Laundry Worker
Интернет-компания «Сфера» преподнесла человечеству подарок. Вся информация обо всех людях собрана в единую компьютерную сеть. Теперь единственный универсальный идентификатор предоставляет доступ к электронной почте, страничкам социальных сетей, банковским картам и информации о каждом шаге человека... Теперь никто не попадёт в беду. Спасатели быстро отыщут и придут на помощь. Теперь не будет преступлений. Ведь преступнику не укрыться, и наказание настигнет неизбежно. Но на практике не всё оказалось так гладко. Одни люди оказались не готовы постоянно находиться под всеобщим наблюдением. Другие не смогли удержаться, чтобы не лезть в чужую личную жизнь. А главы компании позаботились о том, чтобы их тёмные дела не попали под пристальный взор «Сферы»...
Mannequin
A deserted cliff. Lightning appearing out of nowhere. A mysterious lady all dressed in white. Netflix’s latest original program, “Meridian,” is spooky, confusing, and only 12 minutes long. That’s because although “Meridian” is available on the streaming service worldwide, it was made not for Netflix’s 83 million subscribers, but for algorithms and their programmers. Director Curtis Clark likely had artistic reasons for adding the film’s strange effects. But those elements are primarily there because they tend to trip up video codecs, or software that compresses and decompresses digital video, and other elements of the streaming pipeline.
FBI agent (uncredited)
Jo Bole So Nihaal (also transliterated as Jo Bole So Nihal; literally meaning "Whoever utters shall be fulfilled") is a 2005 Bollywood action comedy film, directed by Rahul Rawail. It stars Sunny Deol, Shillpi Sharma and Kamaal Khan in lead roles, whilst Nupur Mehta and Surekha Sikri appear in major supporting roles; the director also plays an antagonistic role in the film. Singer Kamaal Khan appeared first time on big screen in a negative role. This movie was his debut movie as actor. The film's release was met by protests from Sikh groups, who took offense at its use of a Sikh religious phrase as its title,[1] as well as scenes in which a Sikh police officer is shown being chased by scantily-clad women[citation needed]. Two bomb attacks on 22 May 2005 on theatres in New Delhi showing the film killed one person and injured 49, prompting cinema owners to pull the film, in some cases voluntarily and in some states as a result of a government order.