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- A story of revenge, murder and violence in the gray streets of Lima.
- A woman who had a very hard life has to fulfill two roles in her life: a respectful mother during the day and a prostitute at night.
- When it is the time to shape reality, the spy world calls The Pro Bono Spy Hunter.
- Ariel and Rocío, two kids mistreated by their grandmother, flee from home in order to meet their mother, who is working in another country. The kids face menacing challenges and drift through several countries to find her.
- Challenged by phone by the Pro Bono Spy Hunter and his valet, The Boss travels to the year 2121, where the USSR won the Cold War. Caught spying, The Boss undergoes a subtle questioning technique that tortures him and his interrogator.
- Friedrich funds a contemporary clone of Karl Marx. Marx's hideout is in Peru. Karl will be in a meeting of the Communist Party. Dads, moms, and kids arrive to enjoy a birthday party. Karl freaks out, noticing a priest and nuns.
- Due to different circumstances several kids work in the streets of La Paz (Bolivia). While a group of Catholic priests help them they are endangered by organ thieves and drug dealers. When one of the children is kidnapped and the perpetrators evade the Bolivian police the Blessed Virgen Mary intervenes unfolding miraculous events.
- Under difficult circumstances Leonidas Zegarra is born in a little town in the Peruvian Highlands. As a child he falls for filmmaking. Facing illness, the opposition of his father, sorcery, critics and threats he devotes to it.
- When The Pro Bono Spy Hunter obtains data that can destroy the world, he must share it with The Boss at 3600 meters above the sea level in a faraway traditional Andean village with plenty of historic value located in Peru before the end.
- The Research Director loves art. At The Institute, he shares his passion with the visitors. He explains that art is like sorcery, and the artists have mind powers. In private, his viewpoint is down to earth.
- A strict priest denies a spy a by phone confession. On the phone, too, two nerdy and weird scholars keep a strange long chat on conspiracies, schemes, and plots. An odd conspirator rejoices in his power. All of the five sing what they say.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese journalist. He respects the policy created by the Chinese Communist Party. He points out that French sociology is a science that favors capitalism. And that it is an absurd science compared to Marxism.
- A wealthy executive seeks to take the wife of a humble cab driver, giving him a job in one of his companies and sending him on a trip to Bolivia in order to consummate his lust.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out an audience knows what entertains it. If they like what a film director does, they like his style. It is his brand.
- A reincarnation of Karl Marx hides in Peru. Friedrich pays Karl's expenses and research. Karl wants to be a famous artist. Marx falls in love with the Leonidas Zegarra House Museum. He calls Friedrich and leaves twenty-four voice messages.
- In a Latin American country, an Intelligence Officer and a Sociologist analyze the psychological operations required to remove a recently elected babysitter from the Presidency of the Republic.
- A new reincarnation of Karl Marx hides in Peru. Friedrich pays Karl's expenses. Karl continues his studies and wants to become a renowned artist. He admires Leonidas Zegarra. Marx calls Friedrich and leaves nineteen voice messages.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that the Party will win the battle of ideas. The new tool is the 'law of attraction.' So, all will manifest what they want.
- ParlaNchíno, a Chinese journalist, explains the news for Spanish-speaking people from the perspective of the Chinese Communist Party.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that he knows Mr. Moo and his philosophy. Mr. Moo isn't a Marxist.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the Chinese Communist Party. He returns to explain the news. He was drunk the previous day. He points out that mainstream film directors defend capitalist values.