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Suggestions of similar film to Complexo: Parallel Universe
There are 8954 with the same cinematographic genres, 373 films with the same themes, to have finally
70 suggestions of similar films.
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Complexo: Parallel Universe, you will probably like those similar films :
, 1h21
Origin USAGenres Thriller,
DocumentaryThemes Films about education,
Documentary films about citiesRating68%
The film follows four families from Harlem and the Bronx in the months leading up to the lottery for one of the Success Academy Charter Schools (then known as Harlem Success Academy), one of the most successful charter schools in New York City. The film explores the debate surrounding the education reform movement. The film highlights the opposition from the teachers' unions to charter schools (as they are usually not unionized), and the contest between charter and public schools for building space., 1h19
Origin USAGenres Documentary,
HistoricalThemes Documentary films about citiesRating74%
The film begins with a former resident of the Pruitt–Igoe public housing complex returning to the site of the buildings in the north side of St. Louis, and noting that in spite of the decades since the planned demolition of the buildings, the site remains largely vacant. It continues by detailing the decision by the city to replace 19th century tenement housing with high-rise public housing, ultimately designed by Minoru Yamasaki (later the famed designer of the World Trade Center) in the modernist style as thirty-three 11-floor buildings. , 1h36
Origin South africaGenres DocumentaryThemes Films set in Africa,
Films about racism,
Documentary films about racism,
Documentary films about law,
Documentaire sur une personnalité,
Documentary films about politics,
Documentary films about cities,
Political filmsRating68%
Alongside the southernmost urban centre in Africa, separating city from ocean, lays a very special strip of land. Set against the beautiful backdrop of the Atlantic Ocean on one side and Signal Hill on the other, the Sea Point Promenade – and the public swimming pools in its centre – forms a space unlike any in Cape Town. Once a bastion of Apartheid exclusivity, it is nowadays unique in its apparently easy mix of age, race, gender, religion, wealth status and sexual orientation. Somehow this space has become one where all South Africans feel they have a right to exist, and where the possibility of happiness in a divided world doesn't seem unfeasible. But what is the reality of those coming here? How do people see their past, their present in this space and their future in this country?