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1-26 of 26
- In this luminous tale set in the area around Sarajevo and in Italy, Perhan, an engaging young Romany (gypsy) with telekinetic powers, is seduced by the quick-cash world of petty crime, which threatens to destroy him and those he loves.
- Documenting Roma wedding traditions of the 1980s-90s in Vojvodina from VHS tapes. Explores persisting customs, evolutions, revivals, and generational perspectives on early marriages, virginity's significance tied to their nomadic history.
- Matko and his son Zare live on the banks of the Danube river and get by through hustling and basically doing anything to make a living. In order to pay off a business debt Matko agrees to marry off Zare to the sister of a local gangster.
- Edward Elric, an alchemist from an alternate world, races to prevent the Thule Society from harnessing alchemy to wage war on his home.
- Peli and Nina are a couple from a traditional Roma community who were married by arrangement and are parents to a little girl. However, local custom posits that a marital union can only endure if the couple conceive a boy who can later inherit the family's badge - the chalice (tahtai).
- Let us go behind the cliches and meet a group of Gypsies who live in unimaginable poverty. Nonetheless, their life philosophy is nothing short of inspiring.
- Romaho no have eat and clothes
- A Roma family and their loving struggle for the rights of their children over the course of six years in an Italy where the winds of fascism are blowing again.
- Three young adults on a journey. Mission: to return an old wall clock to their grandmother. A story about a small mission that becomes a great journey.
- In the back room of a flower shop, Tomi, Rasto and Mizu are digging a tunnel in order to break into the safe of the National Bank. After heavy rainfall, the underground maze gets submerged by water and they are forced to stop working.
- Gypsy tells the story of Adam, a boy who, after his father dies, tries to cross the boundary of his Roma shantytown and to improve the lives of his brothers and sisters. He encounters racial, social and cultural prejudices and comes into conflict with the unwritten laws of his own community. Circumstances turn against him and his situation drives him to commit a tragic act: murder.
- A music-driven documentary about a deaf gypsy girl falling in love with Bollywood.
- Muzafer Bislim comes up with some of his most insightful songs while sitting on the floor, recording lyrics into a cassette recorder bought at a flea market. A poet and songwriter who collaborates with the biggest names in Romani music, the 54-year old lives a life of modest means with his family in Shutka, Macedonia. Stored in the corner of his one-room house is a tottering, ceiling-high stack of handwritten, 25,000-word, multi-dialect dictionary of the oldest and most obscure words in the Romani language, which he has painstakingly collected over 35 years. When he's invited to the International Biennial of Poets held in Paris, he sees the trip as an opportunity to have his dictionary published. A testament to the endurance of a people who have been scattered across Europe, the dictionary is not only a work of art but also a rare link to a divided past. Punctuated by Bislim's poetry and original songs, some of which we hear at the moment of their creation, Flames of God immerses the viewer in the literary and musical traditions that this extraordinary artist is committed to preserving.
- A film about Roma deportations.
- A selection of major musicians, representative of the phenomenon of "World music". Each film proposes to take the time to discover the culture and the source of inspiration of the chosen musicians and to create a real meeting between directors and artists. A little of the legend of a people rediscovered, thanks to a group bringing together the kings of Gypsy/Roma music.
- Lida Goulesco and Schnuckenack Reinhardt Quintett recorded live 13/14 May 1970 at Heidelberg and Ludwigsburg, West Germany.
- Following the twists of the Danube, we meet the Roma, the most numerous minority in Europe. Princes Between Men is a poetry about the culture of the Roma ethnic group, imbued with music, ideas of freedom and an unbridled thirst for life.
- Sad and funny story about the ordinary family of Russian Roma who rides to the next village to take a wife for son.
- This intimate story chronicles the relationship between musicians Faith and Branko over 7 years. In 2011, Faith travels from England to Serbia to learn gypsy accordion. She meets Roma violinist Branko and despite language barriers, they fall in love through music. Captivated by their musical chemistry, they marry and take their duo abroad. Their relationship is tested when they realize their differences and that music may be all they have in common.
- Katica - a mother of 14 and her two brothers Zoran and Zlatko at the borderline of poverty in modern Europe, make us question, are we living in the free world if the 3.6 billion of our fellowman's actions are controlled by their scarcity?
- Adi and Florin come from Romania. They are "illegals", earning money from escort services in various Geneva gay bars. Dissociated from reality through the use of a blue movie screen background, they reenact their own experiences and talk about their dreams of money and cinema. By playing with ideas and stereotypes of masculinity as represented by Adi and Florin, two members of the Roma community, the film seeks to explore the gap of shared experience and misunderstanding between its players and its audience.
- In the Gypsy quarter of a village in Transylvania, an old woman has died. During the two nights preceding the funeral, family, friends and neighbors follow one another at his bedside to accompany his departure in music. Their lamentations are captured crescendo by the camera in a single take.
- The protagonists do not fit into the majority society or their own community because of their sexual orientation, religious beliefs and physical disabilities. Factual observation of their struggle for a life shows they are not bitter.