A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS follows our three under-appreciated and over-burdened moms (Amy, Kiki, and Carla) as they rebel against the challenges and expectations of Christmas in hopes of creating a more perfect holiday for their families. And if that was hard enough, they have to do all of that while hosting and entertaining their ultimate holiday foes: their own mothers. By the end of the journey, our moms have redefined how to make the holidays special for their families and it ends up bringing them closer to their own moms.
Starring Academy Award Winner Natalie Portman and directed by Darren Aronofsky (The Wrestler) this provocative psychological thriller exhilarated audiences and critics on its way to becoming the must-see film of the year. Portman gives the performance of a lifetime as Nina a stunningly talented but dangerously unstable ballerina on the verge of stardom. Pushed to breaking point by her driven artistic director (Vincent Cassel) and the threat posed by a seductive rival dancer (Mila Kunis) Nina's tenuous grip on reality starts to slip away. As the pressure builds Nina's all-consuming obsessions spin out of control plunging her into a waking nightmare that will threaten not only her sanity but her life.
"Blue Harvest" finds Peter, Lois, Chris, Stewie, Brian and some of Quahog's finest in the middle of George Lucas' beloved science-fiction epic. Feel the Farce in the most irreverent and hilarious way possible.
Family Guy shouldn't work at all. Even by the witless standards of modern television, it is breathtakingly derivative: does an animated series about the travails of a boorish, suburban yob with a saintly wife, a hopeless son, a clever daughter and a baby sound familiar at all? Even the house in Family Guy looks like it was built by the same architects who sketched the residence of The Simpsons. However, Family Guy does work, transcending its (occasionally annoyingly) obvious influences with reliably crisp writing and the glorious sight gags contained in the surreal flashbacks which punctuate the episodes. Most importantly, the show's brilliance comes from two absolutely superb characters: Stewie, the baby whose extravagant dreams of tyrannising the world are perpetually thwarted by the prosaic limitations of infanthood, and the urbane family dog Brian--Snoopy after attendance at an obedience class run by Frank Sinatra. Family Guy does not possess the cultural or satirical depth of The Simpsons--very little art in any field does. But it is a genuinely funny and clever programme. --Andrew Mueller
Amy joins forces with two other over-stressed moms, leading them on a quest to liberate themselves from conventional responsibilities, going on a wild un-mom like binge of freedom, fun and self-indulgence.
Devastated Peter takes a Hawaiian vacation in order to deal with the break-up with his TV star girlfriend, Sarah. Little does he know that Sarah's travelling to the same resort as her ex ... and she has a surprise in store for him.
A curmudgeonly man is mistakenly told that he has 90 minutes to live by his doctor and promptly sets out to reconcile with his wife brother and friends in the short time he believes he has left.
Family Guy: Something Something Something Dark Side
Follow the Griffin family's hilarious escapades in Season 9 of US animated favourite Family Guy! In Season 9 the Griffin family is back for more hilarious and inappropriate antics! This DVD includes exclusive extended episodes that were too rude for tv! Stewie and Brian travel through alternate universes in an homage to a sci-fi series; spies Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase (guest-voicing as themselves) move into Cleveland's old house Stewie scores tickets to a sold-out concert and Lois lands a job on Fox News. Episodes Comprise: 1. Fox-y Lady 2. Not All Dogs Go To Heaven 3. 420 4. Stew-Roids 5. We Love You Conrad 6. Three Kings 7. Peter's Progress (Season Finale) 8. Road to Multi-verse (Season Premiere) 9. Family Goy 10. Spies Reminiscent of Us 11. Brian's Got A Brand New Bag 12. Hannah Banana 13. Quagmire's Baby 14. Jerome Is The New Black 15. Dog Gone
Follow the Griffin family's hilarious escapades in Season 8 of US animated favourite Family Guy!
Anyone who's watched Family Guy knows that its creator Seth MacFarlane has a lot of hang-ups. As outrageous as many of them are in their animated TV show forum, they get a real rundown in Ted, MacFarlane's multi-hyphenate debut in feature films. As the director, producer, cowriter, and voice artist behind the title character, MacFarlane riffs on pop culture, drug culture, religion, sex, bodily functions, and all things '80s with the kind of abandon that borders on offensive to pretty much anyone--if only it all weren't so spot-on funny. Ted is an utterly believable CGI teddy bear who comes to life in the arms of a friendless 8-year-old boy named John, who quickly grows up to be Mark Wahlberg. John has made a wish that the pudgy plush be a friend for forever, a deal that they both hold on to with genuine poignancy as the years roll by. Ted grows right along with John in voice, manner, attitude, and bad habits until they're both unmotivated layabouts who would rather do nothing more than swill beer, smoke dope, and watch the absurdly iconic '80s movie Flash Gordon over and over again to the exclusion of most everything else in life. John has managed to pick up a girlfriend named Lori (Mila Kunis), who somehow tolerates the pair of them--at least for a little while. Eventually she's annoyed enough with John for not putting away his childish things, thoughts, and behaviours that she demands Ted move out and let them move on as adults. Among all the conceits that Ted embraces is the fact that this fully anthropomorphized stuffed bear started life as a global celebrity sensation before everyone forgot about him. Now he's just a blue-collar Boston nobody who sucks on a bong, chases women, and makes dirty jokes at every opportunity while nobody pays attention. This could have been a generic lowbrow buddy movie in the Judd Apatow mold, which might have been a little funny with a human slob in the Ted role. But MacFarlane brings to the remarkably expressive CGI creation an astonishing and often shocking dynamic with his voice characterization and the consistently clever situations, which whiz by in a structure that's pretty similar to an episode of Family Guy. There are frequent non sequitur digressions and offhanded one-liners that MacFarlane could never get away with on TV. But in the raunchy, anything-goes world of Ted it's all fair game. In addition to farts, drugs, bodily functions, and all manner of sexual vulgarity, it's the slams or homages to the 1980s that are the butt of many of the best zingers or recurring jokes. There are several cameo appearances that may make for delighted double takes. And Sam Jones, the star of the ill-fated Flash Gordon, plays a version of himself that makes a running gag all the more ingenious and demonstrates how far MacFarlane will go to bring comedy down to his level of hilarity. Mark Wahlberg should be commended for being game enough to participate and absolutely shows the comedy chops to make his scenes with Ted come alive. Technically the movie is a wonder as the two-foot Ted blends into the real world with complete believability even as he spouts some of the most outrageous dialogue this side of The Hangover. Ted may be an acquired taste for those who have a dislike for MacFarlane's comic sensibility--and there are a lot of people who do. But as a laughable lowbrow adventure that delivers virtually nonstop unexpected laughs with a little heart to back it up, Ted is a surprising comic novelty that may even win over some of the most vituperative MacFarlane haters. --Ted Fry
Family Guy revolves around the Griffin family and their madcap adventures. The Griffin household includes two teenagers a cynical dog who is smarter than everyone else and a megalomaniacal mutant baby who makes numerous attempts to eradicate his parents and siblings. Heading up this eclectic household is Peter Griffin. Peter does his best to do what's right for the family but along the way he makes mistakes that are the stuff of legend...
This romantic teen comedy tells of a high school senior who, heartbroken after his girlfriend breaks up with him, starts noticing his best friend's little sister, who's not so little anymore!
Get in on the twisted fun watching this 15 disc set, with 68 Family Guy episodes. Join dim-witted (but big hearted) Peter, his adoring wife Lois, silly siblings Chris and Meg, along with their genius baby brother Stewie, the maniacal one-year-old bent on world domination, and, of course, Brian the dog - perhaps the only sane member of the family, even though he licks himself. Holy Crap, it's funny!
Climb into the Vista Cruiser for another trip back to the groovy '70s with the show that proves flashbacks can be more fun than a plateful of Hyde's ""special brownies."" As the gang continues their way toward adulthood their childhood friendships suddenly get a bit more complicated: Kelso begins dating both Jackie and Laurie; Eric and Donna attempt to take their relationship to a new level; Fez keeps trying to get a girl (any girl); while Hyde is so cool that girls are asking him out. And while their parents try to keep everything on the straight and narrow the gang keeps on truckin' with full speed hilarity. Episodes comprise: 1. Garage Sale 2. Red's Last Day 3. The Velvet Rope 4. Laurie and the Professor 5. Halloween 6. Vanstock 7. I Love Cake 8. Sleepover 9. Eric Gets Suspended 10. Red's Birthday 11. Laurie Moves Out 12. Eric's Stash 13. Hunting 14. Red Gets A Job 15. Burning Down The House 16. The First Time 17. Afterglow 18. Kitty and Eric's Night Out 19. Parents Find Out 20. Kiss Of Death 21. Kelso's Serenade 22. Jackie Moves On 23. Holy Crap! 24. Red Fired Up 25. Cat Fight Club 26. Moon Over Point Place (Part 1)
The relationship between two friends gets complicated when they decide to get romantic. Dylan (Justin Timberlake) and Jamie (Mila Kunis) think it's going to be easy to add the act of sex to their friendship, but getting physical leads to complications!
This collection houses the considerable delights of the Griffin clan's season 6 adventures all under one roof!
The complete fifth season of the '70's-inspired cult comedy series That '70s Show. Flash on back to the swinging '70s where there's a whole lotta love going around in the gang's senior year. Jackie is secretly making out with Hyde even though she still has the hots for Kelso. But Eric and Donna soon have a bigger secret after Eric gives her a diamond ring. Even Fez finally finds love at the DMV. But it's the job fair that has everyone thinking of life after high school. Kelso toys with the idea of becoming a cop while Donna and Eric plan on moving in together. But it's Fez's future that may be the most uncertain after he learns he's being deported! Episodes Comprise: 1. Going To California 2. I Can't Quit You Babe 3. What Is And What Should Never Be 4. Heartbreaker 5. Ramble On 6. Over The Hills And Far Away 7. Hot Dog 8. Thank You 9. Black Dog 10. The Crunge 11. The Girl I Love 12. Misty Mountain Hop 13. Your Time Is Gonna Come 14. Babe I'm Gonna Leave You 15. When The Levee Broke 16. Whole Lotta Love 17. The Battle Of Evermore 18. Hey Hey What Can I Do 19. Bring It On Home 20. No Quarter 21. Trampled Under Foot 22. You Shook Me 23. Nobody's Fault But Mine 24. Immigrant Song 25. Celebration Day
A Girl's Gotta Do What A Girl's Gotta Do... Set nearly 15 years after the events of 'American Psycho' this is the story of a college freshman and Patrick Bateman survivor (Kunis) who becomes a teaching assistant to a professor just as she begins to develop her own murderous obsessions...
Deck the halls with laughter and lunacy when you unwrap this double-length episode of Family Guy! After Stewie gets the brush-off from Santa Claus at the Quahog Mall, he travels to the North Pole with a reluctant Brian with one Christmas mission in mind: Kill Santa! Special Feature: Bonus Episode of The Cleveland Show: Murray Christmas
Please wait. Loading...
This site uses cookies.
More details in our privacy policy