Chit Thet Wai 1952
A 1952 Burmese black-and-white romantic-drama film, directed by Tin Maung starring Tin Maung, Kyi Kyi Htay, Thein Zaw and May Lwin.
A 1952 Burmese black-and-white romantic-drama film, directed by Tin Maung starring Tin Maung, Kyi Kyi Htay, Thein Zaw and May Lwin.
When rickshaw driver Pyar Laung falls for Datu, he hides his humble profession, but through helping his troubled friend Cho Yee with wisdom from Buddhist tales, he learns that truth and compassion matter more than deception.
In an impoverished outskirt of Yangon where the healthcare needs of the neighbourhood is great, a doctor tries to deal with the patients' problems and also his own.
Third feature by Director Lucius Wayne.
a group of teenagers buys an new apartment, only to be haunted by The Zwe
မာယာကျား is 2025 Burmese Comedy movie.
A documentary film that capture the moment of an old man in the dilapidated oldest cinema in Yangon reflecting his old day working in this cinema and missing the time with his beloved wife who has passed away.
Dr. Myat Htun struggles to maintain his moral compass while pursued by Kyar Phyu, testing his resolve as his terminally ill wife Daw Thit Sar depends on him.
When Yan Makha, whose fickle mind can never maintain its own course, becomes obsessed with May Wint Wah, the consequences harmonize with fate's inexorable rhythm.
A low-budget Burmese Super Sentai fan film.
Oak Soe is a bit-part actor in the Myanmar film industry who dreams of landing a lead role. Struggling to get by with little money, he is at pains to accept that his girlfriend Honey, is sleeping with a rich older man for money. They both think they are in love and can accept each other for who they are, but the line between acting and reality is becoming increasingly blurred.
A young girl from the Padaung ethnic group in Myanmar struggles to fit in at school. Are the brass rings she wears what set her apart? A short animation about the acceptance of difference. Based on real-life testimonials, this film is part of a series of animations that tell stories of inequality and discrimination in Myanmar at all levels of society, and encourage conversations around human rights and openness to different traditions and ways of life.
This film portrays a group of Myanmar women protestors and activists living in a shelter in Mae Sot in Thailand. Their lives shaped by Myanmar’s Spring Revolution, they have fled the violence and oppression of their country’s military junta and now find themselves in an unwelcoming land.
Based on true story.
A young man falls in love at first sight with a sex worker, and hires him to satisfy his pleasure.
Echoing the story of Vessantara Jātaka, the film depicts a man’s post-widowhood transformation and Myanmar’s complex past through a dysfunctional family.