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Jungle Book: Rhythm N Groove - Pre-Played
$0.00

Jungle Book: Rhythm N Groove - Pre-Played

Utilizing dance pad technology, you can strut your stuff as Mowgli, Baloo and King Louie from Disney's Jungle Book feature film. Gameplay proceeds through a total of nine environments and features nine songs from the classic film, including "Join the Ranks," "I Wanna Be Like You," and "Bare Necessities." Simply follow the instructions on the screen and perform the correct dance steps in time. A variety of different levels make this a fun title for players of varying ages and skill levels. A multiplayer option also allows gamers to cut the rug with a partner.

Supplied by GameFly - Online Video Game Rentals

Jungle Book - Pre-Played
$0.00

Jungle Book - Pre-Played

The classic Disney animated movie The Jungle book comes to Game Boy Advance! Journey as Mowgli, the boy raised by wolves and Bagheera the black panther. You'll adventure through the Indian Jungle in search of human civilization in order to escape the mean tiger Shere Khan. On your way you will escape the hypnotizing gaze of Kaa the snake, dance with King Louie and befriend Baloo! Explore six lush 3D worlds and 20 massive levels! Open the Jungle Book and experience the classic tales of Sir Rudyard Kipling like never before!

Supplied by GameFly - Online Video Game Rentals

Dr. Suess: Green Eggs and Ham - Pre-Played
$0.00

Dr. Suess: Green Eggs and Ham - Pre-Played

Dr. Seuss comes to Game Boy Advance! Something is amiss in the land of Green Eggs and Ham and it is up to you to set things right. Play as the adorable kids from the classic Cat and the Hat childrens book. Travel to the strange and magical lands of Green Eggs and Ham, Cat in the Hat and The Lorax! Encounter strange creatures and unforgettable characters! Dr. Seuss's magic stories have entertained generations. Now it's your turn to step into the stories of Dr. Seuss and experience them like never before!

Supplied by GameFly - Online Video Game Rentals

The Hobbit - Pre-Played
$0.00

The Hobbit - Pre-Played

Based on the classic book, The Hobbit the video game recreates the adventure and wonder of J.R.R. Tolkien's enduring yarn about a child-sized hero and hobbit known as Bilbo Baggins. On his fantastical quest to take back the treasure of Lonely Mountain from the greedy, sleepy, evil dragon Smaug, Bilbo, Thorin the dwarf and his dwarven company, and Gandalf the Grey, must first survive a long, perilous journey. Bilbo will encounter hungry trolls, goblins in the Misty Mountains, the treacherous Gollum, wolves on the tail, the giant spiders of Mirkwood, and finally mighty Smaug himself. It is a timeless adventure filled with action, wisdom and heart, now virtualized and perfect for both mature children and adults.

Supplied by GameFly - Online Video Game Rentals

Britney's Dance Beat - Pre-Played
$0.00

Britney's Dance Beat - Pre-Played

See if you've got the stuff to help Britney Spears prepare for her latest world tour! Help Britney keep her rhythm and perform her famous moves in non-stop dance fests. Practice then show your stuff on stage, dancing to Britney's infectious, fun hits. Success unlocks tour book photos, a special music video and picture puzzles. There are three modes of play: Practice, Concert and Two-Player--invite a friend over and dance the night away with a Game Link cable.

Supplied by GameFly - Online Video Game Rentals

Viewtiful Joe - Pre-Played
$0.00

Viewtiful Joe - Pre-Played

When your girlfriend is zapped onto a movie screen filled with danger, you must follow her into a cartoon world and become the superhero Viewtiful Joe! Using visual effects a la Hollywood action movies, and the superhuman abilities of a comical comic book superhero, you will engage in an exciting quasi 2D/3D adventure. Use "Slow Power" to slow down the action and deliver stunning attacks in a slow motion Kung Fu movie style. Or use "Mach Speed" to smash criminals in a hail of speed demon fury! Designed with impeccable style and cel-shaded graphics, Viewtiful Joe is a truly unique video game experience. Kick some butt! Have some laughs! And save the day!

Supplied by GameFly - Online Video Game Rentals

Little Shop of Horrors - B&W Dolby
$3.99

Little Shop of Horrors - B&W Dolby

Perhaps the greatest movie ever shot in two days, Little Shop of Horrors was originally conceived as a followup to Roger Corman's black comedy A Bucket of Blood (1959). Jonathan Haze plays Seymour Krelboin, a schlemiel's schlemiel who works at the Skid Row flower shop of Mr. Mushnick (Mel Welles). Experimenting in his spare time, Seymour develops a new plant species that he hopes will lead him to fame and fortune. Unfortunately, the mutated plant -- named Audrey Junior, in honor of Seymour's girlfriend Audrey (Jackie Joseph) -- subsists on blood and human flesh. It also talks, or rather, commands: "Feed Me! FEEEEED ME!" Before long, the luckless Seymour has fed his plant the bodies of a railroad detective, a sadistic dentist, and a flashy trollop. Meanwhile, Mr. Mushnik, who has stumbled onto Seymour's secret, has inadvertently offered up a burglar (played by Charles Griffith, who also wrote the script and supplied the plant's voice) as a midnight snack for the voracious, ever-growing Audrey Junior. (When the plant blooms, the faces of its various victims are reproduced in its flowers.) Ignored on its initial release, Little Shop of Horrors began building up a cult following via repeated TV exposure in the 1960s. By the mid-1970s, it had attained classic status, spawning a big-budget Broadway musical (and followup feature film) in the 1980s and a Saturday morning cartoon series in the 1990s. Enhancing the original Little Shop's reputation was the brief appearance by star-in-the-making Jack Nicholson as a masochistic dental patient (Nicholson is often incorrectly referred to as the star of the film, though in fact he barely receives billing). Much as we love Nicholson, our vote for the most memorable Little Shop cast member goes to the ubiquitous Dick Miller ("No thanks, I'll eat it here"). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Supplied by Best Buy

The House by the Cemetery - Widescreen
$3.99

The House by the Cemetery - Widescreen

This cult horror film from director Lucio Fulci lurches along with a certain amount of disjunction due to cutting, perhaps, if not to an innate Fulci disposition. When the Boyle family temporarily moves into a mansion near Boston so the father can do some research, the son Bob (Giovanni Frezza) starts seeing the ghost of a young girl motioning to him, and eventually he discovers the basement's terrible secret. A certain Dr. Freudstein (Giovanni de Nari) has been hanging out there since 1879 when he was banned from the medical profession, and he has kept himself alive although in miserable physical shape, by murdering the various inhabitants of the house and using their cells to keep his body going. An oversize bat attacks the father, floors come apart and crush unsuspecting victims, and at one point little Bob's blond head is held to the basement door by the evil doctor while the father is wildly swinging his axe through the door to save his son. Scenes like these and others are the real objective of the movie -- the strange and irresolute ending, and leaps and gaps in the plot, are indications that all else is dispensible pretext - gore is the goal and it is delivered in sickening doses. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

Supplied by Best Buy

The River Niger -
$3.99

The River Niger -

River Niger is a Tony Award-winning play turned to a movie. It features James Earl Jones as a house-painter/poet who struggles to support his cancer-plagued wife (Cicely Tyson). This is a realistic portrayal of the difficulties encountered in the poverty-stricken ghetto. ~ Rovi

Supplied by Best Buy

John Wayne: Greatest Movies, Vol. 2 -
$3.99

John Wayne: Greatest Movies, Vol. 2 -

Includes:Lawless Range (1935) Hell Town (1937) Angel and the Badman (1947), MPAA Rating: NR Lawless Range In this, his fourth Western for Republic Pictures, John Wayne plays John Middleton, a would-be rodeo rider forsaking his chance of winning the championship in favor of searching for an old family friend who is missing under mysterious circumstances. After carrying out a bit of undercover work with the help of the missing man's pretty niece, Ann Mason (Sheila Mannors), John is ready to join the local ranchers in their fight against unscrupulous banker Frank Carter, aka Butch Martin (Frank McGlynn, Jr.), who is trying to steal their gold rich land. As he had in his earlier Riders of Destiny (1933), John Wayne "sings" a couple of ditties, including "On the Banks of the Sunny San Juan", his unlikely baritone this time supplied by bit player Jack Kirk. Adding to the unusually high musical quotient is the harmony group The Wranglers performing "The Old Dusty Road", none of which makes anyone forget Gene Autry! ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi Hell Town Paramount borrowed John Wayne from Republic Pictures for the studio's second screen version of Zane Grey's Born to the West, which was also the Western's original release title. A couple of drifters, Dare Rudd (Wayne) and Dinkie Hooley (Sid Saylor), arrive in a Wyoming town hoping for a handout from Dare's rancher cousin, Tom Fillmore (Johnny Mack Brown). Dare takes but one look at Tom's girlfriend, Judy Worstall (Marsha Hunt), and decides to stay in town. He obtains the job of chuck wagon cook, but Judy, who is falling for the charming newcomer, convinces Tom to give Dare a job with more responsibilities. To get rid of a potential rival and to prove Dare's irresponsibility once and for all, Tom assigns his cousin the job of selling the herd. Unbeknownst to either Tom or Dare, however, saloon owner Bart Hammond (Monte Blue) also has his greedy eye on the herd and sets a trap for Dare. Hell Town used quite a bit of stock footage from the original silent version, Born to the West, which had starred Jack Holt. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi Angel and the Badman One of John Wayne's most mystical films, Angel and the Badman is also the first production that Wayne personally produced. The star plays a wounded outlaw who is sheltered by a Quaker family. Attracted to the family's angelic daughter Gail Russell, the hard-bitten Wayne undergoes a slow and subtle character transformation; still, he is obsessed with killing the man (Bruce Cabot) who murdered his foster father. The storyline traces not only the regeneration of Wayne, but of the single-minded sheriff (Harry Carey) who'd previously been determined to bring Wayne to justice. Not a big hit in 1947, Angel and the Badman has since become the most frequently telecast of John Wayne's Republic films, thanks to its lapse into Public Domain status in 1974. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Supplied by Best Buy

John Wayne: Greatest Movies, Vol. 4 -
$3.99

John Wayne: Greatest Movies, Vol. 4 -

Includes:'Neath the Arizona Skies (1934), MPAA Rating: NR Randy Rides Alone (1934), MPAA Rating: NR Winds of the Wasteland (1936), MPAA Rating: NR 'Neath the Arizona Skies John Wayne attempts to locate Shirley Jean Rickert's wayward father in this low-budget Western from his days with Monogram. The little girl, a "half-breed," is the heir to a 50,000-dollar Indian oil claim, but she needs the signature of her long-lost father in order to collect. Chris Morrell, Nina's foster father, manages to get the tyke out of town before Sam Black (Yakima Canutt) and his gang can get their grubby hands on her and her inheritance, but other villains learn of the girl's potential windfall, including express office robbers Vic Byrd (Jack Rockwell) and Jim Moore (Jay Wilsey). When Vic finally gets hold of the child, he is shot and killed by one of his own hands, Tom (Earl Dwire), who is revealed to be Nina's real father. With Tom's help, Chris manages to trick the Black gang and is able to storm their hideout. In the ensuing melee, Tom is fatally shot but Byrd manages to escape with Nina. Chris goes after them and there is a final confrontation in a raging river. 'Neath the Arizona Skies was based on Gun Glory, a short story by B.R. Tuttle, which had been filmed in 1933 by maverick producer Victor Adamson as Circle Canyon. This earlier version starred Buddy Roosevelt as Chris and Clarise Woods as the little heiress. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi Randy Rides Alone In perhaps the most haunting opening of any B-Western, Randy Rides Alone has John Wayne enter a deserted saloon filled with corpses. To the tinny strains of a player-piano and with someone eerily peeking from behind a portrait of Ulysses S. Grant, Wayne's reconnaissance ends with his arrest for murder. No B-Western ground out in five days for around $10,000 could possibly live up to this introduction and Randy Rides Alone quickly gets down to business as usual. But director Harry L. Fraser and scenarist Lindsley Parsons still manage to get in a couple of off-beat touches. The killers, lead by stunt-man extraordinaire Yakima Canutt, are holed up in a cave picturesquely hidden behind a waterfall, and future comic relief George "Gabby" Hayes, looking for all the world like Lionel Barrymore, plays a mute, hunchbacked shop-keeper who may not be all he appears. Add to the mystery elements some extraordinary stunt-work by Canutt and you have a superior series Western. Cecilia Parker, one of the more gracious actresses to appear in low-budget fare, was all set to co-star as the murdered saloon owner's niece, but Wayne came down with the flu and production was delayed. When producer Paul Malvern was ready to begin again, Miss Parker proved unavailable and had to be replaced with 1924 WAMPAS Baby Star Alberta Vaughn, an actress whose career was all but over. Randy Rides Alone did little to alter that fact but the film remains a minor classic of the genre. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi Winds of the Wasteland Former pony ex

Supplied by Best Buy

Great Movie Thrillers -
$3.99

Great Movie Thrillers -

Great Movie Thrillers -

Supplied by Best Buy

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