The Boy With the Floppy Hair: A Love Letter to Almost

Some short films try to tell a story. This one tries to bottle a feeling. The Boy With the Floppy Hair plays less like a traditional narrative and more like a whispered confession set to moving images. It is closer to a music video than a plot-driven short, built on impressionistic fragments of New York City and the ache of something that never quite becomes what you want it to be.

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OBEX: When Black Mirror Collides With Tron’s Analog Nightmare

OBEX is the kind of movie that feels like it crawled out of a dusty computer lab at 2 a.m., humming with static and bad ideas in the best possible way. It is lo-fi, deeply analog, aggressively strange, and proudly uninterested in smoothing out its rough edges. In an era where nostalgia is usually sanded down and sold back to us by algorithms, OBEX makes nostalgia feel uncomfortable again.

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Scammers, Surgeons, and Saw Adjacent Chaos in Twisted

Twisted arrives with a slick premise, a confident creative team, and the kind of setup that feels immediately ripe for tension. Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman and written by Jonathan Bernstein and James Greer, the film follows two millennial scammers running a bold New York apartment con. They flip properties they do not own, sell them to unsuspecting buyers, and move on before anyone catches on.

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