Saturday, October 12, 2013

Slip Away



Slip Away - Good Movie
As always, Amazon Instant Video plays flawlessly.

The movie finally arrived on Amazon Instant Video - YES! To sum up the review of the movie - In comparison to other lesbian movies out there, I thought the movie was pretty good. It addresses a serious problem that not many couples (not only lesbians although it was nice to see it from a lesbian relationship perspective) face. My only complaint was that the movie was too short.

Some may enjoy it but I didn't
This is a short movie about a relationship torn apart by drug addiction. The story has been told over and over - this film adds a lesbian element...but thats about it. There may be some artistic value that I'm not keen to. Not something I would really recommend for the rental price. The film would be more suited to be paired with some other lesbian shorts in the Amazon library and rented as a package.

I want more!
I gave this a 4 rather than a 5 because it was too short. This would have made a great (longe) movie or even better a web series. I want more!

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Bunny Play Date



Great for young kids
This movie is great for the pre-k kids. My 3yr old just loved this movie but adults will find this a little boring. Lots of cute baby animals and bouncy music. Keeps the little ones quite for an hour.

Cute for a while
Baby animals are always fun to watch - whoever filmed this could have caught more of those cute moments. The music was a bit distracting, drowned out the little animal noises.

Voiceovers Lol
My 5 year old and I watched this and it was extremely boring so we "talked for the animals". That was pretty much the most exciting thing Lol

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The Kansas Tea Party



Entertaining and informative
This was enjoyable to watch and contained a lot of valuable information! Having never attended a Tea Party event, this was informative about what occurs at these gatherings!

A truthful account of the Tea Party
This was a great film. It was nice to see so many people from our state fighting for the constitution. This should be played for liberal gatherings.
I had no idea that the Kansas Tea Party was doing so many things locally. A real eye-opener film. I loved it!

A Grassroots Movement
An informative documentary film, especially for someone wanting to learn about the Tea Party, and/or for those people that may have a negative view after listening to the main stream media. Thanks to Dr. Ibbetson for actively being involved in the Tea Party movement, a heartland story, for sure. His Conscience of Kansas radio program is a hit, as well as his books. Keep up the good work!

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Friday, October 11, 2013

Skyscraper - Part 4 - Copper and Diamond



As Jimi Hendrix sang, 'Kiss the Sky'
Ever wonder how a skyscraper gets built? We see them all the time - on television, in person, in movies, but how are they actually put together and built? This program educates you as to how a skyscraper named, 'World Wide Plaza' in Manhattan (former site of the old Madison Square Garden building) was planned, executed, and finally constructed.

The building construction began in 1986 on a four-acre area. The cost was $100 million dollars. The skyscraper is 50 stories high, containing shops, offices, cinemas and apartments. 'World Wide Plaza' is part of a three building commercial and residential complex completed in 1989. The roof of the building features a pyramid of copper panels with a glass dome. The inner steel framing was constructed by a technique called, 'Overhead reverse weld in the sky'.

The skyscraper known as 'World Wide Plaza' stands proudly as one of New York City's impressive skyscrapers. New York City has the fastest building construction of...





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Between 2 Worlds



Interesting Concept
I thought this documentary brought up a very interesting point about our concept of time and how that impacts our daily lives. It is something that I very much take for granted and don't pay much attention to, and it was thought-provoking to consider that.

However, I wish the documentary went into more depth regarding what it would be like, on a practical level, to not adhere to the Gregorian calendar (i.e., how would daily life change). I also wish the documentary spent less time on the whole "conspiracy" angle of the Gregorian calendar, and just discussed more about the impact it has on daily functioning and human psychology/spirituality, etc.

Thought provoking indigenous view of the Gregorian calendar and Mayan philosophy
The documentary is not about a catacylsmic end to the world but the possibility of a human created one. It compares the Gregorian calendar to the Mayan calendar demonstrating that humanity is at a crossroads for our future. With the Gregorian calendar we face a future of unnatural rampant consumption and destruction of the Earth. The Mayan focus is to listen to our inner voices and choose a more cyclic, natural existence of peace, cooperation, and environmental responsibility. The makers of the film see the beginning of a paradigm shift to the later while acknowledging the continued rise of consumerism, control, damage to the environment, and war.

I gave the documentary only four stars because the musical introduction is over four minutes long, viewing like a travelogue of the Yucatan, a place I love actually. I almost bailed on the film because I thought it was only going to be music and pictures. Also, the narration sounds dated, like it was extracted from another...

Feel Good
Yes, the Mayans were all about peace love and unity. Now excuse me while I cut the still beating heart out of this loser as part of our human sacrifice ritual. !?! I agree with the message of the flick but have a few problems with the messengers.

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Bomb Squad



not worth the time
this was really bad, the acting was bad, but the was really really bad was the sound editing, who ever did the sound on this film should be banned from the industry.

Intriguing
I understand this was a student film and had a ridiculously small budget and they did some amazing things with that budget. The CGI effects are better than many SYFY productions. The acting could use some fine tuning but I think that and the props all fall under the ridiculously small budget. I was impressed by the number of times the super beings used their powers and the basic story is sound though the dialogue and and few points along the way could use some tweaks.
I would very much like to see the potential reached for this film maker.

LOW BUDGET MST LAUGHER
DISCLAIMER: I am not connected to this film which is why I didn't vote a "5". It is sad when the makers of the film have to shill their own product in an attempt to make a substandard project look good. If watching a quality low budget film is your thing try "Primer."

The film opens with 3 men in ski masks (and no gloves) robbing a guarded building of its glow sticks. On their way out they encounter the evil Wraith, a man in a black cloak hoodie and a cheap demon voice echo enhancer...oooooh scary, Darth Maul move over. These guys all have special powers, i.e. stop bullets, create fire, create lightning, and influence people with their glow in the dark contacts.

The movie shifts to 8 years later. Two of the Freeman kids visit super dad in prison and he imparts some of his power to them who in turn touch their siblings who also get power, turning them into a mini "Fantastic Four" to the dismay of their doting mother. It is during their visit he recaps the plot,...

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The Great Year



Six Degrees of Civilization
An engaging documentary that intertwines the phenomena known as precession through the Equinoxes and how, the rise and fall of civilizations may be linked to this on a grander scale. All indications point to the ancients being obsessed with the heavens and having been aware of this cyclical grand cycle. Their knowledge of the cosmos without our current stage of technological advancement defies our ability to explain their insight on such an expansive scale. Yet several ancient cultures utilizing advanced geometry and astronomy all had names for this vast cycle and the effect it played on mankind.

For years the academic community has told us these ancient writings amount to no more than fairly tales.

Now several institutions are examining the possibility that ancient civilizations were more advanced than previously thought... a theory that does not sit well with traditionalists in conservative academic circles.

Does history and civilization move in...

"Clock Of The Ages" ~ "A Return To The Golden Age"
Did highly advanced civilizations exist on the earth long before conventional history wants us to believe? Civilizations that understood secrets in astronomy, mathematics and many other fields of scientific endeavor that have unfortunately been lost with the passing of time, now buried somewhere in the sands of antiquity.

Are the ancient tales of an antediluvian "Golden Age" populated by beings with miraculous God-like abilities really just nothing more than myth and legend? Or are they in reality the last remaining fragmentary accounts of what mankind once was and may become again in some future age?

Warning, this documentary will challenge everything you've been taught about history, astronomy, religion and the nature and destiny of mankind. Be ready to postulate such concepts as:

1) The discovery of a 24,000 year celestial cycle which determines the rise and fall of civilizations and man's ability to comprehend 'higher wisdom.'

2) A...

Interesting idea well presented
I ordered this DVD after reading "Lost Star of Myth and Time" by Walter Cruttenden, which is a sequel to the book this DVD is based on. There was a brief description of the DVD in the back of this book. The movie makes sense even if you haven't read either book, but if you want to see most of the evidence for its ideas, get the books.

The graphics make it much easier to visualize what the books talked about, and the narrative, interviews, and shots of various ancient sites present the idea very well.

In case you don't know, the general idea is that precession of the equinoxes is not caused by a wobble of the Earth's pole, as is assumed by conventional science, but by the Sun being part of a binary star system, and thus following an eliptical path through space and taking the Solar System along with it. (So that it appears to be going backwards in relation to the "fixed" stars half of the time.) It's a logical idea that explains the observed phenomena. So why...

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Sensored



brilliant fearsome psyche thriller
this is probably the most intelligent psyche thriller I've seen in years. Caught it at the sacramento film festival. Creates it's own sick and perverted world that
tests the viewer's own judgement and discernment. Either way it is demented beyond belief and very very creatively imagined and fleshed out.

Twists abound
I don't want to spoil the movie so I will keep this brief. I was nervous about renting as it has no trailer but I am so glad we did. This movie will have you guessing until the end. It is not something I have seen done before. Not so gruesome but very stimulating for the mind. My husband and I both enjoyed this film.

A Cult Classic in the Making
Sensored is a cult classic in the making. At times simple, at times complex; it will leave you guessing right up to the end. Unlike most movies in this genre, you can watch it several times and still be surprised at what you uncover - it is anything but formulaic. If you're looking for a movie that captivates you from the start and has you both amused and confused, this is your movie. You'll appreciate the complexity of the story and the fact that it's not just another "run-of-the-mill" pshyco-drama.

I thoroughly enjoyed this movie!!!

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The Incredible Hulk



The Best of All Worlds
The second film to be produced directly by Marvel seems eager to prove why comic book companies should exercise direct control over their films. Rather than being nothing more than a new director's take on an old classic, The Incredible Hulk is both an engaging film and a love letter to every other incarnation of the The Hulk that proceeded it. This film truly endeavors to understand and assimilate the entire history of the character into one new project, and boy does it succeed.

At the center of The Incredible Hulk is an ambitious attempt to marry the two most popular and conflicting visions of the character. The film borrows many elements from the fondly remembered 1970s television series but also incorporates many of the more important elements from the comic book. It's a tough balancing act, but the film makes the disparate elements mix together in a way that makes complete sense and (I believe), leaves fans of both series feeling satisfied. The origin and...

Old JADE-JAWS is Better Than Ever!
"THE MADDER HULK GETS, THE STRONGER HE GETS". Apparently, ol' Jade-Jaws has been rebooted for the screen under the moniker; "Incredible Hulk" with a new director; Louis Letterrier, a new script by Zack Penn and has a new lead actor in Edward Norton. To be honest, I'm one of the few who appreciated Ang Lee's "Hulk", appreciated but didn't love. Sure, it was too moody, nary a smile on anyone's face, full of human angst and fake looking CGI, but I thought it was reminiscent to the comic book when Paul Jenkins was at its helm. 2008's version of the Green Goliath trumps the 2003 version, with a different origin, more action and the CGI is a vast improvement over its predecessor. No, it is not a sequel to the 2003 film but a re-imagining that has close links to the "Hulk" (except for the color) who appears in Marvels' "The Ultimates" comic book.

Bruce Banner (Edward Norton) is hiding out somewhere in South America, looking for a cure for his gamma-induced affliction, trying to...

The new Hulk film was well made for a number of reasons
This re-imagining of the green Goliath works far better than Ang Lee's 2003 outing that's for sure. Being an avid admirer of the Bixby/Ferrigno series in the late seventies and early eighties I found this film to be closer in spirit to the series and I definitely liked that.

The Hulk's origins are played out at the very beginning and once that's over and done with audiences are in for a fast paced and enjoyable ride. The film attempts to keep people who liked the series happy as well as the crowd who want it firmly rooted in Marvel tradition. The Hulk battles a foe called The Abomination in the final third, and by the way that fight is pretty amazing, and I gather that that's a person to be found in the original comics.

While Eric Bana was one of the few things that was positive about Hulk (2003), Norton betters him here. He's such a natural performer and he can convey so much with mere expressions. He was the perfect choice to play Banner, in some ways he...

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Winchester '73



First Stewart/Mann Teaming a CLASSIC!
Winchester '73 is one of the most enduring and popular films of James Stewart's career, for several reasons; it was the first of five teamings with brilliant, underrated director Anthony Mann, who retooled Stewart's drawling, 'aw-shucks' persona into a laconic, edgier, more flawed hero; it featured a brilliant cast, including Shelley Winters, Dan Duryea, Stephen McNally, John McIntyre, and, in VERY early appearances, Rock Hudson and Tony Curtis; visually, it is spectacular, one of the most beautiful Black and White films ever made, with deep-focus photography highlighting rugged Arizona settings that literally leap from the screen; and, most of all, it is a terrific variation of 'Cain and Abel', told through the premise of the search for a 'one-of-a-kind' rifle Stewart wins in a competition, then loses through treachery. It's the kind of film that offers new insights each time you view it, as the actions and motivations of 'good' brother Stewart and 'bad' brother McNally become better...

Anthony Mann creates a classic
The story goes that in 1950 Jimmy Stewart was looking around for something a little different for himself, something where he could play a character less folksy and warm. He sure did find it in this film, as well as all the other magnificent westerns he did with gritty, noir director, Anthony Mann (T-Men, Raw Deal, Railroaded, etc). This is the first of their collaborations.

When the film was first shown to test audiences, there were titters in the crowd when Jimmy Stewart's name appeared in the credits. "Mr. Smith" in a western? Shooting people? Please. By the end of the film, the tittering was all done and Stewart had established himself as a viable western hero (although in truth the magic of these Mann/Stewart westerns is that the characters Stewart plays are hardly "heroic." They are usually driven, neurotic men, nearly shifty-eyed, with a mean streak a mile wide - bitter men, and always very, very angry and eager to kill.

The basic set-up of this film is...

Cain and Abel
Along with a handful of other titles, this film is right at the summit of the great American Westerns ever made. It came entirely out of the blue as well. It was James Stewart's first serious Western (omitting "Destry Rides Again") and displayed a side of his character his Air Force buddies may have known about but precious few other people did. When Stewart threatens to break Dan Duryea's neck in a bar fight movie audiences must have been seriously taken aback. Doubly shocking is the fact that Stewart is out to gun down his outlaw brother for the murder of their father. Nor was Anthony Mann, the director, known for his Westerns, but this masterpiece simply could not be improved. The show is littered with great performances, especially John McIntire as the gun dealer, and Stewart sidekick Millard Mitchell, who made a huge impact in Hollywood during a very short career. Mitchell also appeared in "Twelve O'Clock High", "The Gunfighter", and...

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Billy Elliot



It's all about being able to express yourself.
Beginning with an exuberant title sequence, this charming, offbeat, coming-of-age story revolves around Billy Elliot (Jamie Bell), the younger of two sons of a widower coal miner (Gary Lewis) near Newcastle in Northern England. It's 1984, and the National Union of Mine Workers is engaged in a long, bitter strike, marked by street battles with riot police and protests against the busloads of scabs crossing the picket lines.

Following the family tradition, Billy is expected to learn boxing at the Everington Boys Club where, instead, the 11 year-old becomes enthralled by the girls' dancing class, led by a chain-smoking teacher (Julie Walters) who soon recognizes his raw talent. He loves watching Fred Astaire in old movies and is instantly drawn towards the ballet class, but when his macho father and rabble-rousing brother (Jamie Draven) discover he's taking ballet classes, they ridicule Billy - "Lads do boxing and football and wrestling, not friggin' ballet!" - forcing him...

A Terrific Tale of Redemption and the Father-Son Dynamic
Jamie Bell is pure magic in this wonderful coming-0f-age film that tells the story of a working class English lad who takes up ballet as a way to hone his boxing skills. In the process, he discovers himself, learnes some valuable life lessons, and fills a deep void left by the death of his beloved mum. Despite his family's strong objections (and financial straits) Billy ends up studying dance from a local teacher (the effervescent Julie Walters, who won an Oscar nomination for her work here). Her lessons - both technical and moral - serve as the basis for a devastatingly real connection between Billy and his disgusted macho father. What ensues is a dramatic comedy that inspires us at every turn without condescension or pity. The heartening interaction that develops between father and son is truly evocative, especially so for anyone who ever followed (or didn't) their dreams despite their family's objections. Not only does Billy "Dance!!" for his supper...he befriends the local...

SENTIMENTAL DELIGHT
If you love intimate, moving character films like Cinema Paradiso, you will love love love Billy Elliot. A small, rousing British film with cleverly written characters, this movie is both sentimental and expertly crafted. The performances, particularly from Julie Walters as the dance instructor, and that winsome, melancholy but excpetionally gifted boy as Billy, will truly steal your heart. The simple premise is instantly grabbing -- an artistic boy, only 11, is unfortunately the most forgotten element in a fractured, sad little family, which includes a pre-Alzheimer's grandmother, an angry older brother and a defeated, sad and tense father. While Dad and bro are on strike, money is tight - the year is 1984 at the height of British strike/tensions. Billy is sent to boxing lessons, where, by happenstance, he discovers a true vent for his budding creativity -- and especially his joy in dancing. Filled with infectiously appealing pop and light-classical music, this film is part...

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Thursday, October 10, 2013

I'm Not Rappaport



Perfect
This movie manages to make you laugh and touch you deeply as many times as you won't think is possible during the two hours. Is truth always best? Can you still be romantic and feel deeply when you are old? How do you choose to see the world? You will be asking yourself all these questions and might be surprised at the answers.

Want a good belly-laugh? This one's for you....
We couldn't stop laughing! Two old codgers sitting on a park bench getting stoned...laughs are sure to follow. Tackles some big issues, too, although true to life, no big solutions are found. Aging, the homeless, drugs, violence. All this and more can be seen through the witty eyes of Walter Matheau and Ossie Davis. I'm buying this video so that I can watch it again and again!

This is a must see!
They passed this movie in cable and I just saw it for Mr.Matthau but when I finished watching it I was amazed how great this movie is,I don't even know if it did it to the theaters here in Mexico...I think Alex Lora of a great group called El Tri appears.A touching story and one of the greatest movies ever made.Buy it!

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The Celebration



Brilliant, devastating potrait of a family
"The Celebration" was made under the rules of Dogma 95, a pact about how a movie is to be made. It was signed by several Danish filmmakers including Thomas Vintenberger, the director of "Celebration". The rules include using only hand held cameras, no artificial lighting, no props except those found on location. Dogma 95 is an attempt to get away from the artificiality of Hollywood-style movie making, but, in its own way, it's artificial itself because it works only with certain kinds of movies. "The Celebration", though, happens to fit perfectly into its rules. The hand held camera work, for example, only adds to the tension of this powerful and devastating film.

A large family gathers to celebrate the 60th birthday of its patriarch. Among the celebrants are the man's grown children, a daughter and two sons. A fourth child, a twin of one son, recently killed herself in the family's country inn where the party takes place. One son, Michael [Thomas Bo Larson], is a loud and pushy...

Danish dysfunctionality
I hadn't seen any Dogme 95 films until quite recently. I did have a passing familiarity with the tenets of the group--which got a fair amount of press due to the emergence of Lars von Trier as a director of note--but hadn't actually gotten around to viewing any of the releases available in this country until just a few months ago.

A lot of what I had read was pretty negative. Many reviewers found that the strictures under which Dogme 95 filmmakers operate were more limiting than liberating--and that even when the script and the acting were good, those strictures (particularly the grainy cinematography and lack of edits) often undermined the films' effectiveness.

Since the first Dogme film I actually saw was ITALIAN FOR BEGINNERS, I found myself in tentative agreement with the critics. That film, a comedy-drama, seemed to beg for better lighting, better sound and an overall more professional look. I remember thinking that the film's generally washed-out look...

ONE OF THE BEST FILMS OF 1998
After I saw this brilliant film, I was totally blown away by it. (I was also blown away by the fact that the obtuse Academy Awards did not nominate it for Best Foreign Language Film. The Celebration was ten times better than Life is Beautiful.) I would compare The Celebration to another brilliant film of its time: The 400 Blows by Francois Truffaut. Both films make excellent use of their cameras, and deal with the theme of child abuse by the adults. The freeze frame shot of the twin son at the end of The Celebration reminded me of Antoine at the end of The 400 Blows. THERE SHOULD BE MORE FILMS LIKE THE CELEBRATION AND THE 400 BLOWS MADE AND RELEASED IN THE U.S.

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The Wolf Man (1941)



Monster Movie Heaven comes in a long-overdue deluxe edition
If you've been keeping up with the DVD releases of Universal Monsters, you might already know this is the 3rd time The Wolf Man has been released in the past 10 years. But this new deluxe 2-disc edition should prove to be the definitive release. In addition to a spectacular restoration (which is still not quite perfect, but probably the best the film will ever look on home video), there is an exhaustive array of bonus features. Actually, only two of them are new, but when added to the already excellent extras carried over from previous releases, this is simply a must-have for anyone with even a slight interest in the film.

But let's take a quick look at the film itself. The Wolf Man has always been my favorite Universal Monster. I think it's the combination of Curt Siodmak's poetic and gothically romantic screenplay, and the Everyman performance of Lon Chaney Jr. as Larry Talbot. Chaney will perhaps forever reside in the shadow of contemporaries like Karloff and...

The birth of Universal's most tragic monster character
Among the pantheon of classic Universal monsters, only Dracula and Frankenstein's monster stand taller than The Wolf Man. This 1941 classic starring Lon Chaney, Jr., is a must-see for anyone claiming any interest in horror movies. The film has exerted a huge influence on the art of bringing horror to life for over six decades now, thanks to the heralded make-up prowess of Jack Pierce, the tight and powerful script of Curt Siodmak, some impressive photography work, and wonderful performances from a truly stellar cast of actors and actresses.

There is just something different about The Wolf Man; I have a hard time viewing him as a monster Larry Talbot is a thoroughly sympathetic and tragic character. Dracula loves being a vampire, Frankenstein's monster is just an unfortunate victim of circumstance whose various body parts have already lived full lives, but Larry Talbot desperately hates the monster he has become. He's already a sympathetic character, coming home after eighteen...

Universal Fans Drop Everything and GET DVD ALREADY!
When Universal started putting out the classic monsters on DVD this fall, I just knew I'd have to wait a long time for the underappreciated Wolf Man. But no! On the heels of the OUTSTANDING discs of Frankenstein, The Bride & The Mummy comes another first-class offering. Like the others, THE WOLF MAN contains an excellent documentary as well as the trailer and a commentary track by a film historian. The print of the film is gorgeous. I don't care what your age is or when you first saw this amazing film, if you're a horror fan you simply must own this one.

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Yellow Rock



KILLING A RAVEN IS A BAD OMEN
The film opens with a poorly scripted, worse read narrative about the plight of the Native Americans. Max Dietrich (James Russo) an apparently bad guy comes into Yellow Rock to hire Tom Hanner (Michael Biehn) to take him through Black Paw territory so he can locate his missing brother and nephew. His party of men end up with Dr. Sarah Taylor, an interpreter respected by the Black Paw and a member of the tribe (Michael Spears) to make sure they don't pass through the sacred burial grounds which would curse them. Of course they pass through the daylight medieval misty burial grounds and the film takes the anticipated twist.

The acting was over done to the point of being bad. Lenore Andriel, who also wrote and produced this film was perhaps the worse of the lot reminding me of a laughable Angelique Pettyjohn. I understand shooting a film on a budget, but if you are going to use a modern Presidential coin to be a $20 gold piece, don't show a close-up of the coin. C'mon Nick, at...

Yellow Rock-A Review
Solid writing and acting. A very enjoyable [independent] Western, unlike a similar film recently released, "Legend of Hell's Gate". Lenore Andriel did a great job with the writing and producing, especially with it being her first Western ever. She also delivered a pretty solid performance as Dr. Sarah. Michael Biehn and James Russo delivered equally solid performances in their respective roles, and let's not forget Michael Spears! I really only saw the film for Michael and Eddie Spears and Zahn McClarnon (wasn't disappointed, let me assure you!), but I came out of the movie really enjoying it and liking it. the MPAA did rate the film as "R", but in reality, the violence is less than that of "Hell on Wheels" or other modern Westerns. Yes, it is kind of slow in the beginning, but once they move to the wolf sequence, it gets really interesting really quickly. Worth seeing, even as a "B-rated" Western!

Worst movie I've seen in years
I know the actors tried hard but I kept feeling the director must have been stoned. The plot was scattered and confusing. It just didn't draw me into the story at all. I'm glad it was a free redbox rental or I would've felt cheated.

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Evan Almighty



Evan Almighty is Mighty Entertaining
The review I read in the USA Today suggested that this movie was a stinker. But I think the critics dropped the ball. This was a fun movie, and a great choice for the whole family. Evan Baxter is the former Buffalo news anchor who has just been elected to Congress with the lofty campaign slogan "Change the World."

This inspires God (played by Morgan Freeman) to speak to Evan about building an ark. God is angry that the beautiful Appalachian mountain vistas he has created are being destroyed by those desiring to create huge residential areas. He is upset with those who want to destroy the natural beauty of the world.

Animals start following Baxter around two by two, and (like in the Tim Allen flick "The Santa Clause") he begins to look like his predecesor (Noah).

Evan becomes alienated from his congressional colleagues and from his family, but by this point in the film, he is convinced that he is doing the work of the Lord.

As the plot...

GREAT movie on Courage, Faith, and Hope
This is a GREAT movie inspite of the reviews given to it by certain critics. (especially critics who happened to compete with it's opening debute). This movie is NOT about a man building an ark, although that appears to be on the surface. It is about a man who is forced into circumstances which seem to be unalterable, taking him further away from his own personal aims in life only to find himself again. He must surrender his own life's plans for plans that appear completely incongruent to his own by Divine interference. He is pushed to the edge of his sanity while his stable and well grounded wife watches him hopelessly slip away. Ultimately, when his own strategies fail, he surrenders to his divine mission and plunges into his project whole heartedly at the cost of his job, family, and his reputation. Steve Carell plays the role so beautifully, full of laughs and humor, drama and tears. And Morgan Freeman, who plays God, is so wonderfully warm and true, he touches the hearts...

This may sound a bit strange...
But FINALLY I can watch a movie with my mother! I'm in my mid twenties and our tastes just tend to run so opposite on everything. I saw this and then saw the rating (which suprised me considering Bruce Almighty) and we agreed on it. And it was very entertaining.

I actually enjoyed the fact that cussing was kept to a minimum (if at all) and so was vulgarity. I loved Morgan Freeman's portrayal of God and the fact that they kept the sense of humor.

Steve Carell WAS very restrained in this movie, as compared to his other roles, but I thought he did an excellent job. I've seen more than 1 review stating that it wasn't as good as 40 Y.O. Virgin, but it's a completely different kind of comedy and his character is very different.

I also didn't really find it sacrilegious or making fun of religion. Some people love that type of humor. I find it tiresome. So for me that was a plus.

In conclusion: yes, it can be a family film, but it can also be...

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Elizabeth



A LAVISH AND LUSH MEDIEVAL TAPESTRY...
This is a magnificent film with a stellar cast giving award calibre performances. Cate Blanchett deservedly won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Drama. She is truly the heir apparent to Bette Davis and Glenda Jackson, both having portrayed Elizabeth I in memorable performances. Cate Blanchett now joins their ranks with her own incredible performance in that role.

The movie begins in 1554, in an England that is bitterly divided on the issue of religion. Ruled by Mary Tudor, Henry the VIII's oldest daughter and a devout catholic, protestants are being burned at the stake as heretics, giving rise to Mary's popular name, "Bloody Mary". Reviled by her Spanish husband and in poor health, Mary is badgered by her advisors to do away with Elizabeth, her considerably younger, bastard half-sister. This Mary will not do, no matter how pressed. Still, Elizabeth lives her life with the sword of Damocles hanging over her head at all times.

When Mary dies, Elizabeth takes...

Good Drama, Bad History
This is a lovely movie, Cate Blanchet's performance as the title character is excellent, as is the rest of the cast. The costumes are spectacular.

As others have noted, this film is entertainment, not history. The writer(s) mixed fact with pure fancy, and compressed many authentic episodes that occured over 40 or so years into the beginning of the reign. Walsingham did not kill Marie de Guise, nor did he oust Cecil as Elizabeth's primary advisor. Robert Dudley was not involved in any murder plot. I won't bore you with the rest of the laundry list.

I think it only fair to point out that in my opinion, despite the inaccuracies, the writer(s) did manage to give a fairly accurate view of some major aspects of Elizabeth I's entire reign. She did use possible marriage as a political tool. And she was damned adept at doing so. Elizabeth did have a more moderate religious policy than either of her two predecessors.

The movie is worth watching. And, if seeing it whets your...

Elizabeth from princess to icon: One mistress and no master.
Among Great Britain's monarchs, two queens stand out in particular: Elizabeth I. and Queen Victoria. Both came to power at extremely young ages, and at times of political instability which would have set the odds of survival against any new ruler, but particularly so, against a woman. Both beat those odds in ways few people would have foreseen: They not only persevered but ruled for a nearly unparalleled long time, and during their reign achieved to both strengthen England's economy and international stance and give new direction to its society. We have long come to identify their reign as "the Victorian Age" and "the Elizabethan Age," respectively. Yet, while "Victorian England" is an expression often used synonymously with moral conservativism, Elizabeth I. fostered not only the development of science but also the theater and arts; providing fertile ground for the works of Shakespeare, Marlowe and many others. (Influenced by her husband, Queen Victoria supported the exploration of...

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Wet Hot American Summer



Now, this was one funny movie.
If you liked The State, the sketch comedy show from MTV, then you'll most likely laugh at the same people here. Most of the cast is in this film, and Michael Showalter and David Wain (also the director) co-wrote it.

It's the last day of camp in the summer of 1981. Janeane Garofalo plays the camp director who falls in love with the local physicist, David Hyde Pierce. But the real star is Showalter, who plays "Coop," trying to get the girl of his dreams to fall for him, in spite of her "love" for vapid Paul Rudd (who reminded me a lot of Trey Parker here, for some reason).

This movie is basically a take-off of the `80's camp films like Meatballs. You know, the ones they used to show on USA Up All Night. And every possible gag is included here, including a few I didn't see coming (like the trip to "town").

One thing, though, keep in mind while you watch it that all of this is happening during the span of one day.

One of THE most underrated movies of 2001!
I had heard good things about this movie when it was at Sundance, but it seemed bypass the Chicago are almost entirely. So I rented the DVD, and this movie was hilarious. It's a shame that movies like American Pie 2 and Dung Pow (or whatever that awful-looking Martial Arts movie is called) are considered 'daring' and 'edgy' because of a few gross-out gags and little else. This movie was edgier and more daring than any comedy I've seen since the classic "Where's Poppa". It is most simply a parody of early 80's summer camp flicks, but it also has a bizarre, absurdist genius to it all it's own. Not every gag works, but it has enough unforgettable lines and sequences to ensure it's eventual evolution into true cult classic. The cast is all great, but the best is Chris Melloni (of Oz and Law & Order SVU) who is freakishly hilarious in his role as the camp cook. You don't just have to be a fan of MTV's the State to enjoy this as I have never seen the show. This film won't be for...

You either get it or you don't
Wet Hot American Summer is a movie which I have to admit I wasn't thrilled by the first time I saw it, but the second time I really started to understand the humor and now it is my favorite comedy. The type of comedy in the movie (as others have stated) is very different then what you would normally see in prime time, but it gets more and more hilarious everytime you watch it... love it...

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Aspects of Stravinsky



Good documentary
This is a good documentary for anyone looking to learn more about Stravinsky. I have a few documentary's that have some of the materials presented in this film, but nevertheless a wonderful view.





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The City Mouse and the Country Mouse [HD]



Super Why solves problems
Super Why solves the problems of his friends with the help of Super Readers. This show teaches moral lessons, as well as the alphabet and phonics and basic pre-reading skills. Also, the characters, Super Why, Princess Pea, Pig, and Red Riding Hood all have different super powers related to reading and this helps illustrate how even though we are all different, we all can contribute something to help. Good show.

Super why
Super why is a super show for all children learning and developing the concepts of reading. Great program And a great learning tool.

Highly recommend
Great shows. Both fun and educational. Great for kids ready or getting ready to read. Highly recommend! Enjoy the shows.

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The Three Little Pigs: The Return of the Wolf [HD]



Super Why solves problems
Super Why solves the problems of his friends with the help of Super Readers. This show teaches moral lessons, as well as the alphabet and phonics and basic pre-reading skills. Also, the characters, Super Why, Princess Pea, Pig, and Red Riding Hood all have different super powers related to reading and this helps illustrate how even though we are all different, we all can contribute something to help. Good show.

Super why
Super why is a super show for all children learning and developing the concepts of reading. Great program And a great learning tool.

Highly recommend
Great shows. Both fun and educational. Great for kids ready or getting ready to read. Highly recommend! Enjoy the shows.

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The Matador



An amazing look inside the world and tradition of Bullfighting.
This is a fantastic voyage into the world of Bullfighting. You get to live in "El Fandi's" world and see him pursue his quest of completing 100 Corrida's in a single season. You see first hand the love of a family dedicated to helping David attain this dream, and the sacrifice they all make to see it happen.

Bullfighting certainly is not for everyone, but for those who can see the inherent beauty, and bravado this is sure to please. The documentarian also shows the people who protest Bullfighting, and question it's place in todays world. Bullfighting is ceratinly not without critics, but this film is about a mans total focus on attaining a dream, not a debate. To watch him in the ring is magical and majestic, he is trully one of the best Matadors. The score is also grand and the photography brillant. If this were about another topic, besides Bullfighting, this would surely have won and Academy Award.

If this topic interests you at all, buy the DVD, you will be...

Excellent bullfighting video!
I am a Spanish teacher and have been looking for a replacement video for a bullfighting unit that we do in class. This video is absolutely fantastic! It gives an excellent view into the art and shows many great quality video clips of the bullfight and behind the scenes involving what really happens at a bullfight. The video is in Spanish with subtitles and really gives the kids a workout listening and the musical score is outstanding. THIS IS GREAT FOR A SPANISH CLASS!

Next best thing to attending one.
I was very surprised at how beautiful this movie is and how well the matadors career is shown. I think it is a fascinating career choice in such a demanding tradition.

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Reality of Love



One of the best made for TV movies out there.
Most of the time, made for TV movies seem to be just that, made for TV and TV only. But this one is different. It isn't just like all the other TV movies out there. This movie can be compared to the made for TV movie "Lucky Seven" in quality.

"I Want to Marry Ryan Banks" tells the story of a down and out actor who's last hope is to, with the help of his best friend and agent, make it to the big times once again. His friend sets up a reality TV show similar to "The Bachelor" in order to boost his career.

While it seems that Ryan is a big hit with all the ladies on the show, it is only because his friend and agent, Todd, is feeding him lines through an earpiece. One by one the number of girls dwindle and the favorite, Charlie, has fallen in love with Todd in a romance that started the minute he interviewed her for the show.

This is a really great romantic comedy and Bradley Cooper steals the show, as Todd. Or at least I think so. I haven't actually seen...

A romantic gem!
This was previously aired on ABC Family under the title "Who Wants to Marry Ryan Banks?". But don't be deterred by the fact that this was a made-for-TV movie. It's a fantastic romantic comedy, one of my absolute favorites. Granted, it's a bit hard to buy Jason Priestly as a highly sought after bachelor, but it really doesn't matter because half the point is laughing at how absurd it is thinking he'll magically find love in a staged reality program. Bradley Cooper and Emma Caulfield are absolutely adorable- the chemistry between them is amazing. You'll melt from the cuteness if you're a romance fan. I honestly can't believe they didn't release this on DVD sooner, as the fans have been screaming for it. I literally squealed with delight when I saw that they are finally releasing it.

Pure Awesome
This movie is pure gold. Soooo good. Keeping my fingers crossed it will become available in the States.

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Episode 1



Proper Dickens Properly done
There has recently been a rebirth of Dickens mini-series and I believe that this is one of the best. For some reason, Dickens is best known for his depressing stuff (a Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations) but Martin Chuzzlewit is a robust melodrama and it translates very well to the screen.

There are actually two Martins in this movie, Martin senior, the wealthy old man who is suspicious of everyone, and his grandson and namesake who Martin Sr. has disinherited. With the heir apparent out of the way, Martin Sr.'s money grubbing relations move in to try to get themselves a piece of the pie when the old man dies. The sneakiest and most odious of the lot is the hypocrytical Mr. Pecksniff. (Look closely, do you recognize the Dashwood sister's father from Sense and Sensibility?) He has a slimy scheme for getting at Martin Sr.'s money and plans to use Martin jr. for it.

That, in a nutshell is the plot for the first hour of the movie. Other subplots involve more of Mrtin Sr.'s...

Excellent and enjoyable. An instant classic.
It's a shame that not enough people seem to know about "Martin Chuzzlewit," based on Charles Dickens' novel.

The story centers on wealthy, old Martin Chuzzlewit (Paul Scofield). His many relatives believe that he is at death's door, so they swarm about him like a bees angling to get a piece of his fortune. He is estranged from his namesake and grandson, young Martin, and is accompanied about town by his young companion, Mary Graham. Chief among his many relatives is the hypocritical and fastidious Mr. Pecksniff (wonderfully portrayed by the versatile Tom Wilkinson - "Full Monty," "In the Bedroom") and his daughters Charity (Emma Chambers) and Mercy (Julia Sawalha - "AbFab" and "Pride and Prejudice"). He invites young Chuzzlewit into his home only to banish him without explanation weeks later. Young Martin has to fend for himself and leaves for America with his faithful helper Mark Tapley in search of fortune.

The cast is sold...

GREAT Escape Entertainment
Truly, one of the best I have ever seen and yes, do like to watch over and over again...

I had a "Dickens" of a time in the mid 90's trying to find this video a while after it was first presented on PBS, but at the then discounted price of $60, it was very well worth it!

It's an enthralling tale you become one with...you feel as though you are an observer on the sidelines trying to keep score as this thoroughly amusing bunch of people go from scene to scene, fleshing out Dickens' tale that portrays many of the worst and also the good and decent qualities of human behavior. The actors are THAT believable and so right in their respective roles!

I find though that I have to listen carefully in a few parts of this story, as the words said in the thick English slangy accent from a few of the characters can pass me by.

Altogether this is a truly superb show that unlike so much else out there, I will never tire of seeing again and again!

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Chios: Martyrdom and Resurrection of a People



Visuo-acoustically conveys the tragic atrocities and massacre of the Chian population by the Turks
Highly recommend this well-produced documentary film by historian and scholar Dr. Ìiljan Peter Ilich which includes rare and hard to find reproductions of paintings from the period as well as images of current Chios and features music of Lefteris Bournias complementing the film with an authentic Chian sound which serves to convey the lament of the loss via the use of clarinet taxims, zourna ottoman melodies as well as songs sung by the Chian Choir of St. Markella.

Η Σφαγή της Χίου είναι το θέμα ντοκιμαντέρ

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Best Day Ever: Aiden Kesler 1994-2011



joke movie
The entire movie portrays young people more harshly than the normal self centered, pathetic individuals they are, therefore this movie is a hoax. It can be categorized as fiction and actually rates less than Blair witch. Sadly it appears to be product of Canada. Useless movie, waste of time.

Actors?
I thought the movie was great. Bittersweet. Until the end. I always wonder what it would feel like to be told that your number is up. I was teary eyed while watching it especially because it involved a child.
At the end, they listed the credits, same as they would for any movie. Unless I read it wrong.....that was not the "real" Aiden! All those kids were actors.
If I'm wrong, someone please correct me.

Linda in NJ



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Joe Satriani - Le Grand Rex Theatre - 2008 - Paris



French cinema at its best...
What is it about French films that makes the best of them so deeply reflective in a way that few American and British films achieve? Maybe it's that France itself is such a beautiful and evocative country, maybe it's that the French have a lifestyle that, for us non-French, appears so stylish and romantic... whatever... but when they get it right they really are in a different class, and "Paris" most definitely gets it right.

Beautifully filmed, brilliantly acted, and underpinned by a superb soundtrack, the film explores "real" peoples' lives slowly and above all subtly. Not a great deal happens, and there are no conclusions to the stories involved - a guy gets diagnosed with a life threatening heart condition, another chap falls in love with one of his students, a lonely single mother and a market stall trader are hesitantly drawn together, and an African dreams of getting to Paris to start a new life. That's about it really. But it's the way that this is all put together...

Beautiful, entrancing, and deep
This is a French movie made for a French audience. As a result, for Americans, it provides a window into another culture which is familiar in some ways, but quite different in others. Personally, I love movies which transport me in this way.

Not surprisingly, the movie is visually beautiful, and thus does justice to the beauty of Paris. But more importantly, the movie uses its distinctively French style and sensibility in order to probe many facets of the human condition in a sensitive, penetrating, and balanced manner, thus taking us on quite a journey of diverse vicarious experiences, thoughts on questions big and small, and a wide spectrum of simple and complex emotions. In short, the movie gave me a lot to ponder, and I may need to eventually watch it again.

At the end of the journey, it's clear that this is by no means a feel-good movie, and my net feeling was closer to poignance than happiness or even ambivalence. But the movie does also illustrate the...

'Parisians grumble...'
PARIS is a kaleidoscopic view of that great City of Light inhabited with a variety of individuals each of whom is consumed with life and love and living and dying. Cédric Klapisch has written and directed this richly populated canvas as a background of a tender story of a Moulin Rouge male dancer Pierre (Romain Duris) who is diagnosed with a terminal heart disease requiring transplantation if he is to survive. But in the end the many characters introduced in 'incidental stories' have become so interesting that, instead of providing simply a background for Pierre's portrait, they become an integral part of the drama as well as indelibly stamped on the viewer's mind.

Pierre has kept his illness secret, yet when faced with the dire concept of a transplant he confides in his sister Élise (Juliette Binoche), a single mother of three, who takes him in to fill his boring days of self confinement. There is a palpable magic between the two as Élise attempts to...

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Closet Keepers



Spooky
These shows are spooky and scary and yet the kids are glued watching, waiting, feeling the spook, getting it's a show. This was less freaky than Goosebumps. I am not sure if that's because he was too young when he started watching Goosebumps or because it's a less scary show. The Haunting hour was too much for them so this show may be more appropriate for 8,9 year olds.

love it
love it! used to watch this show growing up, still love watcing it! blast from the past! keep it up!

Great stories!
This series is worth five stars! I watched this with my son when he was a little boy and I liked it then. I would highly recommend watching this series to everyone. A good clean form of intertainment which is so hard to find in our world today!

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Earhart's Electra: Eyewitness Accounts of What Happened to Amelia's Plane



what really happened?!
The mystery of the disappearance of Amelia Earhart and whether in some fashion and for how long did she survive has been with us for decades now. This documentary presents the case that her plane survived and was held by the Japanese and that she survived too, for some years according to some witnesses from the islands. Is this what really happened? Not altogether certain for lack of absolutely hard evidence but there is enough to strongly suggest that this is part of the story and deserves attention. We may never really have a definitive answer.

How can you make an amazing story so awful?!
Seriously. This is such a fascinating and incredible topic and I couldn't even finishing watching this because it was done so poorly. I had lots of complaints but for brevity I'll just say the audio was the worst - old radio clips with music with people talking over it? Really?! Super overkill. Then the distracting watermark on everything and again, doubled audio tracks and sooooo much repetition. I get some of the repetition could be used effectively....but like the audio, there was just TOO much. This definitely needed more work with an editor. So sad because this is such a great story that so little know about. But having blaring music, old timey radio announcers talking, while other people talk at the same time is not an effective way to share information.

Pretty Conclusive
It sounds pretty conclusive to me. The eye witnesses were all ex service men, near death from old age. I don't think they were lying because they had nothing to gain. They were obviously speaking from memory, not a script. Their stories seem to mesh pretty well.

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Seeking Salvation: A History of the Black Church in Canada



nice description, amazon
I would guess that this description is to a different movie? this film was lacking any con men. I guess I missed that part.

This is a documentary about the black church in canada, so you know





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The Blood Of My Brother



Superbly produced documentary about the Shia insurgency in Iraq.
This is flat-out one of the best documentaries I've seen thus far concerning the Iraq War. Andrew Berends captures the torment/anguish/ennui felt by a family of Shiite Iraqis living in Kadhamiya after one of their own is cut down by an American soldier as he was guarding a sacred mosque located within the district. It's difficult to discern whether or not the death of this young man was unprovoked. However the circumstances surrounding his death are moot and secondary to the primary motif running through the film: the reality of violence so pervasive that it is simply impossible to escape it. The cinematography is top-notch and combined with the superb editing gives the movie a narrative component that I've never quite seen in other documentaries. Highly highly recommended.

Interesting, but flawed documentary
THE BLOOD OF MY BROTHER documentary follows Ibrahim, a young Shiite man in his early twenties during a period of some weeks in spring/summer 2004. Ibrahim`s older brother Ra'ad was killed by American soldiers while on duty guarding the Kadhimiya mosque in Bagdad. The viewer is witness to Ibrahim`s and his family`s efforts to come to term with the loss of their loved one. Extended scenes show visits to Ra'ad`s grave or Ibrahim, his mother and sister recollecting. Ibrahim dreams of revenge and joining the resistance movement, but feels compelled to support his family by running his late brother's photography shop.

Interspersed is - often quite gruesome - footage of the insurgency and the turmoil in Iraq, ranging from streetfighting in the Sadr City slum in Bagdad (where a crowd of Shiites cheer at the wreck of a downed American Apache helicopter) to grim scenes of wounded civilians. The viewer accompanies American soldiers searching the homes of suspects and interrogating...

Raw and Real.
This well-produced documentary styled 'movie' will sober you up if you're still punch drunk from the State of Denial political press. Thematically focuses on a homeland's natural reflex to invasion and occupation. Throws you headlong straight into the mix - into Iraqi cities, streets, alleys, vendor shops, mosques, graveyards and homes of its citizens to make an uncensored point of the whole hellish mess. If you are clueless as to Middle Eastern culture (i.e. religious, economical and sociological mores) and wish to increase your understanding or deepen your perspective, this little movie will pry your eyes wide. After the movie, go to Main Movie setup screen and watch all the deleted scenes as it is all very foundational footage. Warning: This movie is stark. Recommended preliminary reading materials: The Iraq Study Group Report (can be downloaded in Adobe format on the Internet - about 100 pages long on regular typing paper).

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Honeybees: A Beekeeper And A Princess



Wow! Fabulous for schools. Is this the new, "Tim the toolman for bees"
This was a fun video. It can be funny at times. It's a different twist seeing a princess in a beehive. She knows a lot about honey bees.
This would be great for schools. Children never get to see what a hive looks like inside. Children can see what's inside the hive, and learn how the bee colony works. One can even see a queen bee. A rare opportunity. The bees are surprisingly docile.

I recommend this to everyone.
Randy is very good at presenting the information. New beekeepers can learn a lot from this as well.
I hope Randy and Brooke will make a series. I will be looking for it.

I so enjoyed this video.

Pretty Princess: another plus for the video!

Buy the video and enjoy it!!!

Enjoyed The Experience
I hope you all enjoy the simplicity in which we tried to keep this 'fun to produce' video. The honey, that these honeybees brought in and that we were able to taste, was delicious. No stings throughout the whole production, which Brooke would tell you, is a nice end result. I really hope you enjoy Honeybees: A Beekeeper And A Princess :) Check out our facebook page for more info and lots of scene pictures. Honeybees: A Beekeeper And A Princess [...]

This is an educational letdown
Yes, you can learn a little from this. You can also learn a lot more from others. I would NOT advise spending money on this, even as a rental, unless you just wish to be mildly entertained with minor facts that really will not help you much.

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Moon Mater (Short)



Should be Free
I purchased this and then we watched a 5 minute show. Five minutes is really not something you should have to pay for. I will be sure to read the time of the programs next time I order. Really, this should be FREE for PRIME members or not sold at all.

Short Available in Mater's Tall Tales
I bought this for $1.99 as a quick impulse when my son was watching vids on one of my screens. Turns out this short is already contained in the Mater's Tall Tales video that we bought 2 months ago. That one is 36 minutes long. The price (then at least)? $1.99! Don't waste your money here.

Warning -- Kids LOVE this video.
Be warned, if you play this for a young child, they will play it again and again. It's short, cute and has Larry the Cable Guy as the voice of Mater.

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Freddy and The Figglettes, Part 1



...
This is good for you if you're looking for a reason to commit suicide. What has the world come to?

Terrible program
Sadly we watched the whole series. The high pitched voice goofy logic, poor acting and weak attempt at blocking made me insane. The only redeeming quality was that each episode is short. So the pain was short lived. My son however loved it.

The one trick pony has outgrown his trick
To be fair I'm not a Fred fan, but I'm also not a Fred hater, and had a laugh or two in recent years when someone dropped a link to a particular Fred youtube, so the synopsis and the free episode caught my eye as something to fill in a little break time. Did Fred ever translate into funny professional entertainment? I can't say for sure, since I never paid attention to the movie, but this sitcom episode is just awful.

The plot and characters are not fresh, but plenty of comedy holds up just fine under these conventions, and while I do like the approach of taking real and common human flaws and amplifying them to a bizarre degree, that's not at all new in itself either. The true failing is that they are quirky and overwrought in a way that could only work at being funny or interesting in the orbit of a star that delights us, and there is none here. What was kind of funny in the past in the vlog of an amusing kid has somewhere along the way turned into an uninspired...

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King Soccer



Okay product depending on what you are looking for
Bought this to see Franz Beckenbauer involved in training. Ultimately, it is what you might expect from a dated video series teaching Americans how to play soccer.





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Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Naked in a Fishbowl - Season 3 Episode 1 - "Smooth Moves"



A Wintery funny teen sexual frustration flick
I love this movie. It was around the time when a lot of movies came out about sexual frustrated teens trying to find places to experience the "act" as a right of passage.
This time a group of high school teens follow their school star skiers to a resort for a big ski competition. The girls want to party and the boys want to get some. We focus on two teen boys who are dismayed to end up rooming with their high school biology teacher, Roy Baliban played by Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In regular - Alan Sues. I loved Alan Sues, who literally stole the show portraying this totally square & somewhat effeminate persona. There is a scene with him in a Raiders of the Lost Arc reinactment which is hilarious and also dates this picture. This movie also stars Mary Beth McDonough who played Erin in the Waltons series...she seems a bit old to be a love interest in this movie. Billie Hayes also is in this picture and is a crazy woman who hangs out at the resort talking about being abducted by...

terrible waste of money
can't believe i bought this movie. looks like it would be similar to a hardbodies type of movie based on the cover. this pg movie had no action whatsoever. at best, a 10 year old might enjoy it. those tags are complete lies. no nudity whatsoever.

This is where the hottub time machine landed
This movie is a lot of fun on the slopes 80s style, you know the deal, horny high school guys, hot girls, jerky preps, some sweet retro skiing and clothes and dancing some kind of climax, I think this and Hotdog are the 2 best 80's ski comedies.

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Fly Fishing for Trout with Harry Murray



The best!
I just want to know what Mr. Murray has forgotten about flyfishing for trout. This is an excellent video for the beginner to stream fishing. Especially how to find the fish!

Probably not a very helpful primer for a new fisherman
As an avid flyfisherman, I didn't learn anything new, and I doubt if this would be a very helpful first introduction to a person taking it up for the first time.



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Air Mater (Short)



Still funny
I have watched this at least ten times and it still will make a guy grin. Great for all ages and fans of "Cars".

Too Short
I purchased this video through my Wii U and it didn't tell me the vidoe was only 3 minutes. Had I known, I never would have paid $1.99 for a 3 minute video. I was expecting maybe 15minutes.

So funny !!
Purchased for my Grandson, he is almost five. He laughed so much and watched it three times. Wish it was a little longer for the price.

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Random Lunacy



Wonderful movie about a delightful man and his adventure.
This is a wonderful movie about a simple man who is a lovely genius. His path may not be for you but his adventure will touch your heart. Watch and enjoy.

Mr Twenty Twenty





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Monday, October 7, 2013

Jacques Pepin Fast Food My Way 2: Cooking Under Pressure



Enjoyed
I really enjoyed Jacques lighthearted approach to his recipes and it made it fun viewing
which learning how to cook a really good dish.

under pressure
I enjoyed the fact he demo a pressure cooker and how to use it. Not everyone grow up around them. It was especially timely with the new interest in using these cooker



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Jacques Pepin Fast Food My Way: Jacques Favorites



Best Chef there is!
My husband and I have followed Jacques Pepin for many years. He is a wonderfully accomplished chef and as far as we are concerned the best. We watch many cooking shows and while they might make one or two things in a show, Mr. Pepin has completed a complete meal or two. Just to watch him is a treat. His cookbook as all of them are, a great addition to your cookbook collection. Easy to understand and cook and delicious to eat!

Wonderful Ideas
Though the sound quality was somewhat suspect the program has wonderful ideas from a wonderful chef, with dishes that we'd actually make.

Always Fabulous
Jacques Pépin is one of the leading culinary educators of our time, whether through video or books, or even live. His PBS series, Fast Food My Way, brings classics to modern. This particular meal includes a starter of crab cakes, a spicy radiccio and romaine salad, a "leftovers" pasta gratin, and macaroons for dessert. Yummy, all!

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Jacques Pepin Fast Food My Way: Hurray! Cassoulet



Real French Cooking
I love the video. It's hard not to like Jacques Pepin. He has insane experience, skill and technique. Ill watch another one, for sure.

Love Jacques, love Cassoulet!
Can't beat Jacques' techniques or his classic cooking style. Also wonderful are the shows he and Julia did together, watch them!

Every Episode a Treasure
Cassoulet...fast, Jacques' Way. He begins this lesson by getting the various meats going. But, I must reveal that my son-in-law is French, from the Sud Ouest (where Cassoulet was born - and there are many different "real" Cassoulets.) I make this for him often, but NOT this one. This is something, probably wonderful, but it's not Cassoulet.

Then he moves on to the salad: zucchini, tomato, mozzarella.

Next, we have a couple of variations on starters with smoked salmon. Presentation is key. Haven't tried them - Yet.

Finally, Dessert: We're not big on desserts. Rarely have one if we don't have guests. This includes orange supremes, a cream cheese mixture including orange zest, and a sauce with orange juice & orange marmalade as ingredients. It looks light, and he put the whole thing together in less than four minutes, including segmenting the orange. Of course, he's the master of technique.

Jacques Pépin is one of the...

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Anemonefish: Nature's Aquarium



Peaceful DVD
This is a good DVD for relaxation or just as background "mood". It isn't a NatGeo/Discovery adventure, as the camera doesn't move or follow the fish. The camera stays still so your TV looks like a porthole into the ocean. The camera lingers on each scene for about a minute so you can really watch what the fish are up to... but not so long that you would ever get bored. Then there is a smooth transition to a different scene. We like that there is no narrative to follow, so we can play it in the background, and start/stop at any point.

Great DVD
I bought this DVD for my daughter who has special needs. She really calms down around fish and this DVD has been a huge help to calm her down.

Great Job!
Wonderful! Great colors, scenery, the fish, all was photographed and put together so well, like having the ocean in your living room. I would recommend it to my friends. I also liked the choice of music or natural sounds.

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Jacques Pepin Fast Food My Way: Dessert -Pick Me Up-



Smoked trout salad. Poached chicken breast on cauliflower. Quick tiramisu.
Jacques Pepin in his element and at his best. This entire series is a response to those who think that it is easier to pick up dinner at a fast food joint instead of making dinner at home. In episode after episode, he demonstrates that amazing dished that are only available to you at home can be made quickly and easily.

In this episode, he starts with desert, a simplified tiramisu of lady fingers soaked in a coffee syrup and layered alternately with a marscapone mixture. Next he makes a smoked trout salad for a first course. Then he finishes up with poached chicken breasts over steamed cauliflower and topped with a fresh pico de gallo. Beautiful!





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DeadTime



DO OR DIE FOR "LOVE MEETS MURDER"
Birmingham's hottest rock band is going through a "transitional phase" with a new guitarist. With their last album being a flop, the record company is reluctant to spend any money on them. They compromise by allowing them to record a low budget video in an old studio, one that is a bit primitive with bars on the windows and only one exit. Nigel (Adam Fray) the director brings in girls who add to the conflict.

The idea is to create or recreate the band's "primal energy." From the start you know something else is in the works for the band from the coded and secretive talks that the director and their manager (Carl Coleman) hold. As you know from the description, a hooded slasher enters the locked studio with no cell reception.

Fairly good integration of sex, slashing, and rock and roll...although we have seen better. Laurence Saunders is no Gene Simmons, still a decent film for those who love rock and roll slashers. Better than "Slumber Party Massacre 2", not as...

It IS just that...OK
It was watchable. Nothing great. They could've put a tad bit more work and feel into this flix. Too bad.

Would've been better without the CGI gore
This shot on digital video British slasher film is overlong and takes too long to get moving. I was hoping for a really fast paced slasher flick, but this film is too slow getting started. However, once the body count starts, it does eventually deliver the exploitation. I don't mind a slow starting film, as long as there's good scenery or atmosphere; this film has none of these, and this makes it boring at times. It does deliver the gore, although most of it is CGI, and there's a very bloody scene where a nude woman is stabbed in the crotch. I've read that this scene was cut from the British release of the film, but it's intact on this DVD. Gore fans shouldn't be disappointed here because there's no lack of gore or violence, and there's also a decent amount of nudity; even though the nudity isn't really explicit which is disappointing because this type of film would've been better with more explicit nude scenes. What's also disappointing is the unnecessary filler that extends...

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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald: Reader's Guide on Video



Very Helpful
This is an odd video, I had to read this book for a class, I had read it in high school but I could not remember the details. This was great, it gave me insight I definitely missed the first time around.

Book Report
I was a little disappointed in this video. I was really looking for a more indept experience as to the writing of The Great Gatsby. With the renewed interest in the book by the recent release of yet another film I thought I'd re-read this classic. Hoping to gain some insight into the author and maybe a discussion on the plot. I gave it an okay rating only because somewhere out there a struggling high school student might use this basic information on his or her's next book report. As for me...I'm sorry I wasted the money.

Helpful!
This is like Cliffs Notes or Sparknotes on video. I pretty much used this because I didn't have time to read the book. It goes through the book and explains everything and uses pictures to make it clearer.

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Revelations



Expertly Blending Old With New: A Modern "Dallas" Succeeds As A Sequel, Not A Reboot
When I initially heard that the TNT network was planning to revisit Southfork ranch, I was more worried than I care to admit. How many shows have we seen lately that tried to reboot a previous success to somewhat disastrous results? A lot! And "Dallas" is such an iconic show that all but defined prime time soaps in the eighties (even if it began in the seventies and ended in the nineties). At its height, "Dallas" was a true cultural phenomenon and J.R. Ewing was TV's grandest villain. In the 2012 interpretation of "Dallas," the makers opted for something completely inspired. Instead of another insipid reboot, they conceived an actual sequel--a continuation of ongoing storylines as envisioned twenty years later. And the results may just surprise you. While not perfect, this new "Dallas" is deliciously entertaining and one of the year's great guilty pleasures. Bringing back Larry Hagman (J.R.), Linda Gray (Sue Ellen), and Patrick Duffy (Bobby) for leading roles really works, Ken...

Dallas is back! And *not* in some cheesy reboot!
It's almost impossible to believe that 20 years after it left, Dallas has come back for a "Season 15".

And that's EXACTLY how it's treated. No silly reboot, no bring back one or two old characters to start it off and draw in fans, only to then forget about them (I'm talking to you, new 90210 and Melrose Place). The original characters are an integral part of the show, and ironically it's incredibly refreshing that they are not trying to reinvent Dallas, but continue it in a new era with an ever-so-slightly updated sensibility.

From the opening credits (the same style and song, thankfully - though not the rotating cast pictures, but I can see where that might have been TOO retro), it's clear that it's still Dallas - flashy cars, fancy clothes, some backstabbing, secrets, and assorted high-drama mayhem. Now there is a bit more of a contemporary take on the oil business - but again, it's wonderfully subtle. It's not hard to imagine that they have all been living...

Back and good Texas style
I did not know what to expect with this new edition of Dallas but I'm sure glad I watched. The whole season was excellent and the writers did a good job of delivering the excitement and suspense known to follow the Ewings. I definitely recommend the show's whole seasons to new and existing Dallas fans.

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Death on Demand



Demand more than death here. Demand some quality!
Playing like a bad mix of 'House on Haunted Hill' and 'Halloween: Resurrection' (yes, worse than 'Halloween: Resurrection'), we follow the story of three couples (including a couple football players, an emo lesbian, and a porn star. . . seriously) who are invited to the former home of amateur mountain climber & psychotic murderer Sean McIntyre (which might be the lamest name for a killer in the history of horror). Why? Because some rich guy (who looks like the prickish lovechild of Eli Roth and Colin Farrell) promised them $5,000 if they'd participate in his live-stream webcast at the haunted house. As expected, the ghost of McIntyre is brought back during a séance (why do I even bother?) and begins to stalk down his house guests.

Well, what's there to say? I wasn't expecting much here, and I got what I was expecting. This simply is not a good film. The premise isn't awful, I suppose. Worse ideas have made better films. But, though it's said too much: The execution...

YOU DON'T LIKE VELVET?
The movie opens with the McIntyre murders, a black and white scene of a guy killing his family, then himself. 20 years later the house becomes a scene for a reality show where contestants must spend the night in the house equipped with sound (screams) and cameras. The characters entertain us with some "good" cheesy dialouge. The contest takes place on Halloween night with live streaming. In order to get viewers, they add a porn star to the group. The group includes two rival football players and their girlfriends along with a lesbian who is paired up with the porn star.

The couples initially hold a seance lead by Daphne Ciccarelle who dabbles in the occult...now it is a matter of who lives and dies and whatever plot twists they can come up with.

I liked the overall "B" movie quality to this film. While it isn't anything new to the horror film genre, I enjoy rip off movies that are done well with characters and dialouge.

Sex, nudity (cutie Anne...

So dumb.
<strong>Death on Demand</strong> (Adam Matalon, 2008)

Before helming the terminally stupid <em>Death on Demand</em>, Adam Matalon had directed two things: Sesame Street skits and a short called <em>Sex and Camping</em>. No, I can't figure it out, either. But it makes a lot more sense than <em>Death on Demand</em>, whose continuity issues in the first half-hour would really be a problem if you could somehow bring yourself to give half a fig about the goings-on therein.

Plot: Sean McIntyre (<em>Sixty Cups of Coffee</em>'s Jerry Broome) was a mountaineer who went nuts and killed his family twenty years ago. Ever since, his house has stood abandoned, rumored to be haunted. Fast-forward to the present day, and college student Richard DeNola (<em>Over the G.W.</em>'s Dan Falcone), looking for a way to make some quick cash, comes up with the idea of doing a webcast from the house, offering five grand to anyone who manages to stay the...

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