Ebenezer: (Fullscreen 4:3 / English - Dolby Digital (2.0) Stereo / Cert. PG) In this an exhilarating Wild West version of Dickens' classic 'A Christmas Carol' Scrooge (Palance) is a miserable card-cheating miser who owns half the town until visited by the ghosts of Christmas past present and future... A Kid Called Danger: (Fullscreen 4:3 / English - Dolby Digital (2.0) Stereo / Cert. PG) 13 year old Dano wants to be a cop just like hi dad. He gets just such an opportunity when he plunges head first into the case of a highly wanted jewel thief whose crimes even the police can not solve... Little Heroes: (Fullscreen 4:3 / English - Dolby (2.0) Stereo / Cert. U) When young Charlie's parents go on a long trip he and his home are protected from the intrusion of two thugs by the hilarious antics of his pet dogs Samson and Hercules... Gulliver's Travels: (Fullscreen 4:3 / English - Dolby (1.0) mono / Cert. U) Based on Jonathan Swift's literary classic the live action/animation features Richard Harris as Lemuel Gulliver who encounters a series of adventures after being shipwrecked...
Terry is a beautiful young woman who has grown up in the suburbs of New York City she is now about to fulfil her ambition and head for the bright lights of Broadway to take up her career as a dancer. Nature has endowed Terry with a great vitality and an exuberant figure. With the benefit of her body she finds herself surrounded by many different personalities of the New York nightlife. The young Puertorican guy who makes love to her the way she likes it quickly intensely and above all wildly. Robert her real love. Their relationship is different and maybe he is the one with whom she can spend her future and fulfil her dreams. It is soon apparent that even Robert is cynically taking advantage of her sexuality. From the creator of such classics as '11 Days 11 Nights' D'Almato presents a film that couples all the eroticism of '9 1/2 Weeks' and all the excitement of 'Dirty Dancing'.
Bill Murray is at his wisecracking best in this riotous romantic comedy about a weatherman caught in a personal time warp on the worst day of his life! Teamed with a relentlessly cheery producer (Andie MacDowell) and a smart aleck cameraman TV weatherman Phil Connors (Bill Murray) is sent to Punxsutawney Pennsylvania to cover the annual Groundhog Day festivities. On his way out of town Phil is caught in a giant blizzard - which he himself actually failed to predict - and finds himself stuck in a small town hell. Just when things couldn't get worse they do! Phil wakes the next morning to find that it's Groundhog Day all over again. And again. And again. During the recurring 24 hour nightmare Phil starts to realise that he can also use it to his advantage; to re-write the events of his day and to generally have a whale of a time. But manipulating his day to capture the one woman he really wants is not quite so easy... A truly comic time warp that everyone will enjoy being stuck in!
Jamie Foxx stars in this biopic of legendary soul and R&B singer Ray Charles. Riding high on a wave of Oscar buzz, Foxx proved himself worthy of all the hype by portraying blind R&B legend Ray Charles in a warts-and-all performance that Charles approved shortly before his death in June 2004. Despite a few dramatic embellishments of actual incidents (such as the suggestion that the accidental drowning of Charles's younger brother caused all the inner demons that Charles would battle into ad...
Much less fun than its predecessor, this 1989 sequel starts off on a bleak note by telling us our heroes from Ghostbusters have been on the skids for five years and Bill Murray's lead character never did hook up with Sigourney Weaver's lovely symphony-musician character. What's more, she has a kid by somebody else. Everybody's on an uphill climb, and Ghostbusters II never soars the way the first film did, despite having the same director, Ivan Reitman (Dave, Kindergarten Cop). The lame plot finds the boys attempting to prevent a disaster on New York City caused by too many bad vibes in the Big Apple. Yikes! Fortunately, screenwriters Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis have penned enough good one-liners to keep Murray busy, and if the ghostly special effects no longer surprise as they did in Ghostbusters, they're at least inventive. -- Tom Keogh, Amazon.com
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