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- Havana 2027: A 38-year-old man, after 10 years of sentence, leaves prison. Sad for the death of his girlfriend, he arrives in the city determined to end his life. A clown, Mofo, host of a TV show, makes him an offer to die in a great way.
- He was an icon for a generation of freedom fighters, frequently risking his life for his dream of universal social justice. But his final battle would be for the right to a dignified death. As a key figure in the Spanish resistance, Miguel Núñez paid a heavy price for confronting the Franco regime. He was repeatedly tortured, spent 14 years in prison and was sentenced to be executed. After his death sentence was commuted and he was finally released, Nuñez took on the dictatorships of Central America, fighting with the Sandinistas in Nicaragua and working with, amongst others, President Evo Morales. But when diagnosed with a serious illness, Nuñez chose to turn his death into an act of affirmation. Under pressure from the Church and the far right, doctors in Madrid are now reluctant to administer palliative care. Many patients have died in agony. Declaring that "if there is no freedom to die, there is no freedom to live", Nuñez became a passionate advocate for patients' rights.
- This documentary journeys to the kitchens of Peru's coast, highlands and jungle, as well as Peruvian expat communities in Paris, London, Amsterdam and New York for answers. From the most humble family kitchens to the poshest restaurants, from stories of pioneering Peruvian chefs abroad to those who preserve ancient recipes at home, we find that Peru's cuisine is deliciously integrating for its people, who have historically been marked by ethnic and economic differences. Renowned chefs such as Gaston Acurio, Ferran Adria, Juan Mari Arzak and Bernardo Roca Rey share their views on Peru's cuisine alongside those unsung chefs, who also dream of Peru's cuisine as a motor of development.
- This documentary tells a part of the forgotten history of the Mbya Guaraní people who ancestrally inhabited the basin and islands of the southern Paraná in Paraguay and Argentina (Departments of Itapúa and Misiones). In the 80's, they were exiled from their lands without consultation or compensation, violating international treaties, for the construction of the Yacyreta (EBY) binational hydroelectric plant in Paraguay and Argentina. Similar situation lived other members of this town in nearby regions, affected by the colonization of the Paraná riverbank, ending all cornered in small communities. The displaced tell their story, and tour their ancient Tekoha, their sacred places, to which they do not have access today because they have become the property of EBY or private estates. Survivors originating from these lands are currently demanding compensation for the granting of the last Itapúa forests for native peoples, so that they can be protected, as a national park.