Gordon Dunn (Martin Donovan), a visionary scientific pioneer, is found dead shortly after he unveils his newest work: a device able to extract, record, and play a person's memories. Soon, a mysterious man (Peter Dinklage) shows up at his widow's door, claiming to be a friend of her late husband. After stealing the machine from the house, the man uses it to try and solve the mystery of Gordon's death, beginning an investigation of memories that lead him to unexpected and dangerous places. Features: Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Mark Palansky and Actor Peter Dinklage. The Memories We Keep.
Little Women is a "coming of age" drama tracing the lives of four sisters: Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy. During the American Civil War...
A young couple go to a remote and deserted coral island for a camping holiday only to find that the island is inhabited by a ghost seeking retribution for a past outrage.
Starring a rock royalty cast including Iggy Pop (Iggy & the Stooges) Alice Cooper Henry Rollins and Moby SUCK is a rock'n'roll vampire comedy-horror about a down and out band The Winners who will do anything for a record deal. Their luck suddenly changes when Jennifer the bass player disappears one night with a Vampire and emerges with a sexually charged charisma that drives the audiences wild. As the band members succumb one by one to blood lust their gimmick launches them into the limelight.
Dan Mathews (Joel McCrea) is a gritty cowboy drover toughened up by what he does. When he comes across wandering rich-boy Chester Graham Jr (Dean Stockwell), the son of a wealthy railroad executive, he is forced to teach him some hard lessons about life on the road. Accidentally left behind by his father's train, the sheltered heir isn't too happy about walking alongside Dan and his drovers to get home. Chester has to work as he goes, reluctantly learning the ropes of true cowboy life. As time goes on and the road to Santa Fe doesn't get any gentler, Chester slowly starts to prove his worth. It becomes clear he isn't so soft after all An all-star cast also includes Oscar winner Chill Wills (The Alamo).
Artist Eben Adams has never been able to impress dealer Henry Matthews with his work - until he draws a sketch of a young girl he meets in the park one day.She says she is only twelve and is dressed in clothes of a bygone era. The next time the couple meet Adams has become a success and Jennie a beautiful young woman whom he persuades to sit for a portrait. Adams learns that Jennie was raised in a convent in New England and died when a tidal wave hit the town. Hoping to be reunited w
Raymond Chandler's cynically idealistic hero of The Long Goodbye, Philip Marlowe, has been played by everyone from Humphrey Bogart to James Garner--but no one gives him the kind of weirdly affect-less spin that Elliott Gould does in this terrific Robert Altman reimagining of Chandler's penultimate novel. Altman recasts Marlowe as an early 70s Los Angeles habitué, who gets involved in a couple of cases at once. The most interesting involves a suicidal writer (Sterling Hayden in a larger-than-life performance) whom Marlowe is supposed to keep away from malevolent New-Ageish guru Henry Gibson. A variety of wonderfully odd characters pop up, played by everyone from model Nina Van Pallandt to director Mark Rydell to ex-baseballer Jim Bouton. And yes, that is Arnold Schwarzenegger (in only his second movie) popping up as (what else?) a muscleman. Listen for the title song: it shows up in the strangest places. --Marshall Fine
Flintstone's Christmas Carol
This 20th Anniversary edition of E.T. introduces the warmth and sense of magic of Steven Spielberg's much-loved movie to a whole new generation. And it is the youngsters at whom this new version has been aimed, with the film being given a Star Wars-style make-over in the hope that it will appeal to a generation weaned on digital effects. Thus, ET now has a souped-up space ship and the pursuing FBI agents are more politically correct, carrying walkie-talkies in place of guns. They've even given ET himself a CGI face-lift, digitally replacing the beloved puppet in certain scenes. But this is no Apocalypse Now Redux. The re-edited scenes are small and insignificant to the plot: the only additional footage of any note is ET taking a bath and demonstrating that he can breathe underwater, which is amusing but irrelevant. The surprise is that the deleted scene with Harrison Ford playing Elliot's school Principal has still not made it to the new version. Despite such grumbles, E.T. is still the joyful experience it was 20 years ago, only this time grown-ups can follow the story through an added glow of nostalgia, as they fondly remember just how great BMXs were! --Nikki Disney On the DVD: E.T.--20th Anniversary Edition has the revised version of the movie (but not the original cut) on Disc One, presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen and with a choice of gloriously remastered Dolby 5.1 or DTS sound options. The major beneficiary of this new presentation is John Williams' outstanding music score, which uniquely can also be played along with the film in the live version from the LA Shrine Auditorium 2002 premiere. A documentary about Williams conducting this extraordinary performance and a feature on his original scoring sessions are the best extra features on Disc Two. Other documentaries cover the "Evolution and Creation of ET"; a "Reunion" of the principal cast and crew with some fun behind-the-scenes footage; a piece on the planets of the Solar System narrated by ET himself (!); a photo gallery; trailers, and DVD-ROM extras. There's no director's commentary, but Spielberg does briefly introduce the movie on Disc One. --Mark Walker
Titles Comprise: My Darling Clementine: In another of his classic Westerns John Ford again reflects upon the advance of civilization on the receding frontier recounting the events leading up to and including the legendary gunfight at the O.K. Corral. As they drive their cattle toward California Wyatt Earp (Henry Fonda) and his brothers Morgan (Ward Bond) Virgil (Tim Holt) and young James (Don Garner) stop outside Tombstone Arizona where they refuse an offer for
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: The evil Shredder believes he's found what gives the turtles their power the radioactive ooze and proceeds to create dangerous mutants. Armed with Professor Perry's anti-mutant antidote it's all up to the crime fighting turtles to save the city... Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3:Everybody's favorite giant kung-fu kicking turtles travel through time and space to feudal Japan to rescue their plucky sidekick April when a golden sword acc
Wyatt Earp has long fascinated filmmakers. Actors from Burt Lancaster and James Stewart to Kurt Russell and Kevin Costner have played the legendary gunfighter but no portrayal is more definitive that Henry Fonda’s in My Darling Clementine. John Ford’s first Western since his seminal Stagecoach My Darling Clementine ranks among the director’s finest. Telling the story of the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral and the friendship between Earp and Doc Holliday Ford renders this famous tale into a lyrical masterpiece filmed in his beloved Monument Valley and full of iconic moments. This limited edition contains two versions of the Western classic – the version that premiered in cinemas in December 1946 and the longer ‘pre-release’ cut that had played to preview audiences earlier that year – as well as another Wyatt Earp movie from 20th Century Fox Allan Dwan’s Frontier Marshal starring Randolph Scott and Cesar Romero. LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS High Definition (1080p) Blu-ray presentations of My Darling Clementine’s theatrical and ‘pre-release’ versions and Frontier Marshal Original uncompressed PCM mono 1.0 sound Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Jay Shaw. BLU-RAY DISC 1: MY DARLING CLEMENTINE (THEATRICAL VERSION) 4K digital film restoration Commentary on the theatrical version by author Scott Eyman and Earp’s grandson Wyatt Earp III John Ford and Monument Valley - a 2013 documentary on the director’s lifelong association with Utah’s Monument Valley containing interviews with Peter Cowie (author of John Ford and the American West) John Ford John Wayne Henry Fonda James Stewart and Martin Scorsese Lost and Gone Forever - a visual essay by Tag Gallagher on the themes that run through My Darling Clementine and the film’s relationship with John Ford’s other works Stills gallery Theatrical Trailer BLU-RAY DISC 2: MY DARLING CLEMENTINE (‘PRE-RELEASE’ VERSION) FRONTIER MARSHAL AND OTHER WYATT EARP TALES 2K digital film restoration of the ‘pre-release’ version of My Darling Clementine What is the Pre-Release Version? - a documentary by Robert Gitt Senior Film Preservation Officer at the UCLA Film and Television Archive comparing the two versions of My Darling Clementine High Definition digital film transfer of Frontier Marshal Allan Dwan’s 1939 Wyatt Earp film starring Randolph Scott Two radio plays inspired by Wyatt Earp - a 1947 adaptation of My Darling Clementine starring Henry Fonda as Earp and Richard Conte as Doc Holliday and a 1949 Hallmark Playhouse production in which Conte played the role of Earp Frontier Marshall Theatrical Trailer 40-PAGE BOOKLET Booklet containing new writing on My Darling Clementine by Kim Newman (author of Wild West Movies) and on Frontier Marshal by Glenn Kenny plus an extensive archive interview with screenwriter Winston Miller illustrated with original archive stills and posters
The hit of the 1969-1970 season, Department S was an attempt on the part of television company ITC to create a "with-it" follow-up to the The Saint and Man in a Suitcase series which were starting to look staid by then. The department of the title is notionally part of Interpol, a group managed by the first of many black TV top cops (here Denis Albana Peters), and assigned all the bizarre cases The Avengers hadn't handled. Often they would come up against modern variations on the classic "locked-room" or "paradox" mysteries so favoured in crime fiction, mysteries which verge on the sort of phenomena The X Files would later specialise in (except no aliens appear in Department S). The supposed leads are Action-Man-type Stewart Sullivan (Joel Fabiani) and English-rose computer whiz Annabelle Hurst (Rosemary Nichols), but the break-out character is the flamboyant Jason King (Peter Wyngarde), a mystery writer and puzzle-solver notable for his Fu Manchu facial hair and an enormous wardrobe of safari suits, ruffled shirts, flared trousers and velvet jackets. King was the only male character on TV to be as fashion-conscious as the Avengers girls, and his preening peacock attitudes--along with the scripts' above-average mysteries--made this essential viewing for the Age of Aquarius. Volume One includes the following episodes: "Six Days", in which a missing airliner turns up but the passengers have no idea that they've lost six days, with Peter Bowles; and "The Trojan Tanker", in which a mystery woman is found in a luxury suite concealed inside an oil tanker, with Simon (Doomwatch) Oates. --Kim Newman
Richard Fleischer (10 Rillington Place) directs this 1968 adaptation of Gerold Frank s book about the real-life case of The Boston Strangler, a serial killer who terrorized Boston, murdering many women, and defying the efforts of a special division headed by John S. Bottomly (Henry Fonda) to catch him. Then the police zero in on Albert DeSalvo (Tony Curtis), a normal family man who may be suffering from a split personality. Dual Format Edition Special Features: High Definition Transfer UK Blu Ray Premiere Original Mono Audio Audio Commentary by Kat Ellinger Author and editor in chief of Diabolique Magazine Split-Screen Personality William Friedkin on Richard Fleischer s The Boston Strangler Real Killer, Fake Nose Richard Fleischer s Boston Strangler remembered Out of His Mind: Richard Fleischer On The Boston Strangler A Killers Emotions: Tony Curtis On The Boston Strangler Still Gallery Optional English SDH subtitles for the main feature Original Theatrical Trailer
Speed (1994): Hold on tight for a rush of pulse-pounding thrills breathtaking stunts and unexpected romance in a film you'll want to see again and again. Keanu Reeves stars as Jack Traven an LAPD Swat team specialist who is sent to defuse a bomb that a revenge-driven extortionist (Dennis Hopper) has planted on a bus. But until he does Jack and passenger Sandra Bullock must keep the bus speeding through the streets of Los Angeles at more than 50 miles an hour - or the bomb wi
It's been nearly 100 years since Earth was devastated by a nuclear apocalypse, with the only survivors being the inhabitants of 12 international space stations that were in orbit at the time. Three generations later, the survivors number 4,000 -- and resources are running out on their dying Ark (the 12 stations now linked together and repurposed to keep the survivors alive). Capital punishment and population control are the order of the day, as the leaders of the Ark take ruthless steps to ensure their future -- including secretly exiling a group of 100 juvenile prisoners to the Earth's surface to test whether it's habitable. No one has set foot on the planet in nearly a century -- until now. Among the exiles are Clarke, the teenage daughter of the Ark's chief medical officer; Wells, son of the Ark's Chancellor; the resourceful Finn; and brother/sister duo Bellamy and Octavia, whose illegal sibling status has them flaunting the rules. Technologically blind to what's happening on the planet below them, the Ark's leaders -- Clarke's widowed mother, Abby; the Chancellor, Jaha; and Jaha's shadowy second in command, Kane -- are faced with difficult decisions about life, death and the continued existence of the human race. For the 100 on Earth, however, the alien planet they've never known is a mysterious realm that can be magical one moment and lethal the next. With the survival of the human race entirely in their hands, the 100 must find a way to forge a new path on a wildly changed Earth that's primitive, intense and teeming with the unknown.
Now perhaps the most beloved American film, It's a Wonderful Life was largely forgotten for years, due to a copyright quirk. Only in the late 1970s did it find its audience through repeated TV showings. Frank Capra's masterwork deserves its status as a feel-good communal event, but it is also one of the most fascinating films in the American cinema, a multilayered work of Dickensian density. George Bailey (played superbly by James Stewart) grows up in the small town of Bedford Falls, dreaming dreams of adventure and travel, but circumstances conspire to keep him enslaved to his home turf. Frustrated by his life, and haunted by an impending scandal, George prepares to commit suicide on Christmas Eve. A heavenly messenger (Henry Travers) arrives to show him a vision: what the world would have been like if George had never been born. The sequence is a vivid depiction of the American Dream gone bad, and probably the wildest thing Capra ever shot (the director's optimistic vision may have darkened during his experiences making military films in World War II). Capra's triumph is to acknowledge the difficulties and disappointments of life, while affirming--in the teary-eyed final reel--his cherished values of friendship and individual achievement. It's a Wonderful Life was not a big hit on its initial release, and it won no Oscars (Capra and Stewart were nominated); but it continues to weave a special magic. --Robert Horton
It's been a challenging season for the Gunners: full of action and excitement tension and drama. In a season which saw the Gunners reach the quarter finals in the Champions League beating London rivals QPR Chelsea and Tottenham on the way to face Liverpool in the FA Cup Final and securing 2nd place in the Premiership the squad fought hard and long. Even with the tragic loss of Arsenal legends David Rocastle and George Armstrong and rising prospect Niccolo Galli resolve was firm and the team pulled together to haul in some great results. In this video we follow Arsenal's European campaign the road to Cardiff and sweat-soaked endeavours to regain the top spot in the Premiership. With action from all of the tournaments highlights of the Ladies amazing Treble and the FA Cup success of the Youth squad this is the definitive story of Arsenal's 2000/01 Season. Also includes interviews with Tony Adams Lee Dixon Thierry Henry David Seaman manager Arsene Wenger and new star Ashley Cole.
Titles Comprise: Feast : From executive producers Wes Craven Ben Affleck Matt Damon and Chris Moore comes the incredible horror extravaganza Feast. When a motley crew of strangers find themselves trapped in an isolated tavern they must band together in a battle for survival against a family of flesh-hungry creatures. Terrifying and full of surprises Feast turns the screen blood red as the group is devoured one-by-one. Feast 2: Sloppy Seconds: The ravenous rapacious creatures of Feast have returned and this time they're taking on an entire town. In the aftermath of the slaughter that saw a family of grotesque monsters attacking a bar in a middle-American backwater four survivors made it out alive. Fleeing the blood-soaked bar they make it to a small neighbouring town where a new batch of monster-bait is dealing with their own problems. But when the insatiable creatures follow the trail into the town all bets are off as the locals are forced to band together with the new arrivals to try and figure out how to survive a fresh onslaught. Feast 3: The Happy Finish: Following the monster onslaughts of Feast 1 and 2 the survivors are saved by the mysterious prophet Shot Bus Gus who seemingly has the ability to control the beasts. He leads them into the sewers as they travel to the big city. Along the way they get help from karate expert Jean-Claude Segal and learn that the beasts originate from a place called The Hive. Armed with this knowledge they decide to fight back and destroy them once and for all!
Werewolf Of London: The first Hollywood film to explore a werewolf on the silver screen a creature rooted in folklore worldwide. Directed by American Stuart Walker and starring Henry Hull Warner Oland and Valerie Hobson. Werewolf of London chronicles the life of botanist Dr Wilfred Glendon who sets off on an expedition to the Himalayas to find the marifisa lupina lumina a rare orchid that only blooms by moonlight. When he finds the unique plant he is attacked and injured b
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