Inside the Quiet Turmoil of One Hour Girlfriend

One Hour Girlfriend follows Richard, a withdrawn man who arranges a one-hour companion visit, believing intimacy can be treated like an experiment. What begins as a carefully controlled encounter gradually shifts as emotional walls erode, revealing a man wrestling with past heartbreak and a companion who becomes far more than a hired presence. The film stars Sofia Papuashvili, Chris Spinelli, and Phillip Kim Marra, with writing and direction by Gregory Hatanaka, who also produced the film alongside Chris Spinelli and Jamie Grefe with co-producers Geno McGahee and Warren Hong.

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Pour One Out for Logic: The Napa Boys and the Joy of Total Absurdity

From the jump, The Napa Boys feels like it starts halfway through its own mythology. Not in a clever mystery box way, but in a what did I miss and was I supposed to already love these people kind of way. The movie drops you into wine country with zero patience for orientation, which is either part of the joke or a dare to the audience to catch up or get out of the way.

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Clovers: Slots, Meth, and the American Hangover

Premiering at Slamdance Film Festival 2026, Clovers drops us into Asheboro, North Carolina, once labeled the fastest-dying city in America, and refuses to let us look away. Directed over a multi-year stretch by Jacob Hatley and Tom Vickers, the film centers on a quasi-legal strip mall casino and the orbit of people who land there when other structures collapse. What sounds like a gimmick becomes something heavier.

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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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