Archive for the ‘Music & Video’ Category

Spy Kids 3-D Game Over

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

Description
The Spy Kids are back again! This time, their trademark action is combined with the very latest digital technology and the thrill of the 3-D experience to deliver a motion picture event that pushes family fun to the next level! Secret agents Juni (Daryl Sabara) and Carmen Cortez (Alexa Vega) set out on their most mind-blowing mission yet: a journey inside the virtual reality world of a 3-D video game where awe-inspiring graphics and creatures come dangerously to life! As they face escalating challenges through increasingly difficult levels of the game, the Spy Kids must rely on humor, high-tech gadgets, and the bonds of family in order to stop a power-hungry villain (Sylvester Stallone) set on controlling the youth of the world! Also featuring familiar faces Antonio Banderas, Carla Gugino, and Ricardo Montalban in an incredible all-star cast!Amazon.com
The adventures of pint-sized secret agents Juni and Carmen Cortes (Daryl Sabara and Alexa Vega) continue. As Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over opens, Juni has left the spy agency and launched a career as a private detective–but when he learns that his sister Carmen has disappeared into a nefarious multi-user computer game, he agrees to go in after her, with the assistance of his grandfather (Ricardo Montalban). Three-dimensional special effects launch us into a topsy-turvy world of battling robots, souped-up motorcycle races, frogs on pogo sticks, surfing on hot lava, and much, much more. The story is even more incoherent than an actual computer game–but the movie storms along, driven by writer/director/editor/everything-else Robert Rodriguez’s sheer visual enthusiasm. Featuring Sylvester Stallone, Antonio Banderas, Carla Gugino, and everyone else who appeared in the first two Spy Kids movies. –Bret Fetzer

Spy Kids 3-D Game Over

Little Black Book

Sunday, June 5th, 2011

Product Description
The Little Black Book is a hilarious novelty gift for stocking fillers, Birthdays and Stag Nights! With this little beauty you can keep a log of girls or guys numbers, their name and location (whether it is the pub or their home town). Rank each one with the beer symbols, which can be used in all manner of ways! Rate them out of 10, how many beers it took for them to give you their phone number or how drunk you will need to be to find them remotely attractive. There is nothing worse than chatting up a hot girl, only to wash off the number she gave you in the shower the next morning. Doh! This handy little book should be carried with you to bars, clubs and pubs for any pulling moment.

Little Black Book

Gidget – The Complete Series

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Description
Catch a wave with America’s favorite southern California beach teen in GIDGET: THE COMPLETE SERIES. Join two-time Academy Award® winner Sally Field (1984, Actress in a Leading Role, Places in the Heart) as perky 15-year-old Frances Elizabeth Lawrence (better known to her family and friends as Gidget), Don Porter as her ever-loving father, Russ, and a host of such soon-to-be-famous faces as Richard Dreyfuss, Barbara Hershey, Bonnie Franklin, Harvey Korman and Henry Jaglom, for 32 winning episodes of fun-in-the-sun comedy, romance and adventure.Amazon.com
Gidget launched the career of the ever-perky Sally Field (who decades later still looks like the sweetie-pie beach bunny she played in the mid-’60s series). The show is a valentine to Southern California, surfing, and plucky girl power–in fact, Gidget’s self-aware musings and intrepid ways of getting out of trouble lay the groundwork for later TV heroines like Buffy and Veronica Mars. The show’s aged surprisingly well, mostly because of the undeniable charms of Field, who seems to take her teenage “horror stories”–as when squeeze Jeff (a.k.a. Moon Doggie) is poised to return to Princeton and suggests they date other people–with a knowing grain of salt. The teen drama is all a bit tongue in cheek, since it’s clear nothing will get our Gidget down for long. The dialogue is a real treat, a crazy mix of late film noir (“How old’s the underripe tomato?”) and pre-Summer of Love hipster California-speak (“Well, look at all the wiggy birds around here!”). The set includes all 32 episodes, with a short interview with Field, who has a lot of affection for her young persona–as do we all, Daddy-o. –A.T. Hurley

Gidget – The Complete Series

I’ll Do Anything

Sunday, April 10th, 2011

Product Description
Matt hobbs is a talented but unsuccessful actor. When estranged (& strange) ex-wife beth dumps their daughter jeannie on matt father & daughter have a lot of adjusting to do. Matt eventually faces the choice of family vs career in a particularly difficult way. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 12/26/2006 Starring: Nick Nolte Albert Brooks Run time: 116 minutes Rating: Pg13 Director: Albert L BrooksAmazon.com
Originally conceived and shot as a musical, James L. Brooks’s (Broadcast News) comedy of life in Hollywood remains a perceptive and very funny film. A loose Nick Nolte stars as Matt Hobbs, a struggling actor who must find work to support his spoiled 6-year-old daughter (cutie pie Whittni Wright) when his estranged wife (Tracey Ullman) dumps her. Brooks creates wonderful characters in this insightful look at how the movie business has changed–from strong talent (represented by Hobbs) to image and test screenings. Hobbs’s angel–professionally and privately–is embodied by a ditsy production assistant (Joely Richardson) to an egoistical producer (Albert Brooks, hilarious as always). Ironically, the movie’s songs by Prince were excised when they did not test well. What’s left lacks the heights the songs might have provided (especially in the finale), but with Brooks’s talent for giving even minor characters juicy dialogue, I’ll Do Anything is a light comedy worth seeking out. –Doug Thomas

I’ll Do Anything

The Disenchanted

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

Product Description
Judith Godreche (The Man In The Iron Mask, Ridicule) stars as Beth, an enchanting young Parisian girl whose boyfriend, in the middle of a petty argument, dares her to bed the ugliest man she can find, to test her love for him. What follows is more than a test of love; it is also one of courage and will. Three men cross her path: an older man whose mistress is Beth’s invalid mother; a young, inexperienced boy her own age; and, finally, 40 year-old Alphonse, a handsome, mysterious stranger.

Taking a simple premise and a beautiful young woman, Benoit Jacquot has created a masterpiece of French cinema, capturing in full the talents of the young actress Judith Godreche and displaying beautifully his own innovative style.

The Disenchanted

36 Fillette

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Description
While on vacation with her family, fourteen year old Lili vows to lose her virginity. She attracts the attention of a good looking, middle-aged playboy and with the skill of an adult and the naivete of a child, she seduces him. Her involvement with this older man and a chance encounter with a musician further her journey toward sexual awakening.

36 Fillette

Breathless

Saturday, January 29th, 2011

Amazon.com
The movie that heralded the French New Wave movement, this lean and exciting 1959 film directed by Jean-Luc Godard (A Woman Is a Woman, Weekend) broke new ground not only in its unorthodox use of editing and hand-held photography, but in its unflinching and nonjudgmental portrayal of amoral youth. Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg play two young lovers on the run from the law after Belmondo kills a cop and steals a car. Soon they are on an odyssey through the streets of Paris searching for some money he is owed so that he and his American girlfriend can escape to Italy. As a chase picture it features some startling photography on the streets of Paris, but as a romance it defies expectations, existing as part tragedy and part Bonnie and Clyde crime movie. The result is a wholly original film experience. Inspiring not only a remake starring Richard Gere but numerous films and television series, Breathless is an essential part of motion picture history. –Robert Lane

Breathless

The Exorcist

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

Description
An innocent girl is evilly possessed — and a doubting priest becomes her last hope. Linda Blair and Ellen Burstyn in the two-time Academy Award(R) winner that shocked the world.

DVD Features:
Audio Commentary:Separate Commentaries by Friedkin & Blatty
Other:“Fear of God” 3 trailers Nwe Interviews
TV Spot:6 TV Spots: “Beyond Comprehension”, “You Too Can See The Exorcist”, “Between Science and Superstition”, “The Movie You’ve Been Waiting For”, “Nobody Expected It”, “Life Had Been Good”

Amazon.com
Director William Friedkin was a hot ticket in Hollywood after the success of The French Connection, and he turned heads (in more ways than one) when he decided to make The Exorcist as his follow-up film. Adapted by William Peter Blatty from his controversial bestseller, this shocking 1973 thriller set an intense and often-copied milestone for screen terror with its unflinching depiction of a young girl (Linda Blair) who is possessed by an evil spirit. Jason Miller and Max von Sydow are perfectly cast as the priests who risk their sanity and their lives to administer the rites of demonic exorcism. Ellen Burstyn plays Blair’s mother, who can only stand by in horror as her daughter’s body is wracked by Satanic disfiguration. One of the most frightening films ever made, The Exorcist was mysteriously plagued by trouble during production, and the years since have not diminished its capacity to disturb even the most stoic viewers. –Jeff Shannon

The Exorcist

Around the World in 80 Days

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

  • Get ready for phenomenal fun, spectacular adventures, and nonstop action as hilarious megastar Jackie Chan (SHANGHAI NOON, SHANGHAI KNIGHTS) dares to do what no one has done before beat the clock in a race around the world. Traveling the globe by land, sea, air, and even in-line skates, Chan and his buddies are greeted with impossible obstacles at every planned and unplanned stop along the way, ma

Description
Get ready for phenomenal fun, spectacular adventures, and nonstop action as hilarious megastar Jackie Chan (SHANGHAI NOON, SHANGHAI KNIGHTS) dares to do what no one has done before — beat the clock in a race around the world. Traveling the globe by land, sea, air, and even in-line skates, Chan and his buddies are greeted with impossible obstacles at every planned and unplanned stop along the way, making their fantastically speedy voyage more frantic and heart-pounding than ever! Filled with amazing stunts, humor, and the importance of friendship and following your dreams, AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS is one trip the whole family will enjoy taking together.Amazon.com
The 2004 version of Around the World in 80 Days is an entertaining hodge-podge of adventure, comedy, and scenery from across the globe. Phileas Fogg (Steve Coogan, 24 Hour Party People), an obsessively precise inventor, bets that he can circumnavigate the planet in 80 days–considered impossible in the Victorian era. In this version, Jackie Chan plays a Chinese peasant who retrieves a stolen idol from the Bank of England, then convinces Fogg to hire him as a French valet so that Chan can get back to his village. Chan supplies numerous spectacular fights against the forces trying to stop Fogg or get the idol, while Coogan is both funny and a surprisingly appealing romantic lead (he flirts with a fetching French painter who joins them). The various episodes–featuring cameos by Arnold Schwarzenegger, John Cleese, Owen Wilson, and Sammo Hung–are uneven, but a goofy good cheer prevails. –Bret Fetzer

Around the World in 80 Days

I Shot Andy Warhol

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Description
He was the world-renowned King of Pop Artand his life was about to take a dramatic turn in exchange for someone else’s fifteen minutes of fame! Starring Lili Taylor (Ransom) and Jared Harris (Father’s Day), and winner of the Sundance Film Festival’s Special Jury Recognition Award*,this “vibrant, touching and thoroughly entertaining film” (The New York Times) explores the provocative story behind the shooting of ’60s superstar Andy Warhol. Valerie Solanas (Taylor), a lesbian writer, loner and prostitute, has come to the Big Apple with one goal in mind: to spread the gospel of her radical feminism. Desperate for an audience, she latches on to the fringes of Warhol’s (Harris) glamorous sex-and-drug-laced Factory scene. But as her zeal swerves dangerously out of control, her private madness leads to a bizarre obsession with the artist himselfand a final, explosive act of violence that not only gets her notice…but makes her manifesto infamous. *1996Amazon.com
Mary Harron’s feature–which picked up a Special Jury Award at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival for lead actress and independent film mainstay Lili Taylor–is a highly suspect mishmash of golly-gee counterculture reconstruction and inflammatory agitprop. Harron re-creates the ultimately violent relationship of motor-mouth street freak writer-prostitute-lesbian-gun-wielding assailant Valerie Solanas (Taylor) and pop artist Andy Warhol (Jared Harris) in the late 1960s, which ended in Solanas’s assault on Warhol for his charmingly noncommittal responses to her search for a patron. It’s a great idea for a film, but I Shot Andy Warhol is truly at odds with itself. Harron’s modular construction of the story–part naive reenactment of the instant-celebrity life at Warhol’s studio, part celebration of Solanas’s subversive ramblings, part investigation into the roots of her hyper-victimization at, apparently, the hands of all men–is ultimately a shell game that allows the writer-director to avoid taking a clear stand on Solanas’s bizarro politics. The cast is the only draw here: besides indie-film queen Taylor, Jared Harris makes for a convincingly cagey Warhol. –Tom Keogh

I Shot Andy Warhol