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Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
Mathilda works in a club and takes care of little drug deals for her boss. Moni drifts from one one-night stand to the next. The quiet Pavel looses his job as a photographer. They meet in the club. Something happens between them.
Mathilda works in a club and takes care of little drug deals for her boss. Moni drifts from one one-night stand to the next. The quiet Pavel looses his job as a photographer. They meet in the club. Something happens between them.
The film primarily functions as a character study of an entrepreneur, documenting the personal highs and lows of rapid success and failure within the dot-com era without explicitly endorsing or critiquing the underlying economic system from a political perspective.
This documentary chronicles the journey of a white male entrepreneur in the early 2000s tech scene. Its casting reflects the demographics of its subject matter without intentional DEI-driven choices, and its narrative focuses on individual ambition and business challenges rather than critiquing traditional identities or emphasizing DEI themes.
The film 'Over Night' (2003) is a documentary detailing the chaotic making of 'The Room.' It focuses on the production process and the personalities involved, particularly Tommy Wiseau. There are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes explicitly presented within the narrative.
Over Night (2003) is a documentary about the making of Tommy Wiseau's 'The Room'. The film focuses on the production challenges and the personalities involved. It does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This film is a documentary about real-life entrepreneur Mark Cuban and the dot-com boom. It portrays actual individuals and events without adapting characters from fictional source material or altering the gender of historical figures.
This film is a documentary featuring real individuals, not fictional characters or historical figures portrayed by actors. Therefore, the concept of a "race swap" does not apply.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources