A Chance Encounter Can Change Your Life Forever A cast of Hollywood’s brightest young stars shines in this award-winning drama about finding yourself in the detours on the journey of life. Antonio Sabato Jr. stars as Jeremy, an irresponsible, womanizing college student. Neil McDonough (Band Of Brothers, Medical Investigation) costars as Brian, a hotshot salesman entering “the real adult world.” A chance encounter at an intersection leaves both men secretly envious of each other’s lives. Jeremy envies Brian’s material success. Brian yearns for Jeremy’s carefree, quota-free lifestyle. Both will discover that things are not what they seem as they follow the paths toward their futures. Amy Smart (Rat Race, Starsky & Hutch) appears as the girl Jeremy lost along the way.
When was it made?
1/18/2005
Who stars in it?
Neal McDonough Antonio Sabato Jr.
And the cast includes:
Neal McDonough, Antonio Sabato Jr., John Bennett Perry, Andrew Miller, Alexandra Woodward
Again, you can watch Crossing Paths just by clicking the link.
If you would rather buy it on Amazon, just click the image below:
The Space Colonies, the United Earth Sphere Alliance, and the OZ Special Forces (an arm of the sinister Romefeller Foundation) remain locked in a three-way struggle in this 49-part series that aired in Japan from 1995 to 1996. The outcome hinges on the actions of the five young pilots and their indestructible Gundam mobile suits.
Duo and Quatre, who is the heir to an enormous fortune, hide out in the desert with sympathetic rebels while their three counterparts undergo various personal crises. Having lost a sword duel to Treize, Chang broods and announces, “I have no right to fight.” Heero seeks forgiveness for having inadvertently caused the death of pacifist leader Marshal Noventa–and offers to let each of the Marshal’s relatives shoot him. Trowa is overcome with admiration for Heero’s nobility, and almost kills himself in an attempt to follow his example. Dissuaded by circus performer Catherine, Trowa helps Heero prepare for a mobile suit duel with Treize. Meanwhile, Relena tries to assassinate the icy Lady Une and forges an alliance with Lieutenant Noin.
The plots and character motivations may sound improbable, but the episodes deliver plenty of robot vs. robot battles–which is what Gundam fans want.
Rated 13 and older for occasional profanity and violence, largely restricted to machines attacking each other. –Charles Solomon
First, the movie is about OscarÂ(r)-nominated* director Arthur Hiller (Love Story) directs a perfect cast (Leonard Maltin), including funnyman Dudley Moore (Arthur) and captivating OscarÂ(r) winner** Mary Steenburgen (Parenthood), in a modern tale of the trials and tribulations of falling in love with someone completely unavailable. Adapted by Bernard Slade (Same Time, Next Year) from his hit stage play, this upbeat urban comedy is an engagingly wry spectacle where sparklingwordplay becomes scintillating foreplay. Playwright Jason Carmichael (Moore) hasn’t had a hit since he lost his writing partner. But when gawky neophyte writer Phoebe Craddock (Steenburgen) enters his life, she not only helps him pen hit after hit’she also steals his heart! After years of intimate collaboration, the two would be as close as the keys on a typewriter were it not for one thing: Jason’s wife. But when his marriage fails, the stage is finally set for the lovers to either extend their romantic run indefinitely or close it down for good!.
I really enjoyed the performace of Mary Steenburgen and Mary Steenburgen. The rest of the cast was solid as well. The cast includes Dudley Moore, Mary Steenburgen, Frances Sternhagen, Janet Eilber, Robyn Douglass.
Ok, let’s look at Curious George: Plays in the Snow and Other Awesome Activities.
First, the movie is about Winter, spring, summer, fall, Curious George explores it all! Join the world’s most curious monkey for year-round laughter with 8 more adventures from his Daytime Emmy®-nominated PBS KIDS® TV Series narrated by Primetime Emmy® Award winner William H. Macy. Whether he’s playing in the winter snow or building a boat for a summer race, Curious George makes every season fun in Curious George Plays in the Snow and Other Awesome Activities!
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I really enjoyed the performace of Jeff Bennett and Jeff Bennett. The rest of the cast was solid as well. The cast includes Kath Soucie, Jeff Bennett, Bob Bergen, Grey DeLisle, William H. Macy.
When Women Played Ding-Dong (1971, 83 min.) - Prehistoric cave-stud Ari (Antonio Sabato) wins lovely virgin Listra (Nadia Cassini) in a pig-catching contest, but their attempts at “Ding-Dong” keep getting interrupted by idiot battles between his tribe, The Cave Dwellers, and their neighbors, The Lake Dwellers. Annoyed that hubby would rather make war than Ding-Dong, Listra organizes the women of both tribes to go on strike and “abstain Ding-Dong” until the men stop fighting. It all happens back in the days when men carried clubs and women played ding-dong, an Italian stone-age sex comedy based on the Greek classic “Lysistrata” and filled with shapely cavewomen sporting ’70s hairstyles, a gay caveman with the hots for the hero, a title tune that will follow you forever and, of course, plenty of old-fashioned Ding-Dong! “50,000 B.C. (Before Clothing)” (1963, 65 min.) - Locked out of his trailer home by his nasty old wife, sad sack Charlie Wishnick tries to sleep it off in a crazy inventor’s taxi cab but discovers it’s actually a flying time machine which deposits him at The Knob Hill Nudist Camp back in 50,000 B.C. (Before Clothing)! Goofy Charlie gawks at naked cavegirls, falls in love with vivacious Zelda (”Bad Girls Go to Hell’s” Gigi Darlene), and is almost eaten by real-life giant Eddie Carmel in this crackpot nudie-cutie, presented in prehistoric “Nudicolor!”
Personally, I thought Charlie Robinson was incredible, but wasn’t too impressed with Irving Selig.
* Commentary by director Sam Raimi, actor Tobey Maguire, producer Ani Ahrati, and coproducer Grant Curtis * Technical commentary * Blooper reel * “Spidey Sense 2″: Trivia track with “pop-up” facts and trivia about the film and the world of Spider-Man * Four Web-i-sodes: original online featurettes from the film’s theatrical release * Train “Ordinary” music video * Previews * “Making the Amazing”: A 12-part documentary from pre-production to the Hollywood premiere * “Hero in Crisis”: A deeper look into Peter Parker and his personal battles in the continuing story of Spider-Man * Ock-Umentary: “Eight Arms to Hold You”: A special look at Doc Ock from the comics to the big screen * “Interwoven: The Women of Spider-Man”: A look into the lives of Mary Jane, Aunt May and the other women in Peter Parker’s life * “Enter the Web”: A groundbreaking multi-angle look behind-the-scenes at the climatic Pier sequence captured in real-time * Art Gallery: A collection of Alex Ross’ paintings used in the opening credits of the film * Activision’s “Spider-Man 2: Spinning the Game”: A behind-the-scenes look at the making of “Spider-Man 2: The Game” * Weblinks
Gift set items: * Exclusive limited edition portfolio of artwork: Over 25 well-known comic book artists created artwork inspired by Spider-Man 2 specifically for, and only available in, this collector’s edition DVD * Collectible “Concept to Screen Comparison” portfolio: view the transformation of various scenes of Spider-Man 2 from sketches and concepts to images from the final production * Postcard collection of Spider-Man 2 Artwork: five postcards which feature original artwork used in the theatrical advertising campaign of “Spider-Man 2″ including the well-known trilogy campaign of “Sacrifice,” “Choice,” and “Destiny” * The Amazing Spider-Man #50 comic book: reduced-size reprinting of the original comic book in which Peter Parker decides to give up being Spider-Man
Jean Renoir’s 1939 classic is widely regarded as one of the greatest films ever made, and Criterion is very proud to present the film in a special two-disc edition. Cloaked in a comedy of manners, this scathing critique of corrupt French society is about a weekend hunting party at which amorous escapades abound among the aristocratic guests-which are also mirrored by the activities of the servants downstairs. The refusal of one of the guests to play by society’s rules sets off a chain of events that ends in tragedy.
Alfred Hitchcock fans may experience déjà vu upon exposure to this voyeuristic thriller. That’s because director DJ Caruso (The Salton Sea) and co-writer Carl Ellsworth (Red Eye) use Rear Window as a jumping-off point before cherry-picking from more recent scare fare, like The Blair Witch Project. In the prologue, 17-year-old Kale (Shia LaBeouf, Holes) loses his beloved father to a car crash. A year passes, and he’s still on edge. When a teacher makes a careless remark about his dad, Kale punches him out, and is sentenced to house arrest. After his mom (Carrie-Anne Moss, Memento) takes away his Xbox and iTunes privileges, the suburban slacker spies on his neighbors to pass the time. In the process, he develops a crush on Ashley (Sarah Roemer, The Grudge 2), the hot girl next door, and becomes convinced that another, the soft-spoken Mr. Turner (David Morse, The Green Mile), is a serial killer. With the help of the flirtatious Ashley, practical joke-playing pal Ronnie (Aaron Yoo), and an array of high-tech gadgets, like cell-phone cameras and digital camcorders, Kale sets out to solve a major case without leaving his yard (a feat that would prove more challenging for a less affluent sleuth). In the end, it’s pretty familiar stuff, but there are plenty of scares once Turner realizes he’s being watched, and rising star LaBeouf, who next appears in Michael Bay’s Transformers, makes for an engaging leading man–despite his character’s propensity for slugging Spanish instructors. –Kathleen C. Fennessy
Daniel Auteuil (Manon of the Spring) stars as Stephane, the curiously diffident co-owner of an exclusive violin brokerage and repair shop. A brilliant technician, Stephane can make any instrument live up to its promise, yet he himself is emotionally remote and disconnected from passionate experience. His partner, Maxime (André Dussollier), lacks Stephane’s gifts but is rich in personality and desire. When Maxime’s new lover, a violinist named Camille (Emmanuelle Béart), is drawn to Stephane’s still waters, he is briefly moved, thus destroying the fragile, symbiotic relationship between all three individuals.
“Two Thumbs Up!” - Siskel & Ebert
“[it] has the intensity and delicacy of a great short story.” - Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
“superb haunting…full of unexpected beauty, richness and feeling” - Hal Hinson, Washington Post
WINNER - César Award, Best Director WINNER - César Award, Best Supporting Actor WINNER - Venice Film Festival, FIPRESCI Prize WINNER - Venice Film Festival, Silver Lion WINNER - London Critics Circle Film Awards, Foreign Language Film of the Year WINNER - European Film Awards, Best Actor WINNER - David di Donatello Award, Best Foreign Actor, Best Foreign Actress WINNER - David di Donatello Award, Best Foreign Film WINNER - French Syndicate of Cinema Critics, Best Film