Editor
II Guerra Mundial. Clara sólo tiene doce años, pero se embarcará en una peligrosa misión junto a su madre y sus hermanos para rescatar a su padre, que está retenido en un campo de prisioneros de guerra. Con la ayuda del misterioso y mágico Drosselmeyer, puede que la pequeña Clara consiga experimentar un auténtico milagro navideño.
Editor
An ambitious magazine editor gets too caught up in a high-stakes sex scandal and is framed for murder.
Editor
Liz le dice a su vieja amiga Bárbara que cree que su ex marido la está espìando. Planea salir de la ciudad por un tiempo y una estancia en una cabaña en las montañas. Barbara se invita a sí misma y cuando parece que Dale les ha seguido a la cabina, Barbara descubre que no conoce a Liz tan bien como ella pensaba.
Editor
Nathan es un joven que vive con su madre drogadicta a la que tiene que ayudar prostituyendose para conseguir dinero. El día que su madre muere de sobredosis, huye de los servicios sociales en busca de su padre.
Editor
Five astronauts make the first manned trip to Mars in the second decade of the 21st century. They must battle and overcome inferior computer components, corporate greed and indifference, and their own personal problems, as well as the surprises that the Red Planet has in store for them.
Post-Production Manager
An American elementary school program from the 1970s, Man: A Course of Study (MACOS), looked to the Inuit of the Canadian Arctic to help students see their own society in a new way. At its core was The Netsilik Film Series, an acclaimed benchmark of visual anthropology from the National Film Board that captured a year in the life of an Inuit family, reconstructing an ancient culture on the cusp of contact with the outside world. But the graphic images of the Netsilik people created a clash of values that tore rifts in communities across the U.S. and revealed a fragile relationship between politics and education. A fiery national debate ensued between academic and conservative forces.
Editor
An American elementary school program from the 1970s, Man: A Course of Study (MACOS), looked to the Inuit of the Canadian Arctic to help students see their own society in a new way. At its core was The Netsilik Film Series, an acclaimed benchmark of visual anthropology from the National Film Board that captured a year in the life of an Inuit family, reconstructing an ancient culture on the cusp of contact with the outside world. But the graphic images of the Netsilik people created a clash of values that tore rifts in communities across the U.S. and revealed a fragile relationship between politics and education. A fiery national debate ensued between academic and conservative forces.