Instruction on how to lock into an airtight groove as you anchor your band with a foundation of solid bass lines.
At last... The official Pigface bootleg! The long awaited home video documenting Pigface's Team '94 North American tour. The sequel to 1992's Glitch this hour long video features live performances from over 15 shows plus an exclusive look behind the scenes: backstage on the bus and in the studio. The band here consists of Chris Connelly Ogre Martin Atkins and more. Trent Reznor makes an appearance and Danny Carey of Tool plays as well. Son of a Glitch was created in response to all the 'crap' Pigface bootlegs that have surfaced in recent years. With never before seen live footage interviews and more... Son of a Glitch exposes other bootlegs as the rip-offs they really are. Tracklist: 1.Insemination 2.Asphole 3.Murder Inc. 4.Ten Ground and Down 5.Divebomber 6.Your Own You Own 7.Suck 8.Think 9.Satellite 10.Auto Hag 11.Seven Words Bonus Materials: 1. Flowers of Romance 2. Murder Inc. 3. Dirtbox Tennessee 4. Ignition Times Four
Vote early. Vote often. American iconoclastic director John Sayles (Lone Star) takes aim at contemporary politics and corporate influence with more than a vague reference to George W. Bush and contemporary Republican politics. Grammatically challenged user friendly gubernatorial candidate Dicky Pilager has just launched a campaign for the citizens of the New West. But things take an unexpected turn when the taping of an environmental political advert ends up with Pilager reeling in a long-dead corpse. Enter his ferocious campaign manager Chuck Raven who hires an idealistic journalist turned rumpled private detective Danny O'Brien to investigate potential links between the corpse and the Pilager family's enemies. In the tradition of Chinatown Danny's investigation pulls him deeper and deeper into a complex web of influence and corruption involving high-stakes lobbyists media conglomerates environmental plunderers and undocumented migrant workers.
Irene is a shy reserved girl who starts working in an isolated mountain hotel. Her employers seem obsessed with cleanliness but she's not fazed by that. But she soon discovers that her predecessor has mysteriously disappeared and whenever she tries talking about it to the other employees or even the police she's met with indifference. And what are the connections to the cave nearby with its connections to witchcraft?
Winner of the Camera d'Or for Best First Feature at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise not only launched Jim Jarmusch's career but also earned him recognition from critics as one of today's more inventive and creative filmmakers. Lounge Lizard musician John Lurie stars as Willie a disenchanted New Yorker who along with his best friend Eddie (Richard Edson) and cousin Eva (Eszter Balint) decides it's time to leave behind their boring lives in search of ""paradise."" But as their unforgettable road trip to Florida unfolds they find that amidst the sunshine blue skies and palm trees their pursuit of happiness is constantly road-blocked by the very thing they can't run away from... themselves.
The veteran rock and jazz drummer covers styles and methods of his major influences: Buddy Rich Mel Lewis Gary Chester John McLaughlin Airto Moreira and Gil Evans. Bassist Mark Egan joins Danny for some sizzling duets and a discussion of how they create blues and jazz grooves together.
Versatility, thy name is Van Damme! So Arnold cries in End of Days? Hah! In this relentless revenge actioner, Jean-Claude not only cries, but has a drunk scene, suffers suicidal despair, does a little slapstick, and still manages to flash his ubiquitous butt. Which, of course, is what his legion of fans want to see him kick plenty of (other people's butts, that is; not his own). Van Damme may no longer generate any box-office heat (like 1998's Legionnaire, this bypassed cinemas to go straight to video), but he at least gives his fans what they want. Originally titled Coyote Moon, Desert Heat recalls that guilty pleasure Road House, as Eddie Lomax (Van Damme) comes to the rescue of a gallery of colourful characters terrorised by slobbering, drug-dealing bikers and rednecks in a dilapidated desert town. And this time, it's personal. As one denizen ominously observes, "There's trouble on the hoof and it's coming this way" for the three ill-fated bullies who beat up and shot Eddie and left him for dead. Despite its desert setting, Heat is an oasis for great character actors who pick up Van Damme's considerable slack. They include Danny Trejo (Con Air) as Eddie's Native American friend Johnny Sixtoes, Pat Morita (The Karate Kid), Larry Drake (Darkman), Vincent Schiavelli (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Ghost), Bill Erwin (Candy Stripe Nurses), and luscious Jaime Preslly as Dottie the waitress. The director is credited as Danny Mulroon, a pseudonym for John Avildsen, the Academy Award-winning director of Rocky. His career, too, seems to be on the ropes, but he keeps punching with some welcome eccentric touches. At one point Johnny gives the recuperating Eddie a foot massage (didn't he see Pulp Fiction?). And the script offers such goodies as a lovelorn bus driver (Tom's brother, Jim Hanks) inviting Dottie to see Yojimbo, and one biker's plea for mercy from a local tough: "Jessie, we were in high school together. I signed your yearbook". --Donald Liebenson, Amazon.com
RELIVE THE MAGIC of three great Wembley wins by Scotland over England the auld enemy. Includes the 1963 game where Eric Caldow broke his leg and his position at left back was taken by team mate Davie Wilson. The team list included Dave MacKay John White Denis Law Ian St John and Jim Baxter who scored both of the goals for Scotland. The final tally 2-1. Next up is 1977. Goals were provided by Gordon McQueen and Kenny Dalglish and the post-match entertainment was provided by the Scottish support on the famous Wembley turf. Last but not least the 1981 Wembley winner courtesy of John Robertson and team mates Danny McGrain Joe Jordan and Asa Hartford. Classy players classic games.
Another progressive film comes to you from the makers of Unleashed and Road To Madness. This season Straight Jacket Films brings you DAILY DOSE- a film containing some of the most underground up and coming riders some of the best pros in the world and amazing riders tackling the most consequential handrails and jumps of the season! Filmed in Finland Sweden Norway Tahoe Whistler Backcountry Oregon Cascades East Coast Cities Portland Oregon and the Southern Sierras.
Permanent Vacation (1980): In downtown Manhattan Allie a twenty-something guy (Chris Parker) whose Father is not around and whose Mother is institutionalized is a big Charlie Parker fan. He almost subconsciously searches for more meaning in his life and meets a few strange and surreal characters along the way. Stranger Than Paradise (1984): Winner of the Camera d'Or for Best First Feature at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise not only launched Jim Jarmusch's career but also earned him recognition from critics as one of today's more inventive and creative filmmakers. Lounge Lizard musician John Lurie stars as Willie a disenchanted New Yorker who along with his best friend Eddie (Richard Edson) and cousin Eva (Eszter Balint) decides it's time to leave behind their boring lives in search of ""paradise."" But as their unforgettable road trip to Florida unfolds they find that amidst the sunshine blue skies and palm trees their pursuit of happiness is constantly road-blocked by the very thing they can't run away from... themselves. Down By Law (1986): In one of the hippest comedies ever made three misfits find themselves thrown together in a New Orleans jail cell. There's Zach the unemployed DJ Jack the small-time pimp and Bob the crazy Italian tourist. Unavailable for many years this cult hit stars Tom Waits John Lurie and the Oscar-winning director and star of Life is Beautiful Roberto Benigni. A film that firmly established Jim Jarmusch as the coolest director on the American independent scene.
Please wait. Loading...
This site uses cookies.
More details in our privacy policy