First, the movie is about Synopsis: Based on an Asian mythical hero, FORBIDDEN WARRIOR follows the story of beautiful young Seki, who discovers that she is the only living person with the power to control an all-powerful book of spells - and she must learn how to use her gifts in order to save the world from bloodthirsty rivals who would steal it.
DVD Features: Widescreen Format Commentary with Director Jimmy Nickerson and Producers Glen Hartford & Daniel Toll Behind the Scenes - Making of Forbidden Warrior Interactive Menus Scene Selection Trailers Optional Spanish Subtitles.
I really enjoyed the performace of Sung Kang and Sung Kang. The rest of the cast was solid as well. The cast includes Marie Matiko, Sung Kang, Karl Yune, Tony Amendola, James Hong.
The defeat of Galuano was only the beginning of the battle. As Arc leads the Smerian forces against Andel’s army, the sinister Clive masterminds a different assault on an unexpected target. As Shu battles Toshu and the barrier protecting the shrine is destroyed, a powerless Elk must face both his worst fears and his greatest challenge.
Personally, I thought Joshua Seth was incredible, but wasn’t too impressed with Dorothy Elias-Fahn.
First, the movie is about The title of Tim Blake Nelson’s harrowing drama of Jewish death camp prisoners who rise up against their captors to “destroy the machinery” refers as much to the compromise and cloudy morality of collaboration as to the gray world coated in the smoke and ash of the crematoriums. Inspired by real-life events at the Auschwitz death camp, The Grey Zone stars David Arquette as a soul-deadened laborer whose being fiercely jolts to life when he finds a young girl alive among the gassed corpses. He’s the heart and soul of an outstanding cast that includes Steve Buscemi and Daniel Benzali as revolt leaders, Allan Corduner as the shunned camp doctor, and Harvey Keitel as the commandant. Nelson’s rapid pacing, intimate shooting, and terse, jagged dialogue give the moral debate a discomforting immediacy as it races a deadline. When doom hangs in the air, sure death creates unique priorities. –Sean Axmaker.
I really enjoyed the performace of Velizar Binev and Velizar Binev. The rest of the cast was solid as well. The cast includes David Arquette, Velizar Binev, David Chandler (IV), Michael Stuhlbarg, George Zlatarev.
The uncensored show containing expanded scenes of the gorgeous groupies, nudity, more nudity and wild backstage happenings! A Must-See look at on-tour madness, lust and losin’ it! Featuring Fred Durst & Wes Borland of Limp Bizkit, Jonathan Davis of Korn, Insane Clown Posse, Jay Gordon of Orgy, Nashville Pussy, others.
The Wide Blue Road was an incredible movie! Both Josip Batistic and Ronaldo Bonacchi were amazing! The great cast includes Josip Batistic, Ronaldo Bonacchi, Pasquale Campagnola, Peter Carsten, Terence Hill. If you love watching Josip Batistic or Ronaldo Bonacchi, you are definitely going to want to watch The Wide Blue Road
Despite its focus on the destruction of a proud man who loses his livelihood, The Wide Blue Road is a gorgeous, lyrical film refusing to be boxed in by writer-director Gillo Pontecorvo’s bathetic class sympathies. Yves Montand plays Sqarciò, a fisherman on a small island off Italy’s Dalmation coast. With the fishing industry squeezed by a wholesaler’s monopoly, the island is beset by economic depression and strains between men who earn little by fishing legally (using a net) and those–like Squarciò–who unlawfully use dynamite. Once Squarciò is deprived of his bombs, his (and his family’s) decline is a foregone conclusion in Pontecorvo’s fixed-destiny universe. Yet the director is hardly blind to his setting’s redemptive possibilities. The Adriatic island’s clarifying air, the dreamy, epic texture of the apposition of land and sea–such elemental beauty mysteriously, simultaneously heightens and ameliorates Squarciò’s predictable doom. –Tom Keogh
A remastered set with new 5.1 Dolby Surround audio, commentary tracks, new documentaries and deleted scenes. Fast Times at Ridgemont High Before he became an overrated filmmaker, Cameron Crowe (Almost Famous) was a reporter for Rolling Stone who was so youthful looking that he could go undercover for a year at a California high school and write a book about it. He wrote the script for this film, based on that book, and it launched the careers of several young actors, including Jennifer Jason Leigh, Judge Reinhold, Phoebe Cates, and, above all, Sean Penn. The story line is episodic, dealing with the lives of iconic teen types: one of the school’s cool kids, a nerd, a teen queen, and, most enjoyably, the class stoner (Penn), who finds himself at odds with a strict history teacher (a wonderfully spiky Ray Walston). This is not a great movie but very entertaining and, for a certain age group, a seminal movie experience. –Marshall Fine
Dazed & Confused You remember high school? Really remember? If you think you do, watch this film: it’ll all really come racing back. After changing the world with the generation-defining Slacker, director Richard Linklater turned his free-range vérité sensibility on the 1970s. As before, his all-seeing camera meanders across a landscape studded with goofy pop culture references and poignant glimpses of human nature. Only this time around, he’s spreading a thick layer of nostalgia over the lens (and across the soundtrack). It’s as if Fast Times at Ridgemont High was directed by Jean-Luc Godard. The story deals with a group of friends on the last day of high school, 1976. Good-natured football star Randall “Pink” Floyd navigates effortlessly between the warring worlds of jocks, stoners, wannabes, and rockers with girlfriend and new-freshman buddy in tow. Surprisingly, it’s not a coming-of-age movie, but a film that dares ask the eternal, overwhelming, adolescent question, “What happens next?” It’s a little too honest to be a light comedy (representative quote: “If I ever say these were the best years of my life, remind me to kill myself.”). But it’s also way too much fun (remember souped-up Corvettes and bicentennial madness?) to be just another existential-essay-on-celluloid. –Grant Balfour
Jackie (Katie Dickie) works at a video-surveillance firm that is in charge of protecting people who live on a single block of Red Road in urban Glasgow. When she sees an ex-con (Tony Curran) from her past appear on her monitor, she is compelled to confront him for his crimes and begins to stalk him. What mysterious history do they share, and why is Jackie so determined to punish this man? Filmmaker Andrea Arnold keeps the audience guessing and the tension building as Red Road crescendos to an explosive finale.
Personally, I thought Kate Dickie was incredible, but wasn’t too impressed with Tony Curran.
Comedy superstar Gene Wilder goes from geel to sheik in this side-splitting story of one man’s quest to become The World’s Greatest Lover.
When frustrated movie studio mogul Adolph Zitz (Dom DeLuise) announces a talent search for a romantic leading man to rival the great Rudolph Valentino, thousands of hopefuls decend upon Hollywood - including Rudy Valentine (Wilder), a neurotic baker from Milwaukee who knows as little about romance as he does about acting. But when his wife, Annie (Carol Kane), leaves him for the real Valentino, Rudy goes to outrageous (and hilarious) lengths to win the role of a lifetime… and win back the love of his life.
First, the movie is about A hit and run driver kills a child. The child’s father Charles wants to do everything to revenge the death of his son. After a long investigation, a chance meeting puts him in the presence of Paul, a despicable garage owner, who terrorizes his family. Paul is the murderer of Charles’ son. Charles waits for the right moment to face Paul and to bring him to justice..
I really enjoyed the performace of Caroline Cellier and Caroline Cellier. The rest of the cast was solid as well. The cast includes Michel Duchaussoy, Caroline Cellier, Jean Yanne, Anouk Ferjac, Marc Di Napoli.
First, the movie is about Welcome to Wolf Creek, where the suspense of The Blair Witch Project meets the horror of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Inspired by Australia’s “Backpacker Killer” who murdered seven backpackers in the `90s, Wolf Creek won wide acclaim from critics, filmmakers and audience members alike at the Sundance Film Festival. Three unsuspecting hikers take off for a drive across Australia. When the trio returns from a four-hour hike to Wolf Creek National Park, they find their car is dead. Help comes in the form of big, back-slapping bushman Mick (John Jarratt). Since Mick appears to be more Crocodile Dundee than Freddy Krueger, the trio trusts him which proves to be a grave mistake. Quentin Tarantino said, “Jarratt delivers a performance that’s destined to go down as one of the greatest film heavies of the last 25 years. “Not since the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre has terror felt so real.” Ken Fox, TV Guide.
I really enjoyed the performace of Gordon Poole and Gordon Poole. The rest of the cast was solid as well. The cast includes John Jarratt, Gordon Poole, Nathan Phillips, Kestie Morassi, Cassandra Magrath.