Traditionally, movies make it to your local theater by way of studios that see enough financial potential to make money on them. Smaller filmmakers—or just filmmakers with non-mainstream films—usually don't get their movies shown in a theater outside of a film festival. We travel to film festivals all over the world and encourage submissions from undiscovered filmmakers to seek out the stories that deserve an audience.
Out of the hundreds of films we review throughout the year, our acquisitions team handpicks the most enriching ones to pass along to you. Each one is a movie with a story that matters. Stories that remind us about what it means to be human. That explore new possibilities. That help us understand more of the world around us.
Our selections include a wide range of topics from the power of the mind in What the Bleep Do We Know!? to living compassionately in The Tea Cup to the empowering message of creating your own destiny in The Secret or Illusion.
Spiritual Cinema Circle offers the opportunity for moviemakers to take a chance on subjects and storylines that have the power to become something much more than a movie. As a member, you help give these conscious filmmakers a voice. Even films that receive audience acclaim at small film festivals rarely ever get seen again. Together we’re helping change that.
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Current Month's Films

Lucky Boy
This short documentary follows the exploration of a college student searching for his birth mother.
12 minutes in English. Directed by Alexander Frank Gaylon.

Syntony
An expression of the kind of love that transcends, this short is a sweet reminder of who we are capable of being when we are led by our hearts.
8 minutes in Italian with English subtitles. Written and directed by Giacomo Arrigoni

Personal Spectator
Perhaps all we need is an audience to be as fabulous as we can be! Could “being seen” really be transformational?
15 minutes in English. Written and directed by Emmanuel Jespers.

A Relative Thing
Five brothers and sisters are reunited by a call to come home to be with their dying grandmother. A sweet tale of family, love and healing that everyone can understand: it’s a relative thing.
102 minutes in English. Written by Steve Edmiston. Directed by Garrett Bennett.