
Master thief John Robie has retired to the French Riviera and is enjoying retirement there when a series of thefts occurs, perpetrated according to his methods. To prove his innocence, Robie tries to unmask the culprit. In the process, he meets and falls in love with American Frances Stevens, but the romance comes to an abrupt end when her mother's jewels are stolen. At a masquerade ball, Robie tries to catch the real thief and win Frances back.

A young academy soldier, Maciek Chelmicki, is ordered to shoot the secretary of the KW PPR. A coincidence causes him to kill someone else. Meeting face to face with his victim, he gets a shock. He faces the necessity of repeating the assassination. He meets Krystyna, a girl working as a barmaid in the restaurant of the "Monopol" hotel. His affection for her makes him even more aware of the senselessness of killing at the end of the war. Loyalty to the oath he took, and thus the obligation to obey the order, tips the scales.

Set in a magnificent villa near a sun-drenched St. Tropez, lovers Jean-Paul and Marianne are spending a happy, lazy summer holiday. Their only concern is to gratify their mutual passion - until the day when Marianne invites her former lover and his beautiful teenage daughter to spend a few days with them. From the first moment, a certain uneasiness and tension begin to develop between the four, which soon escalates in a dangerous love-game.

Following in the great tradition of his classic "How To" animated shorts of the 1940's, Goofy makes his return to the big screen in "How to Hook Up Your Home Theater". When Goofy is desperate to watch the Big Game, he heads to his local electronics store to tackle every consumer's nightmare - selecting the perfect home theater system and worse, trying to hook it all up.

A routine tow lands Mater in Tokyo, where he is challenged to a drift-style race against a nefarious gang leader and his posse of ninjas. With the help of his friend, 'Dragon' Lightning McQueen, and some special modifications, Mater attempts to drift to victory and become Tow-ke-O Mater, King of all Drifters.

In the middle of an isolated wintry field, two lustful Gen-Xers get it on in the back of their toy-bedecked Mercedes, only to unwittingly find themselves in the last reel of a horror film gone horribly wrong. Not far away, a woman smashes her car into a tree, only to discover her leg is a shredded bloody stump. Hot on her heels is a faceless ghoul hell-bent on burying his axe in her skull. A tussle ensues during which bullets are fired and limbs are lopped off. Meanwhile, the young couple gets dressed and wipes the fog from their windows; only then do they become aware of the gory melee that occurred not ten paces from their vehicle.

After Stan and Ollie prevent a bank robbery by chance, they receive scholarships to Oxford University from the bank's director. There they become victims of the pranks of their fellow students. One day a window frame falls on Stan's head, whereupon he believes he is the master student Lord Paddington. As the latter, he also succeeds in stopping the further pranks of his fellow students. Ollie, who finds everything too much, wants to go back home.

Stan and Ollie play door-to-door Christmas tree salesmen in California. They end up getting into an escalating feud with grumpy would-be customer James Finlayson, with his home and their car being destroyed in the melee.

Stan and Ollie wreak havoc at an upper class hotel in their jobs as footman (Hardy) and doorman (Laurel). They partially undress blonde bombshell Jean Harlow (in a brief appearance) and repeatedly escort a stuffy nobleman into an empty elevator shaft.

Stan and Ollie want to sweep the chimney of the mad scientist Professor Noodle as chimney sweeps. Due to Stan's clumsiness, all sorts of funny mishaps occur, which end with the two of them soiling the entire living room with ash.

Otis Redding's moving performance at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, three months before he was killed in a plane crash. Backing bands accompanying him are Booker T. and the MGs and The Mar-Keys. In addition to the live performance of the Classic Southern Soul Man, Pennbaker, Hegedus and Dawkins give impressions of the special flair of the legendary festival.

The protagonists, two apparently well-off middle-aged gentlemen named Müller-Lüdenscheidt and Dr. Klöbner, are seen sitting at opposite ends of a bathtub belonging to a hotel room. In the course of the conversation, which is conducted in a measured tone but whose content consists mainly of biting remarks and accusations, it turns out that Dr. Klöbner has made a mistake about the room number and is therefore, as Müller-Lüdenscheidt puts it, "sitting in a foreign bathtub".

Paul Winkelmann is the CEO of a successful business in Hamburg that he took over after the death of his father eight years ago. But he is still strongly dominated by his 78 year old mother who cares for him as a child, and who cannot understand why he took an apartment on his own after all these years. The real "problem" starts when Paul gets to know psychologist Margarethe Tietze whose relationship to her parents is also not so easy after all.

A little boy folds a paper boat and sets it "afloat" in the gutter. When it starts to rain heavily, he runs into the house and the boat and its crew, three tiny pirates, go on a great voyage. One adventure chases the other!

Three friends, Alf, Bill and Fred (a man, a dog and a duck), share the same passion for bouncing up and down. One day Bill, the man, inherits a large sum of money and gives up his friends, who go on bouncing without him. But money does not make happiness and Bill, having fallen into depression, jumps off a 7 story building. He survives but loses his memory. After being welcomed back by his friends, the threesome decide to open the Dog and Duck agency, a business selling happiness to people.

Pluto comes bounding outside to help Mickey get a Christmas tree. Chip 'n Dale see him and make fun of him, but the tree they take refuge in is the one Mickey chops down. They like the decorations, especially the candy canes and Mickey's bowl of mixed nuts. But Pluto spots them and goes after them long before Mickey spots them. Minnie, Donald, and Goofy drop by to sing carols.

Private detective Philip Marlowe is hired by millionaire Sternwood to take down a gang of blackmailers. Before he begins his work, he meets Sternwood's two eccentric daughters, Vivian and Carmen. Shortly thereafter, after tracking down a swarming trade in pornographic literature, he finds Carmen, who is under the influence of narcotics, next to the body of one of the blackmailers. Afterwards, the bodies pile up and Marlowe himself narrowly escapes death before he can finally embrace Vivian.

In a streetcar, a black man is called a "negro" by an elderly lady and is showered with all kinds of prejudices that she can think of about his skin color. None of the other passengers does anything against the old lady, not even when a ticket inspector gets on. But now the black man sees a chance to take revenge: He snatches the woman's ticket out of her hand and eats it. Since she cannot show the ticket inspector a valid ticket, she has to leave the streetcar and also pay a fine.

Oh Dae-su, who lived with his wife and young daughter, is kidnapped on his way home while drunk. He is locked in a room for 15 years - without windows, without explanation, and without any contact to others. All he has is a TV, Chinese dumplings, and a growing desire for revenge. When he is suddenly freed, Oh Dae-su searches every Chinese restaurant to find the person who imprisoned him. However, what awaited him is not freedom, but a cruel truth entangled with revenge, guilt, and love.
Who did this to him? And more importantly, why? The answer is deeply personal and devastating.
Oldboy is the second film in Park Chan-wook’s revenge trilogy, a work where his flamboyant style blends perfectly with a dark and poetic vibe. At the time, it was received as shocking and daring, but it has since established itself as a representative film of the 2000s cinema.

Shocking, but with incomparable aesthetics, this film tells of an incident that is said to have happened in Japan in 1936:
Kichizo, a brothel owner, falls in love with the geisha Sada Abe. Soon he is addicted to her body and soul, their ecstatic love games take bizarre forms. More and more they lose touch with reality. On the hunt for the ultimate climax, Kichizo finally asks his geisha to strangle him during the act of love.