Eureka Entertainment to release TROLL: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION, a celebration of one of the greatest bad movies ever made, on Blu-ray as part of the Eureka Classics range from 8 October 2018. Featuring a Limited Edition O-Card Slipcase, with artwork designed by Devon Whitehead, and a collector's booklet featuring rare content. Embraced by a generation of bad movie fans, Troll 2 has become one of the most iconic cult films of its generation, and to this day regularly plays to sold-out theatres of adoring fans. Presented here alongside the first (and entirely unrelated) film, Troll, as well as Best Worst Movie, the definitive documentary on the film's unexpected resurgence as a cult favourite, Troll: The Complete Collection is a celebration of one of the most unusual success stories in movie history. Troll The Potter family (including future Law & Order star Michael Moriarty as Harry Potter) is about to find out there's no place like home when a troublesome troll starts taking over their building, transforming each apartment into an overgrown garden of ancient evil and turning tenants into a horde of hairy hobgoblins. Troll 2 After his family moves to the rural community of Nilbog (spoilers, it's goblin spelled backwards), a g-g-g-ghost warns young Joshua Waits that vegetarian goblins want to transform him and his family into plants and then eat them. Best Worst Movie An affectionate and intoxicatingly fun tribute to one of the greatest bad movies ever made, and the people responsible for unleashing it upon the world. Features: Limited Edition O Card slipcase featuring artwork by Devon Whitehead 1080p presentation of Troll, Troll 2 and for the first time ever on Blu-ray, Best Worst Movie. DTS-HD MA 2.0 audio on Troll and Best Worst Movie, with LPCM mono audio on Troll 2 Optional English SDH subtitles for Troll and Troll 2 The Making of Troll [50 mins]- featuring director John Carl Buechler, producer Charles Band, Writer Ed Naha, composer Richard Band and more Feature length audio commentary on Troll 2 with Actors George Hardy and Deborah Reed Best Worst Movie - over an hour of deleted scenes and interview footage not included in the final cut of the documentary Interview with Troll 2's Goblin Queen, Deborah Reed Screenwriting Q&A with Jeff Goldsmith, Michael Stephenson and George Hardy [audio only - 81 mins] Fan contributions Monstrous - Music Video by ECOMOG A limited edition collector's booklet featuring rare archival material
A battle of action and wits in a World War II prison camp where the Fuhrer's scheme for looting a treasure-laden island off Greece is under way. Prisoners of war labour under the eye of the camp's Austrian Commandment Major Otto Hecht as they dig up priceless Greek art. Zeno the island's resistance leader and his woman Eleana scheme to defeat the occupiers. Zeno and his men clash with the Germans to save the lives of condemned prisoners and try to locate a submarine oil supply dep
It's 1962 and Tracy Turnblad has the largest bouffant on the block. She also has all the right moves to be on the local dance show and win the crown of Miss Auto Show as well as the ex-steady of Amber the snooty reigning princess. But Amber is not too happy and has other plans for Tracy.
Be afraid... Be twice as afraid! Troll: When an evil troll named Torok attempts to bring about cataclysmic changes that will forever erase mankind an ancient sorceress and a young boy join forces to stop him before he can carry out his diabolical plan. Troll II: Trolls live in the woods around Nibog and feed on the town's population. By transforming themselves into people the trolls are able to come into town and pick their menu. This summer their prey is the Waits
Though most of the stars got back together for Airplane II: The Sequel, the Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker team passed the torch to new writer-director Ken Finkleman, who manages to reprise the style of the original quite well but is, as perhaps expected, more or less one-third as funny. The premise, alarmingly similar to the dead-straight contemporary Starflight One, is that the first commercial passenger shuttle to the moon has 2001-style computer hassles en route and finds itself headed straight through an asteroid belt into the sun. Cracked-up test pilot Robert Hays and promoted-from-stewardess technical expert Julie Hagerty have to save the day, despite panicking passengers, inept ground staff, complicated trauma flashbacks, deadpan one-liners and deliberately dodgy special effects. Leslie Nielsen is glimpsed only in footage from Airplane that sets up an extended slapping-the-hysterical-passenger gag redone (into the ground) here, but Lloyd Bridges and Stephen Stucker return as the overly-intense airport crisis controller and his happy-go-lucky gay sidekick. There are sterling cameos in the patented agonisingly serious mode from Raymond Burr (a judge), Chuck Connors (cigar-tossing fire chief), William Shatner (who gets the best sight gag) and Sonny Bono (impotent mad bomber). Back in the early 80s, it was still possible to do mild gags about paedophilia (not only Graves's chumminess with the cute kid who visits the cockpit, but also the priest looking at the centrefold of Altar Boy magazine) but aside from some incidental naked breasts, the humour is a touch cleaner than in the first film. Hays and Hagerty are better than the material, and it's all over swiftly enough--the film clocks in at 75 minutes before the slow, padded end credits--to avoid wearing out your patience. The end title promises an Airplane III, but we're still waiting. The 1.78:1 widescreen ratio of the DVD allows you to see gags in the corners of the frame that would be cropped in a full-screen transfer. --Kim Newman
In a career that's approaching four history-making decades..In an artist creative enough to succeed in every entertainment medium including: A successful singing career with hits in the 60's 70's 80's and 90's Two Top Ten - rated television shows A critically acclaimed appearance on the Broadway stage A succession of hit films including an Academy Award for ""Best Actress"". For all this and so much more Cher has given us reason to believe. With the incredible success of Beli
Unavailable at all for nearly three decades, then issued in a VHS edition in 1996, the Rolling Stones' legendary Rock and Roll Circus finally gets the full treatment with this DVD release documenting the 1968 event. The Stones were reportedly unhappy with their performance (hence the long delay), and it isn't their finest moment; performing "Jumping Jack Flash" and a variety of songs from their then-new Beggars Banquet album, Keith Richards is game, but Jagger's preening (especially on "Sympathy for the Devil") is over the top, and guitarist Brian Jones looks dissolute and well on his way to his death the following year. A certain weirdness permeates some of the other musical acts as well: Jethro Tull lip-syncs unconvincingly, Taj Mahal and band were obliged to perform before the circus set was completed and the audience had arrived, and John Lennon's outing with impromptu supergroup the Dirty Mac (with Richards, Eric Clapton, and drummer Mitch Mitchell) is hampered by Yoko Ono's caterwauling, although their version of the Beatles' "Yer Blues" is cool. Still, the Who are brilliant, Marianne Faithfull is beautiful, the various circus acts are fun, and the crowd clearly loves it. The DVD comes with some fascinating bonus features, including three extra songs by Mahal, some lovely classical piano by Julius Katchen, and a "quad split-screen" version of "Yer Blues". Best of all are a new interview with the Who's Pete Townshend and the various commentary tracks added for the DVD--especially those by Tull's Ian Anderson, director Michael Lindsay-Hogg, and Stones Jagger, Richards, and Bill Wyman (who dryly attributes Jagger's reluctance to issue the show to his dissatisfaction with his own performance, not the band's). Flaws notwithstanding, this is a treat. --Sam Graham
Shortly after a 747 heading to London takes off from New York's Kennedy airport a mysterious letter is found in the airport lounge warning that several murders will take place on the plane before it lands. At first airport security brushes this off as a bogus prank. But they quickly realize the reality of the situation as the first dead body is discovered on the plane. As the death count increases a trail of clues suggests the killer's motives with signs pointing to both passenger
John Waters' unique brand of humor comes to DVD in Hairspray, starring Ricki Lake, Divine and Sonny Bono.
A real archaeological artefact from 1967, Good Times will be mostly of interest to anyone who wants to see a parade of fashions that Austin Powers would reject as too garish to be seen on the street in. The nothingy plot concerns then-married Sonny and Cher playing themselves as a one-note bickering sit-com couple, signing up with sinister film tycoon Mordicus (an impeccable George Sanders) to make a movie but not wanting to do the mouldy rags-to-riches hillbilly script on offer. Cher is supposed to be less interested than Sonny in making a movie--which might well have been the truth since she mostly lies around doodling outrageous fashion designs or contributing her strange sung-through-the-nose vocals as poor, goofy Sonny does all the hard work flogging life into skits that had been squeezed dry by the Monkees before being passed to him. The finale finds Sonny and Cher standing up for integrity and refusing to make a bad film even if it means they gets blacklisted all over town--a lesson it's a shame that they (especially Cher) didn't take to heart in their later careers. Astonishingly, this was the feature directorial debut of The Exorcist's William Friedkin, who fills the screen with colour, action and gaggery after the manner of the then-hip Batman TV show while focusing on screaming outfits that remain among the darnedest things you ever saw. Aside from a reprise of "I Got You, Babe", the score is a little light on the slim canon of S&C hits; the songs included are "It's the Little Things", "Good Times", "Trust Me", "Don't Talk to Strangers", "I'm Gonna Love You" and "Just a Name". The DVD extras include a few sketchy bios and a jump-to-a-song feature. --Kim Newman
Tony Curtis is Stoddard the rich and powerful focal point of Balboa society. Erin blakely (Carol Lynley) is his ex-lover and widow of his partner Sam Cole (Steve Kanaly) is an honest politician determined to expose Ernie's unscrupulous double dealing. Filmed in the exotic sun-drenched waterfront of Newport Beach California 'Rich And Powerful' paints an intimate picture of love lust and intrigue. As Ernie Stoddard knows well; wealth and power bring him either the best of friends or the worst of enemies.
Sonny & Cher: 1. A Cowboy's Work Is Never Done 2. The Letter 3. All I Ever Need Is You 4. Bad Moon Rising 5. Medley: Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show / Mr Tambourine Man 6. Cry Like A Baby 7. I Dig Rock n' Roll Music Sonny & Cher featuring Jerry Lee Lewis Chuck Berry and friends: 1. Bad Bad Leroy Brown 2. Let Me Down Easy 3. Love Grows Where My Rosemary Goes 4. Medley: Out Of Sigh / Get Ready 5. Sonny & Cher Stomp 6. Silly Love Songs Sonny & Cher featuring Donny & Marie Osmond: 1. Without Love 2. You Make Me Feel Like Dancing Bonus tracks in B & W: 1. Little Man 2. I Got You Babe 3. What Now My Love 4. Let The Beat Go On
This DVD includes 2 Christmas Specials from the Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour which aired in 1972 and 1973 and a third from the Sonny & Cher Show in 1976 digitally remastered from the original CBS master tapes. Highlights from the Sonny & Cher's three Christmas variety shows make this a unique treat for fans. Guests include William Conrad Bernadette Peters Captain Kangaroo and Chastity Bono. Songs featured comprise: 1. Jingle Bells - Sonny & Cher 2. A Gift Of Song and O Holy Night - Cher 3. The Twelfth of Never - Sonny 4. Caroling medley - Cast Extras include two animated Christmas videos of Sonny & Cher covering ""Black & White"" by Three Dog Night and Stevie Wonder's ""Higher Ground."" A must-have for Sonny & Cher fans everywhere! 'The Sonny And Cher Comedy Hour' was the show that took America by storm and became a focal point for 70's pop culture. The programme exploded on the scene as a five-week summer replacement series for the Ed Sullivan Show in August 1971. Excitement was so high the show was brought back in December. America fell in love with the battling Bonos as they sang and joked their way through the brightest musical comedy program ever produced!
This controversial documentary carries shocking revelations behind the tragic series of events in Waco Texas which resulted in the death of four federal agents and 76 men women and children of the Branch Davidian religious sect. Amongst the allegations made in the film are that government agencies firstly provoked war with a group whose apocalyptic religious beliefs and rumored manufacturing of illegal weapons made them easy targets and secondly they methodically covered up up any evidence that the government were culpable for the deaths that ensued.
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