P.A.N.I.C. in Griffith Park is a video tape of a popular Los Angeles play about late 1980s life had the so-called LaRouche initiative of 1986, Proposition 64, been approved by California voters. The authorities lack enough facilities to hold and test all those suspected of being seropositive for the AIDS virus, so L.A.’s Griffith Park becomes a temporary concentration camp. Four gay men and a drug abusing rock and roller are rounded up and must deal with life under the rules of Proposition 64.
A newlywed couple arrive at their hotel only to be held captive by a criminal who's bombed the parking garage and has another ticking time bomb in this Greek shot-on-video comedy.
Andy’s friends confront both their own mortality and the deadly new disease stalking their community, while his conservative family grapples with never having come to terms with his sexuality.
It's the most exciting moment of the year: Easter night and little Mimosa birthday. Muskotti, her mother, has such a bad memory that she doesn't know how old Mimosa is.
This time, Leon Schuster plays a filmmaker who is making a candid camera movie, only to discover that another filmmaker has stolen his ideas and is making the identical picture.
Documentary filmmaker Christian Blackwood profiles controversial Filipino director Lino Brocka, detailing his rags-to-riches rise in the mainstream film industry of the Philippines.
Radha, a young man, visits a village to attend the wedding of his friend's sister. However, when the groom runs away, he is forced to marry the devastated bride.