Nevertheless he worsens, as his drawings become emotional and his interest in Nia grows. Silas is diagnosed with Stage 1 and is given a prescription. He goes for a check-up and is befriended by an official named Jonas with stage 2 SOS. The following day Silas becomes distracted during a conference at Atmos, falls asleep more often, and experiences a nightmare for the first time. Later in a team meeting, he again sees Nia's expression portray emotion. Silas is the only group member to notice fellow worker Nia having an emotional reaction. The next day at work a suicidal employee jumps to his death and the emotionless workers coldly analyze the moment. Sufferers who do not take their own lives progress to stage four and are detained in the dreaded Defective Emotional Neuropathy Facility (the DEN), the Collective's institution, which no one ever leaves. Returning home one night, he sees two citizens detained by officials and is reminded of a purported epidemic of Switched-On Syndrome (SOS), a multi-stage "disease" that restores human emotions. Silas, a citizen, works as an illustrator for Atmos. Citizens are mentally stabilized and all emotions and most illnesses are eradicated, with emotion and sexual activity contrary to the society's rules, and conception is through artificial insemination via a conception summons. In a futuristic dystopian society, citizens, known as "members", live under the Collective, the legislative body which monitors and controls the people's actions. It grossed $2.1 million worldwide and received mixed-to-negative reviews. The film was released on through DirecTV Cinema prior to opening in a limited release on July 15 by A24. The film had its North American premiere in the Special Presentations programme at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. The film had its world premiere in 2015 in the international competition section of the 72nd Venice International Film Festival. Additional roles are played by Guy Pearce and Jacki Weaver. It stars Nicholas Hoult and Kristen Stewart as two people living in a dystopian, post-apocalyptic world where all the people are robotic, emotionless workers, and any sign of emotions is treated as a disease. For minority groups living in the city, looking for justice in a world where persecution based on skin color is the norm and the ability to fight back, united, and seeking equal opportunity is frowned upon, the battle continues when the outcome is determined with life or death remaining the only options.Equals is a 2015 American science fiction romantic drama film directed by Drake Doremus, produced by Michael Pruss, Chip Diggins, Ann Ruak, Michael Schaefer, and Jay Stern, and written by Nathan Parker from a story by Doremus. The story escalates as tensions rise between cops and the communities they are supposed to protect and serve hit an impasse. But the game and the world just lost a real solid brotha!”įilmed in 2019 and released on VOD in May 2020, “Equal Standard” was directed by Brendan Kyle Cochrane from a script by Bryan and followed everyday life in New York City where race, rank, loss and betrayal take center stage when NYPD Detective Chris Jones (played by Truvillion) is shot by one of his own during a dustup in front of a local bodega. Thank you Taheim for believing me! My words can’t really express this loss right now nor can I really express my love and gratitude for you Taheim. It’s hard to believe this is the new chapter. “He was very happy and super intelligent. A good solid honorable brotha!!! His character was intact and he didn’t waste his breathe when he spoke,” Truvillion wrote Friday on Instagram. “So saddened to hear my brotha was killed last night.
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