Imagine if you could make anyone love you look more beautiful or punish your enemies just by casting a spell... Sarah is a a 17-year-old with a troubled past. Uprooted by her parents and moved to LA where she begins the final year at St. Benedict's Academy Sarah is a lonely stranger - until she meets a brigade of black lipstick and nails: Nancy Bonnie and Rochelle. These girls may never be in with the in-crowd - they're barely in with each other but recently they have bee
If Buffy the Vampire Slayer represents the lighter side of high school as a macabre experience, here's a movie that asks the burning question, "What happens when angst-ridden teenagers develop supernatural powers?" More to the point, how do four outcast teenaged witches handle their ability to cast wicked spells on the taunting classmates who've nicknamed them "The Bitches of Eastwick"? The answer, of course, is "don't get mad, get even." That's about all there is to this terminally silly movie, which makes up for its ludicrous plot by letting its young female cast have a field day as they indulge their dark fantasies. Fairuza Balk is enjoyable as the most wicked of the witches, and is therefore the focus of the film's most dazzling special effects. But it's Neve Campbell from television's Party of Five who made The Craft a modest box-office hit, just before she became her generation's fright-movie favourite in Scream and its popular sequel. --Jeff Shannon
A little Christmas magic causes two coworkers with contrasting lifestyles to switch sexual orientations.
A modern Italian-American reworking of William Shakespeare's 'Romeo and Juliet' set in the Bronx.
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