DVD Movies
Reflections
Track Listing: 1. Storm Music, 2. Grandma's Hands, 3. Is That Jazz?, 4. Morning Thoughts, 5. Inner City Blues (Poem: "The Siege of New Orleans"), 6. Gun, 7. "B" Movie - (live)
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Tribute to Pink Floyd: Back Against the Wall
Tributee: Pink Floyd.One of the most popular, and analyzed, rock albums ever is undoubtedly Pink Floyd's 1979 sprawling masterpiece The Wall. Although the definitive version remains the aforementioned studio album, there has also been a 1982 movie (starring a pre-Live Aid Bob Geldof), and two separate live albums -- one by Roger Waters in 1990 (The Wall: Live in Berlin, 1990) and the other a delayed release of Pink Floyd performances from the early '80s (2000s Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall: Live 1980-1981). So you think that would be the last we heard from The Wall, right? Think again. A multitude of classic rockers/prog rockers have united to cover The Wall in its entirety, under the title Back Against the Wall. Led by producer Billy Sherwood, a rotating case of musicians was assembled to make anyone with a well-worn copy of Tales of Topographic Oceans drool with excitement -- Yes' Rick Wakeman, Chris Squire, Alan White, and Geoffrey Downes; King Crimson's Adrian Belew, Tony Levin, and John Wetton; Styx's Tommy Shaw; ELP's Keith Emerson, and Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson, among countless others. Interestingly though, it can be argued that The Wall was Pink Floyd's least "progressive" album, as the group focused on tight song structures -- obviously inspired by the then burgeoning new wave and punk movements. The performances are expectedly spot-on (and it's quite impressive how they re-created all the sound effects/spoken word bits so precisely), and stick very close to the originals -- except for a Chris Squire-led take of "Comfortably Numb," which adds a few extra bits. With an ever-increasing overabundance of versions of The Wall to choose from, you've got to wonder if Back Against the Wall was necessary at all. ~ Greg Prato
Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows - Part 2: Mini Montage Film Cels from Warner Bros.
Own a piece of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows with this framed film cel featuring Harry Potter's journey through out the final film. The set includes a mini poster with images from the film along with 11 authentic film cels from the movie. The fil
Flipper's New Adventure from Warner Bros.
The sequel to the original Flipper movie, which spawned the hit TV series. On a remote island, a boy and his dolphin foil a group of escaped convicts who hold a wealthy British family hostage. Filmed on location in the Bahamas, this fun-filled family adve
Moon Is Blue, The from Warner Bros.
It begins and ends on the observation deck of the Empire State Building, a fitting site for this 1953 movie that erupted into a towering controversy. The charm of the film's William Holden/David Niven/Maggie McNamara triangle notwithstanding, Hollywood's
La Dolce Vita Movie Poster
La Dolce Vita Movie Poster - 23.75 x 31.5 in.Lithograph print on a semi gloss stock.
Shirley Temple Collection, Vol. 6 [3 Discs] - Widescreen Dubbed
Includes:Stowaway (1932) Wee Willie Winkie (1937), MPAA Rating: NR Young People (1940), MPAA Rating: NR Stowaway No synopsis available. Wee Willie Winkie In this lovely John Ford film, Joyce Williams (June Lang) and her young daughter, Priscilla (Shirley Temple), travel to India to live on a British Army base with Joyce's father, Colonel Williams, Aubrey C. Smith). Once there, sweet, young Priscilla manages to win the love and affection of the soldiers and her curmudgeonly grandfather, and she plays an important role in easing a local rebellion. One of the best Shirley Temple movies, Ford allows her to be sweet without being cloying and moves the action at a good pace. A wonderful cast of some of Hollywood's best supporting actors add charm to this film which is appealing to both children and adults. ~ Linda Rasmussen, Rovi Young People "Over the hill" at the tender age of 12, Shirley Temple closed out her 20th Century-Fox contract with the musical seriocomedy Young People. After years of trodding the boards in vaudeville, Wendy Ballantine (Temple) and her adoptive parents Joe (Jack Oakie) and Kit (Charlotte Greenwood retire) to a small town so that the youngster can receive a proper upbringing. Alas, the town is full of Babbitt-like bigots who disapprove of "show people", and who make no secret of their desire that Wendy and her family leave town immediately. But when a dangerous storm arises, the courage of Wendy, Joe and Kit-coupled with their rescue of several stranded children-forces the townsfolk to realign their thinking and welcome the family into their fold. The best moments in Young People occur at the very beginning, wherein Shirley Temple literally grows up before the audience's eyes via filmclips from her earlier starring vehicles (watch how Jack Oakie suddenly turns into James Dunn-from the waist down-in a musical number lifted from 1934's Stand Up and Cheer). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
All That Jazz - Widescreen Dubbed Subtitle Special
It's showtime!" In this part film ? clef, part musical phantasmagoria, director/choreographer Bob Fosse takes a Felliniesque look at the life of a driven entertainer. Joe Gideon (Roy Scheider, channeling Fosse) is the ultimate work (and pleasure)-aholic, as he knocks back a daily dose of amphetamines to juggle a new Broadway production while editing his new movie, not to mention ex-wife Audrey (Leland Palmer), steady girlfriend Kate (Ann Reinking), a young daughter, and various conquests. Joe cannot, however, avoid intimations of mortality from white-clad vision Angelique (Jessica Lange) that lead him to look back at his life as he heads for a near-inevitable coronary and his departure from this mortal coil with the appropriate razzle-dazzle. Taking his cue from Federico Fellini's 8 1/2 (1963), Fosse moves from realistic dance numbers to extravagant flights of cinematic fancy, as Joe meditates on his life, his women, and his death. Following a similarly dark revisionist vein as Martin Scorsese's New York, New York (1977), Fosse shows the stiff price that entertaining exacts on entertainers (among other things, he intercuts graphic footage of open-heart surgery with a song and dance), mercilessly reversing the feel-good mood of classical movie musicals. Critics praised Fosse's daring even as they damned his self-indulgence, while Scheider was lauded for giving the best performance of his career. Though not a disastrous failure, All That Jazz came nowhere near the popularity of 1978's Grease, as late '70s audiences increasingly turned away from "difficult" movies. For all its excesses, Fosse's fiercely personal approach turned All That Jazz into another striking work from one of the few directors able to make, and experiment with, movie musicals after the 1960s. ~ Lucia Bozzola, Rovi
Underworld: Evolution/The Grudge [WS] [2 Discs] - Widescreen Special
Includes:The Grudge (2004), MPAA Rating: PG-13 Underworld: Evolution (2006), MPAA Rating: R The Grudge This American remake of director Takashi Shimizu's popular Japanese movie franchise The Grudge puts Buffy the Vampire Slayer alumna Sarah Michelle Gellar back into the line of supernatural fire. When Karen (Gellar), an American student working with a Japanese health center for college credit, comes across a mysterious curse, she quickly finds herself embroiled in a fight for her own sanity, and, ultimately, her very survival. Known as a "grudge," the curse was born inside of a house after its inhabitants died while consumed by rage -- according to legend, the curse touches all who come into contact with it, and will torment those unlucky individuals until they, too, become part of the grudge . Each time the curse finds a new victim, it is, in a sense, reborn, and will continue on its path unless Karen can free herself from its control over her. This version of The Grudge is also directed by Shimizu, and features Jason Behr, Clea DuVall, Kadee Strickland, William Mapother, and Bill Pullman in supporting roles. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi Underworld: Evolution Tribes of vampires and werewolves battle for supremacy among the undead in this follow-up to the horror hit Underworld. Tracing the bloody history of the ongoing war between the Death Dealers, a gang of upper-crust vampires, and the Lycans, a pack of scruffy werewolves, Underworld: Evolution finds beautiful Death Dealer Selene (Kate Beckinsale) and hunky Lycan Michael (Scott Speedman) exploring their own pasts as well as those of their comrades in hope of uncovering the secrets of this centuries-old conflict. As Selene and Michael deal with their bloody legacy as well as their forbidden romance, the violence between the Death Dealers and the Lycans escalates in what may be the final face-off between them. Directed by Len Wiseman, who also helmed the first film, Underworld: Evolution also stars Shane Brolly, Bill Nighy, Tony Curran, and Derek Jacobi. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
House Of Wax Dvd from Warner Bros.
In the wicked performance that crowned him the movie's master of the macabre, Vincent Price plays a renowned wax sculptor plunged into madness when an arsonist destroys his life's work. Unable to use his flame-scarred hands, he devises a new - and murdero
Trappin Ain'T Dead
Track Listing: 1. Trappin Aint Dead (I'm the Truth), 2. Betta Believe It - (featuring Webbie), 3. Air Forces 2, 4. My Money, 5. My1st 48 Hrs, 6. I'm Goin In, 7. Dead or Alive, 8. Always Strapped Freestyle, 9. Trap Files, 10. Sunny Days, 11. Might Just Blow That, 12. Underdawg, The, 13. First Name Last Name, 14. Stupid Freestyle, 15. Consistent, 16. Ready to Ride, 17. Biggest Movie Ever - (featuring Boo Rossini), 18. She's a Lesbian, 19. Get Alot [Remix] - (remix, featuring Boo Rossini)
Sony Music 100 Years: Soundtrack for... [Box]
Includes: Big Bad John, Blowin' in the Wind, Diga Diga Doo - The Mills Brothers/Duke Ellington & His Orchestra, Ezekiel Saw de Wheel - Charlie Young, Indiana, (Back Home Again in) - Fiddlin' John Carson, Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane, Music For Silent Movies, Suicide Is Painless - (from "M*A*S*H"), Take Five - Jimmy Dean, Washington Post March, The - United States Marine Band, Cindy in the Meadows, Crazy Blues - Cliff "Ukelele Ike" Edwards,...and more
Dance Factory Level, Vol. 2
This is a continuous in-the-mix CD compiled and mixed by DJ Louie DeVito.There are certain names you come to associate with certain things, and to rely on for the responsible, quality-conscious delivery of those things. As Col. Sanders is to fried chicken, and Steven Speilberg is to blockbuster movies, so is famed club DJ Louie DeVito to dance music compilations. As on the many other collections DeVito has assembled, DANCE FACTORY LEVEL 2 keeps things pumping with non-stop house beats and pure pop hooks. In the tradition of the dance-club version of Eric Clapton's "Heaven," there's a properly propulsive DJ Sammy take on the old Don Henley chestnut "Boys of Summer," and there's even a 2003 version of the old Snap dance classic "Rhythm is a Dancer," appropriately retooled for the times. Those enamored of pop divas will be happy to note the inclusion of Mariah Carey's "Through the Rain" as well, but LEVEL 2 is first and last focused on pure dance fodder rather than the star system.
Starsky & Hutch: The Complete First Season [5 Discs] -
Includes:Starsky & Hutch: Kill Huggy Bear (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Shoot Out (1975) Starsky & Hutch: The Deadly Imposter (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Terror on the Docks (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Captain Dobey, You're Dead (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Lady Blue (1975) Starsky & Hutch: The Bait (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Pariah (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Death Notice (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Snowstorm (1975) Starsky & Hutch: The Fix (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Texas Longhorn (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Death Ride (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Savage Sunday (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Pilot (1975) Starsky & Hutch: Losing Streak (1976) Starsky & Hutch: The Bounty Hunter (1976) Starsky & Hutch: The Hostages (1976) Starsky & Hutch: A Coffin for Starsky (1976) Starsky & Hutch: Silence (1976) Starsky & Hutch: Running (1976) Starsky & Hutch: The Omaha Tiger (1976) Starsky & Hutch: Jo-Jo (1976) Starsky & Hutch: Kill Huggy Bear No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Shoot Out No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: The Deadly Imposter No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Terror on the Docks No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Captain Dobey, You're Dead No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Lady Blue No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: The Bait No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Pariah No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Death Notice No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Snowstorm No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: The Fix No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Texas Longhorn No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Death Ride No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Savage Sunday No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Pilot Paul Michael Glaser is Starsky, David Soul is Hutch in this TV movie pilot for the extraordinarily popular 1970s cop series. The two charismatic undercover cops go after a team of syndicate hit men. Then they go in the opposite direction (but only temporarily) when they discover that they're the ones who'll be "hit." S and H's supervisor (Bernie Hamilton) isn't around for the pilot, but Antonio Fargas shows up as street snitch Huggy Bear. While this first Starsky and Hutch adventure is only so-so, the rapport between the two leads sold the series, which lasted from 1975 through 1979. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi Starsky & Hutch: Losing Streak No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: The Bounty Hunter No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: The Hostages No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: A Coffin for Starsky No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Silence No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Running No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: The Omaha Tiger No synopsis available. Starsky & Hutch: Jo-Jo No synopsis available.
Questions for the Movie Answer Man (Paperback) Book
What was in the briefcase in Pulp Fiction? Why don't movie actors wear seat belts? Was Fargo really based on a true story? Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic Roger Ebert answers these and hundreds more. Using wit insight and dozens of other experts he resolves some of the most common questions about the moviesand some of the most bizarre.
American Experience: Public Enemy #1 -
John Dillinger was a no-good bank robber in Indiana who captured the public imagination with his bravado and humor. Perhaps it was the Great Depression and the practices of many banks that made the populace root for the man who robbed banks and sent postcards saying "Wish You Were Here" to the Indiana police. Once Dillinger crossed the state line in a stolen car, his capture became the main focus of federal law enforcement officers. The new chief of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover, launched a counter attack to Dillinger's positive press, by branding the outlaw "Public Enemy #1." The saga ended in a rain of bullets outside a movie theater; John Dillinger, "Public Enemy #1," was dead, and the G-Men mythology was born. This documentary tells the story with archival film clips, photographs, personal accounts, and commentary by historians. ~ Rose of Sharon Winter, Rovi






