptoms of his abuses, she struggles with breaking into the film industry.
Still She Rides reveals the untold stories of Nepali women who face daily harassment on public transportation, yet continue to move forward with courage and resilience.
Monsters in the Dark explains the lack of attention that women get over their anxiety, mainly contributed to by men, by following a woman’s struggle with her fear of running alone at night.
Based on true stories, this film shares the emotional voice of a transgender girl in a conservative society. It challenges gender stereotypes and demands equal dignity, reminding us: before any label, we are all human.