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Jongens (English title: Boys) is a 2014 Dutch made-for-television coming-of-age romantic drama film directed by Mischa Kamp and featuring Gijs Blom, Ko Zandvliet and Stijn Taverne. The film was released on 9 February 2014.
Teenage Caveman (2002 film) Tendres Cousines; That's My Boy (2012 film) Therese and Isabelle; Thirteen (2003 film) Through My Window (film) Thulluvadho Ilamai; Too Young to Love (film) Top Spot; Towelhead (film) Toxic (2024 film) Tree of Knowledge (film) The Tribe (2014 film) Turn Me On, Dammit! Twist and Shout (film)
The film was originally released as Boys on the streaming platform Dekkoo in August 2018. [3] It was then screened as Jonas at the Festival de la fiction TV de La Rochelle in September, where it won three awards, including Best TV Movie. [4] In November 2018, it was broadcast on French TV channel Arte, attracting over 1,12 million viewers. [5]
The film opens with a lifeboat washing up onto shore of a tropical island. Inside the lifeboat is eight-year-old Robby. Robby explores the island but finds no signs of any other humans. He falls into a lagoon and almost drowns, but is rescued by a naked ten-year-old black native boy, whom Robby befriends and names Friday. [1]
Back Roads (2018 film) Backtrack (film) Bad Education (2004 film) Baga Beach (film) Baghban (1938 film) Bastard Out of Carolina (film) Beauty Mark; Bedevilled (2010 film) Black Christmas (2006 film) Blue Car; Border (2018 Swedish film) Bound (2015 film) The Boys of St. Vincent; Brimstone (2016 film) BUtterfield 8; The Butterfly Effect; By the ...
The movie premiered on August 1, 1972, in Los Angeles, but was withdrawn within a few weeks due to lack of public acceptance. Although it was called "very benign" by the US rating administration, it received an X rating. It has remained controversial ever since because of some lengthy full nudity scenes of teenage and preteen boys.
Leave it to any country but America to render the worst possible horrors (both psychological and physical) onscreen.
The British film Bend It Like Beckham was broadcast on North Korean state television on 26 December 2010, to celebrate foreign relations between the two nations; the film contains significant sub-plots about religion and homosexuality, but was edited down to half its original runtime for the broadcast. [362]