Stefan Spasov

Igor and his small gang of football fans plan an armed robbery, triggering an unexpected turn of events which force Igor to deny his nationality, religion, family and f riends - the four key pillars of his identity. Set in multicultural Skopje, I am not Igor is a story about what is left of us when we stop believing that we really are our personal story about ourselves.

Three Macedonian women have to contend with control over their bodies, tradition, loyalty, pregnancy and adoption. They have not set out to change the world or society, but their struggle to become mothers makes them unlikely heroines. The three bittersweet stories, one medieval, two contemporary, mirror and contrast one another, exploring themes of love, trust and motherhood.

7.4/10

Andrea is home alone. Dona convinces her to go to the party where Viktor, who Andrea has a crush on, will be. In the club they see Viktor with another girl, and with Andrea’s brother. When Dona asks Andrea to find out who the girl is from her brother, their friendship takes a different turn.

It is a time when Rome rules the world with the power of life and death in their hands. The province of Roman Palestine is a bubbling cauldron of rebellion and control. And on this greater canvas Luke, narrates a story of wonder, amazement and impact... The world is anticipating this moment in history but no one can imagine God touching His creation in the form of a little baby named Jesus. Much is recorded in the Gospels about Jesus' miraculous birth, to a young virgin named Mary, in Bethlehem, but little is known about his quiet growing up in Nazareth. Joseph, his adopted father, seems to have died well before Jesus turns 30 and begins his ministry.

7.5/10

A small town girl, who is infertile, becomes obsessed with her friend’s newborn son, to a degree that she develops a “phantom pregnancy”.