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Buy Your The Karate Kid II From Amazon!

Sunday, January 30th, 2011

The Karate Kid II. The Karate Kid II

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Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 05/27/2008 Run time: 113 minutes Rating: Pg

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8252 in DVD
  • Brand: Sony
  • Released on: 2001-07-10
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: Chinese, English, French, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish
  • Dubbed in: French, Portuguese, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.20 pounds
  • Running time: 113 minutes

Features

  • ISBN13:
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Getting real…4
The first Karate Kid literally spoke to any kid who felt out of place and picked on. Strongly enough, it was a concept played out over and over again. But the evenhanded direction of Avildsen made it a triumph. So what do you do for a sequel? You get real. Not that the first one wasn’t real. The threat to Daniels safety in the first movie was always there and fully realized. But take this student and mentor pair and send them to Okinawa, and you have a whole different ball game. The story centers more on Miagi and his journey home to see his dying father, and facing demons he left as a young man. Asian culture takes certain things much more seriously. Honor in this movie is a subject brought up constantly, and we see it from Daniels perspective; as an American who does not understand why these people do things they way they do in the name of honor. As Daniel comes to grips with this life code in the small village of Miagi’s youth, he realizes that the bully who has targeted him this time does not hold back. He’s ready to kill Daniel. He has no qualms about it either and feels it’s justified. As Daniel swoons a beautiful Asian girl and finds he’s getting in deeper with the affairs of Miagi’s past, he holds his ground, and his good upbringing helps to hold his own honor in place. In the end, the climatic fight scene is what really makes the movie. The whole story builds up to that moment. The idea is that this fight is real, there is no competition, no points. This is not a tournament, this is not a spectacle. Daniel is fighting to stay alive. And it is more brutal then the rules laden tournament of the first movie. Morita and Maccio play off each other so well it’s obvious these two have great chemistry. The teacher/student relationship is apparent from the first scene despite their polar opposite personalities. As in the first movie, each character gives the other what they are missing. Daniel gets a father figure/teacher, Miagi gets a son/student. This movie is just as good as the first in my opinion, just different. A different set of circumstances played similarly to the first one. It’s as different as it can be while still holding the same values. I give it four stars only because of some very minor inconsistencies but overall, it is a very good film.

The 80’s tradition comes back5
I should be considered an expert on this film but I’m not going to claim it. Right now I’m in Kyoto Japan and I am Japanese-American. So this movie has a very special meaning to me. I saw it when I was very little and loved every minute of it. I was always asking my mom if certain things were correct or if the Japanese was correct.
Albeit now the Japanese Slang is a bit old and the issues are a bit ancient (not to also mention most of the movie was filmed in Pat Morita’s home state of Hawaii). This movie still speaks to me.
I like it better than the first and truthfully I think whether it’s better or not is just a state of opinion not actual quality. I just think the second one speaks to me more than the first. I wasn’t the skinny outcast being picked on in high school.
However, I recommend seeing both the first and second not only because of the messages relayed within about honor, respect, love, and the bond between an aged fisherman and a kid from New Jersey, but also because these movies have some of the greatest one liners ever!
“Daniel-san nobody perfect.”
Check them out and see what I mean. Relive the 80’s and come back to the depressing reality TV era.
BTW I’m reviewing the Japanese DVD. They just remade all the movies here on DVD for about $15 each. So I’m picking these up.

One step above the Crane technique… (Pt. 2 of 3)5
You could tell from the ending of the first `Karate Kid’ that this was only the beginning of the story. The continuing journey of Daniel LaRusso bursts wide open in ‘The Karate Kid Part II’ Mr. Miyagi must return to his home land of Okinawa to see his dying father, but he is also well aware that the scars of his past are still there waiting for him after all this time. Daniel learns of Mr. Miyagi’s best friend Sato and how Miyagi broke the village tradition to ask for the hand of his best friend’s betrothed wife. Daniel learns through his trip that karate is more than tournaments and trophies. He learns that it is about honor and pride. He soon understands that there are people who take honor very seriously that they will stop at nothing seek out the purity of honor if it has been disgraced. That means anything is possible, even a fight to the death. Only through the sacred rules and techniques of the Miyagi family karate can Daniel overcome the tremendous obstacles he will face at this step in his journey.

This movie is one of the fabled sequels that live up to its predecessor. The story is darker and Pat Morita’s performance is his best by far. I am surprised that he didn’t get nominated a second time for an academy award. The villains are just as evil as the Cobra Kais (who actually make a brief appearance in the film) and the final fight shows that karate is not about fancy moves and glory. The message learned from `Part II’ is that when it comes to fighting the most powerful technique is the one that your opponent doesn’t see.

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Saturday, January 29th, 2011

More Than a Game

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More Than a Game Described:

They may be the best high school basketball team ever. From humble beginnings, future NBA superstar LeBron James, along with boyhood friends Dru Joyce, Sian Cotton and Willie McGee, began a journey that would take them from local fame to national acclaim. Joined by Romeo Travis in high school, the five fused their talents and, with the help of a dedicated coach, rewrote Ohio basketball history. Now, experience their trials, tribulations and triumphs in this inspirational film about five young men who became more than a team.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #650 in DVD
  • Brand: Lions Gate
  • Released on: 2010-02-02
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 105 minutes

What Customers are Saying:

An inspiring tale beyond basketball5
The title More Than a Game is more than a little cliché, and the most basic summary of this documentary’s premise does little to refute that initial impression: the story of five inner city youths who forge something beyond friendship while pursuing their high school hoop dreams. But the journey of the “Fab Five” who made up the core of the St. Vincent-St. Mary basketball team in Akron, Ohio earlier in the decade is not exactly your average sports saga, filled with extraordinary characters and equally extraordinary circumstances that Hollywood could craft no better in any feature script. Any filmmaker blessed with such serendipitous narrative riches would be content to simply recount the not-so-tall tale, but director Kristopher Belman takes it an added step: bringing the larger-than-life back down to a universally relatable scale.

Figures hardly come more larger-than-life than LeBron James, the Fighting Irish alum who (as the world over has come to know) first caught national sports media attention during his high school stint and has since become one of most celebrated and recognizable stars in all of sports, let alone in basketball. With the knowledge of James’s ultimate NBA fairy tale fate, the temptation would be to focus the film solely on his rise, but his story is duly treated as but one of the threads borne out of what was originally the “Fab Four”–James, “Little” Dru Joyce III, Willie McGee, and Sian Cotton, whom we see in some rare home video honing their individual skills and team chemistry from way back when they were pre-teens. Playing in the Amateur Athletic Union, the quartet lived up to the “Shooting Stars” team name, building on their local Ohio successes to shock observers in a national tournament down in Florida; however, the four’s first taste of national success will turn out to be just shy of complete victory.

And, like most lives, that bittersweet experience reflects the greater journeys followed in More Than a Game. Given the presence of James, one expects this to be a film full of triumphs, but what make those resonate even more strongly in the end are the relatable setbacks, obstacles, and shake-ups that occur along the way. In fact, falling into that last category are two people who will come to complete the “fab” family and help lift the entire unit to new heights, Romeo Travis and “Little Dru”’s father, Dru Joyce II. But long before those heights, each initially enters the basketball picture under less than ideal circumstances: Travis in sophomore year at St. Vincent-St. Mary’s, where his surly demeanor quickly clashes with the core quartet, who had just led the school to a championship the previous season; Joyce II in junior year, who takes over the head coaching position from a decorated predecessor despite minimal experience. How the four manage to evolve into a “Fab Five” and, above all else, a family of six headed by Coach Dru proves not so much a result of their hard work on the hardwood than of the growth they each must undergo as people.

The film’s structure reinforces that latter point. Instead of going the standard route of going through each person’s background at the top, Belman gives the individual histories at appropriate, organic moments within the overall narrative. While this approach does mean that some events early in the film unfold without a complete familiarity with or understanding of all of the players, spreading the stories out pays off in a couple of respects. Instead of blurring into a muddle, it allows each person to have their time to shine and their respective stories breathe and remain clear to the viewer. But even more effectively, the backstories are used beyond mere exposition to illuminate certain key events that affect the group as a whole–further underscoring the greater idea of how various circumstances seemingly centered on one person can cause repercussions for the collective. Chief among these developments, of course, is the hysteria and hype that arises around James after he is featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated, suddenly catapulting midwestern high school hoops into a nationally televised arena. The film admirably does not downplay any of the well-documented dramas and tensions that then sprung forth from James’s literally overnight fame, but instead of wallowing in sensational celebrity scandal, Belman keeps these developments in their proper perspective in regards to the bigger picture: how they affected the entire group and what they all aimed to accomplish.

That is an example of how and why More Than a Game works–showing the grounded, real-life terms and consequences of an increasingly surreal chain of events. Only a select few people can completely relate to being blessed with natural athletic ability and talent at such a young age; even fewer still would relate to being suddenly thrust into the media spotlight and scrutiny. But underneath that gloss and glamour is the classic tale of boys growing into men, of people learning the importance of the greater group glory over the individual shine, with the distinctly drawn personalities of each of the five offering a fairly diverse set of entry points for the viewer to understand and relate. Ironically enough, in balancing his attention between everyone on the team, Belman offers deeper, uncommonly intimate insight into the film’s marquee name; one is a witness what is perhaps James’s most critical, formative period through the eyes of those who not only knew him best, but had a huge hand in shaping the superstar “King James” so familiar to sports fans today. But if lifting-oneself-from-a-hard-knock-childhood-through-big-dreams is fairly commonplace film fodder, More Than a Game’s trump card comes in an arc that is not as commonly told and even more empowering: the story of Coach Dru, as the film is just as much about him coming into his own. If James’s story confirms the prevailing contemporary notion that one’s opportunity for success comes–and then passes–only while one is young, that of the elder Dru counters that, rather poignantly proving that one does not have to settle for comfort and complacency, for one’s true calling and self-actualization may not arrive until later in life.

That statement may make More Than a Game sound pretentious, but such weightier ideas are delivered in a very accessible and entertaining package. The Fab Five make an affable and appealing, funny and fun group, and Belman accordingly has fun, fighting the trap of talking head-and-news-clip documentary monotony and keeping the film visually dynamic. Beyond some snazzy (but not overdone) graphic work that gives the documentary staples of old photos and newspaper headlines some motion and flair, Belman also manages to lend some variety to the basketball footage, with each pivotal game edited and presented in their own subtly distinct way; for instance, some visual repetitiveness is avoided by simply not shooting scoreboards in the same way. Belman even has a little fun with the standard closing “where are they now” text cards without resorting to overwrought editorializing or labored stabs at profundity.

While it certainly helps to be familiar with the game of basketball and a fan of the sport to enjoy More Than a Game, it is far from necessary. Basketball is what brought the Fab Five and Coach Dru together and was and remains a shared passion, but the game is almost incidental to the larger idea: not only that those from not exactly the most privileged of backgrounds can indeed dream and succeed, but that one doesn’t necessarily do it by oneself. Not looking out for number one but instead always looking out for each other is what made Coach Dru and the Fab Five what they were as a team, who they have become as people today–and why their story and this film are so richly moving and inspirational.

Get ready for action … get ready for learning and building character!5
I have to admit, I am not a big fan of basketball. BUT because of my son’s love of basketball, I brought this and a few other DVD’s which showcases his favorite NBA players. (Note: I am still learning the techniques of basketball.)

The highlight and pivotal point of this film, “More Than A Game,” was when the team (St. Vincent-St. Mary) coach gave a serious speech to his young men and devout his faith in prayers (along with them) in a call to the Almighty Saviour. Both messages developed a strength of character to the young men whose lives are expectedly in a vacuum filled with wild excitements (promiscuity, alcohol and more). This to me was a turnaround for the young men. Although it was the coach’s last and final year to train them (in their last year of high school), Coach Dru Joyce and the team thought they would win the championship. They didn’t! BUT, because of their hardwork, faith, character (thanks to Coach Dru Joyce), friendship and love, these young men pulled it off and TODAY we still see the excitement some of them display. What an incredible film. I’m happy to have attain it as a gift; a gift my son will (and has said) will treasure forever. He’s inspired by this great documentary. Great work! Bravo to the executors for producing a fabulous history of the St. Vincent-St.Mary’s basketball team, “Irish”.

Great movie5
I thought it was going be about Lebron but it was actually about his friends. Yea hes a big part of the movie but you will learn about his fab 5 friends. If your a Lebron fan like I am you will enjoy the movie. You get to see old tapes of Lebron and get a little background information. Lebron still looks the same way, its funny see him as a kid and he sticks out at a young age.

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Stills from More Than a Game (Click for larger image)

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Why Pay $14.98 – Decision Before Dawn Only $11.49 At Amazon!

Saturday, January 29th, 2011

Decision Before Dawn

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Decision Before Dawn Details:

Richard Basehart and Gary Merrill star in a film that?s ?as stirring a drama as any you’ll want to see? (The New York Times). Adapted by Jack Rollens and Peter Viertel from George Howe?s novel Call It Treason, and directed by Anatole Litvak, this riveting World War II drama was nominated for the 1951 Best Picture Oscar®.

As the Third Reich declines in power, the Allies develop a radical new plan ? to employ German POWs as spies. Led by American Colonel Devlin (Merrill), and executed by Lieutenant Rennick (Baseheart), the plan is risky, and the tension builds as the Americans learn whether the former Nazis will help or betray the Allies.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #34187 in DVD
  • Brand: BASEHART,RICHARD
  • Released on: 2006-05-23
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Black & White, NTSC
  • Original language: French, German
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 119 minutes

Happy Customers Say:

WWII film of the highest order…Knight’s Cross5
If you haven’t seen this movie ( & I’m very sure most haven’t ) you will be transported back to a space & time when realism meant business.
I saw this film about half a dozen times during the 60’s on T.V., & as a kid I kept asking myself how could they make a movie that was so atmospheric, so vivid. Everybody & everything involved with this project clicks because they had Karma.
For the plot line, to the authenticity of the locals, all that is on the web. But if you know something about WWII in western Europe, specifically this stage of the war, the details the producers went to will astound you. From the cuff bands on uniforms, vehicle markings, to the single decal on the Waffen S.S. motorcyclist’s helmet et al., these guys/women knew what they were doing.
It wasn’t long after I first saw this film that I realized it was, in fact, Richard Basehart ( not a dashing figure, but the man could act ) who was the narrator for the great David L. Wolper WWII documentaries, also produced in the 60’s.
Again, this is a tremendous humanistic/spy movie to experience, this is the benchmark.

Going home4
Offbeat and emotionally involving tale of German turncoats spying for the Yanks in the closing days of WWII.

Largely forgotten, this intelligent thriller captured a best picture Oscar nomination in 1951. Unusual for war films of that period, it pulls no punches about the fears and miseries of that time in Europe. Oskar Werner is sensational as the German traitor motivated to help end the suffering caused by his country’s continued resistance to the inevitable Allied victory. Similar in tone to “The Spy Who Came in From the Cold.”

No extras on this Fox “Heroes of War” series title other than an odd news clip about the film getting an award.

Oskar Deserved An Oscar5
I was delighted (and rather surprised) to see this long overlooked film getting a much deserved DVD release. It had been many years since I last saw it – on television – but much of it remained vividly in my memory. Finally seeing it again, it’s not hard to understand why.

Based on a true story and filmed in atmospheric black and white, Decision Before Dawn was made entirely on location among the ruins of postwar Europe – unusual for Hollywood films of the time. The story of German POW’s being recruited to work as undercover agents in their own country in late 1944 benefits from understated performances and an almost total lack of background music. Much more of an espionage film than a war movie, the heightened sense of reality serves the stifled emotions and confused motives of the characters perfectly. The film only briefly loses its way once – to include the obligatory fallen female – but even this episode is handled well.

Although not top billed, Oskar Werner plays the central character – an idealistic medic caught up in circumstances that have little to do with truth or honesty. One of the finest screen actors ever, Werner gives a superb multi-layered performance, acting as much with his eyes as his voice. The rest of the cast is also good – many of them in far from sympathetic parts. The fact that this was considered a prestige film is underlined by the presence of Richard Basehart, an actor who reputation has underservedly faded over the years.

The direction by Anatole Litvak provides just the right mixture of drama and suspense – more genuine suspense than most Hitchcock films. The script is a taut, no-frills affair. It asks questions but provides no easy answers. The film was nominated for a best picture Oscar. Of course, it didn’t win and became rather neglected over the years. Not because it’s not a good film, which it certainly is, but possibly because it’s not just another bit of mindless entertainment. The drama and suspense engage your emotions, but Decision Before Dawn also gives you a lot to think about.

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Rooting for a German soldier was a daring choice for a movie made in 1951, but Decision Before Dawn justifies the risk; this is a crackling good war movie. In late 1944, the Allies are pushing through Europe but need intelligence behind German lines. Two Americans (Richard Basehart, Gary Merrill) recruit German POWs and enlist them to spy on their former Fatherland. We follow the adventures of one such agent, arrestingly played by the young Oskar Werner, who parachutes into Bavaria and gathers information. (Oddly, the film abandons Basehart and another recruit, marvelously played by Hans Christian Blech, who have also gone under cover.) The well-deployed suspense is accompanied by a constant examination of what it means to be German, and what loyalty to one’s country really entails–dutiful devotion or skeptical rebellion? This question doesn’t go deep (there’s a sense that the movie is a make-nice effort toward a new economic ally), but the film is on solid ground whenever the clockwork suspense takes over. Hildegarde Knef (here billed under her Hollywood spelling, Neff) turns up as a conflicted fraulein. Director Anatole Litvak, shooting on location, gets some amazing shots of bombed-out buildings and ruined towns; in that sense, the film is almost like a documentary record of the postwar landscape. Decision Before Dawn was nominated for the best picture Oscar, but became a lesser-known film in the decades that followed. It deserves a higher profile. –Robert Horton

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LOOK: Pilates for Men DVD RRP: —-! On Sale Now: Price Too Low To Display!!

Friday, January 28th, 2011

Pilates for Men DVD. Pilates for Men DVD

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The Pilates for Men DVD is the first Pilates workout dedicated specifically to men. It’s the best workout for guys interested in gaining that edge… you know, that extra burst downfield, the quicker bat, the devastating jump shot. Maybe you just want to stand straighter….with better posture? You’ve come to the right place! The workout’s focus is on your core, or your powerhouse, the band of muscles around the center of your body. It will help with alignment, balance and provide a muscle tone that allows you to move effortlessly through your day. A modified version is demonstrated for beginners or guys that need to take it slower. The LA Times says: “Although such athletes such as Jason Kidd have endorsed Pilates – many guys still consider it a workout for women. A new DVD, “Pilates for Men” aims to dispel that myth.” King magazine says: “No doubt, Pilates for Men knows the value of working smart not harder. It’s Viagra in mat form!

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #60595 in DVD
  • Brand: Solatus
  • Published on: 2003
  • Rating: G (General Audience)
  • Format: Color
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 32 minutes

Features

  • This DVD contains a 26 minute workout.
  • … a 5 minute maintenance
  • … a 10 minute time-cruncher
  • … a 15 minute rally
  • 4 workouts in one DVD!

It made a world of difference – great for men5
This DVD has made a tremendous improvement in my core strength and flexibility, which I notice when doing routine tasks as well as doing my full workout at the gym. I’ve tried pilates classes, mostly with women, and was discouraged until I got this DVD. Other DVDs that I tried had instructors who assumed that muscle flexiblity in men was a non-issue. Alisa Wyatt is great because the emphasis is on how pilates can address men’s issues, such as tight hamstrings. John and Phil are “regular guys”, who help reinforce that Pilates isn’t just for the super flexible. Also, the DVD is more informal, a thankful change from the “yoga-esque” or “new-age-esque” theme that you see in so many other DVDs or classes.

I use this DVD every other day, on off days when I don’t go to the gym. It is a great compliment and supplement to other workouts. I hope that Alisa will make another Pilates for Men DVD for the next skill workout skill level.

A solid pilates program for men5
After viewing a number of pilates programs for prenatal and postnatal, I finally stumbled across this DVD. The DVD offers a 5 minute, 10 minute, 15 minute, and 26 minute workouts. The full 26 minute workout provides about 26 different pilates moves along with a push up series. The instruction is good and more importantly brief. The series does move quickly, but offers a good workout.

FINALLLY A USEABLE OPTION FOR MEN5
I love pilates, but I don’t think most programs are very “male-friendly”. This has “real” guys, not fitness models doing the exercises and it takes into consideration our tight hamstrings and hips. There’s no pressure to look pretty or look like a dancer with this one! I actually think this could be a unisex dvd.

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Buy Your Knock Off From Amazon!

Thursday, January 27th, 2011

Knock Off. Knock Off

Product: Buy Your Knock Off From Amazon!

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No Description Available.
Genre: Feature Film-Action/Adventure
Rating: R
Release Date: 1-MAR-2005
Media Type: DVD

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #33112 in DVD
  • Brand: VAN DAMME,JEAN-CLAU
  • Released on: 1998-12-29
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 91 minutes

Fun Van Damme action…3
Jean-Claude Van Damme is one of those actors you either are a fan of or you despise. Me? I’m a big fan, so that makes me a little less qualified to rate this film, but I’ll review it nonetheless. It takes place in Hong Kong, where the market for “knock offs,” or imitations of an original product, is blossoming. Van Damme and Rob Schneider play two business partners who are caught up in a nasty circle with the Chinese mafia, renegade CIA agents, and big bad guys. The action and direction from Tsui Hark is awesome, especially a scene where Van Damme slides around on a boat while beating up bad guys. Rob Schneider is not too annoying in this film, which is a good thing. The bad guy, however, was a bit underwhelming, but his demise works. Van Damme films are never any cinematic accomplishment by any means, but they can be, and usually are, plenty of fun. This is no exception.

A+ material5
Excellent movie. The plot is great. The bringing of Rob Schneider and JCVD to one movie might have seemed like a bad idea at first, but they really pulled it off, this movie was one of the funnest movies I ever seen JVCD played in, it still is an action just like all his other movies. They do some non-stop action in China. Their are these pants that can rip apart easily cause their called Knockoffs.

BY far Van Damme’s worst movie.1
This was one of the worst Jean-Claude Van Damme mavies I have ever seen. The camera angles look good at first but get very annoying right away. Van Damme seems real out of it and is possibly never going to recover from this horrible let down of a film. If you are a Van Damme fan, I recomend that you see it to see how bad he has gotten. If you are not a fan of him then don’t waste your time.

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Get Your Triple Feature: Free Willy/Free Willy 2 – The Adventure Home/Free Willy 3 – The Rescue Amazon Discount!

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

Triple Feature: Free Willy/Free Willy 2 - The Adventure Home/Free Willy 3 - The Rescue

Get Your Triple Feature: Free Willy/Free Willy 2 – The Adventure Home/Free Willy 3 – The Rescue Amazon Discount!

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Triple Feature: Free Willy/Free Willy 2 – The Adventure Home/Free Willy 3 – The Rescue Described:

Fun, excitement and the whale that captured the world’s imagination add up to big family entertainment. A lonely boy understands the plaintive cries of the orca confined to an aquatic park’s too-small tank and does something about it in Free Willy (Disc 1/Side A). Watch and understand why “audiences have gone wild for Willy” (Richard Corliss, Time). The boy rejoins Willy in his new ocean home and together they confront a burning oil spill in Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home (Disc 1/Side B), “the ideal family movie” (Caryn James, The New York Times). And Free Willy 3: The Rescue (Disc 2) – “the best of the Free Willy pictures” (Siskel & Ebert) – adds a grittier edge with a story about an illegal whaling operation. Don’t miss 3 whales of a tale!

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3140 in DVD
  • Brand: Warner Brothers
  • Released on: 2006-11-07
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 296 minutes

What Customers are Saying:

fun and filled with memories5
When I was young I loved to watch Free Willy with my grandmother. I thought I had grown out of it, but I fell in love with it all over again. It doesn’t matter what age you are, a great movie is a great movie.

Great family movies!5
This is a really great bargain for 3 excellent family movies! We used them for movie night for 3 consecutive weeks, and we all couldn’t wait for the next one!

Good product5
It was well packaged and in good condition. Another money saver.I usually check Amazon for bargains first.

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Why Pay $19.98 – Random Harvest Only $16.49 At Amazon!

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

Random Harvest. Random Harvest

Product: Why Pay $19.98 – Random Harvest Only $16.49 At Amazon!

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An amnesiac World War I British veteran marries a showgirl, then forgets her.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3019 in DVD
  • Brand: Warner Brothers
  • Released on: 2005-01-11
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Dubbed
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
  • Dubbed in: French
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 126 minutes

Features

  • Paula Smith (Greer Garson) is the secretary of industrialist Charles Rainier (Ronald Colman). She’s also his wife, which Charles does not know. Shell-shocked during World War I, he doesn’t recall his days as her husband, John Smith. Advised not to endanger Charles’ fragile mental state, Paula cannot openly reveal her identity. She must find other ways to help him remember their life together.From

THEY DON’T MAKE ‘EM LIKE THEY USED TO…5
This 1942 five hanky tearjerker garnered seven Academy Award nominations and was the number four box office hit of the year. It is a wonderful, sentimental and romantic love story that captures the heart of the viewer. Corny? Sure, but so what. The film is totally absorbing, fueled by wonderful performances by the velvet voiced Ronald Colman and the beautiful Greer Garson.

The story revolves around a shell shocked, World War I vet (Ronald Colman), who is suffering from amnesia and convalescing in a sanitorium. He simply cannot remember who he is. One day, he simply walks out of that sanatorium and runs into a dance hall entertainer (Greer Garson), who takes a shine to him. Realizing that he has been under a great strain, she looks after him and, before you know it, they fall in love and marry. Now Mr. and Mrs. John Smith, they rent a little cottage in a quaint country village, and he begins a career as a writer. They have a baby boy. All is rosy and well with their world for three years. One day, John travels to Liverpool, where he is struck by a car. The end result is that he remembers who he was before the war, but has no recollection of the last three years.

It turns out that he is wealthy industrialist Charles Rainier. He goes home and takes over the reins of his business. He ultimately engages the services of a wonderful secretary, who turns out to be his wife, though he is unaware of having had any relationship with her, and she does not disclose it to him under advice of the sanatorium psychiatrist, wonderfully played by Phillip Dorn. Steadfast, she patiently waits for the day that he will remember all that they had together.

What happens to them is memorable in this story of love lost and found. It is, no doubt, a highly sentimental and manipulative film, as its intention to tug at one’s heart strings and render one immobilized by tears. It definitely succeeds in that department. It is also hugely entertaining. They certainly don’t make ‘em as they used to. All in all, a wonderful film. Fans of Ronald Colman and Greer Garson will love it, as will all those who love classic films.

Timeless masterpiece5
Greer Garson always stated that of all the fine films she made during her heyday at MGM in the 1940’s “Random Harvest” was her personal favourite. After another viewing of this grand work directed by the terrific Mervyn LeRoy it is very easy to see why. For lovers of well written, beautifully acted love stories “Random Harvest’ is unsurpassed and the memory of its wonderfully moving story will stay with you for a long time.

This tale includes a vivid telling of the story of Charles Rainier (Ronald Colman in one of his best performances)a shell shocked World War 1 veteran suffering from amnesia who is befriended by , marries and then loses his great love Paula (Greer Garson in another superb performance). Although Ronald Colman is central to the action here Greer Garson really steals the film lock , stock and barrel in her depiction of the lovely dance hall performer who falls in love and marries this mysterious man with no past only to see him regain his former life and in the process forget her. Greer’s self sacrifice in the scenes where she becomes the newly well Colmans’ personal assistant just to remain part of his life while never revealing her true identity to him are the stuff that romantic dreams are made of. Realistic? I doubt that strongly, but Colman and Garson are so professional and committed in their playing that we the viewers believe what is happening and are in there barracking for them .

“Random Harvest” never fails to move me and ranks right up there with those other great emotional dramas of the time like “Waterloo Bridge”, “Blossoms in the Dust” and “To Each His Own”. It has the added benefit of a typical sterling MGM supporting cast with Henry Travers, Reginald Owen, Una O’Connor give the film that special “British” feel that MGM was so good at producing during the war years. It’s obvious that cast and crew never once left the Hollywood sound stages but that doesn’t matter as it is a beautifully put together production created with alot of love and care for the material. It ,in my belief deserved the multiple Oscar nominations it earned and in a way was a big comeback for Ronald Colman after a few ordinary years as a Hollywood star.

If you are a fan of Greer Garson or Ronald Colman like I am you wont fail to love the sentimental and beautifully put together film of “Random Harvest” . It is movie making in the old style at its very best and definately the type of film that Hollywood doesn’t make anymore. Definite 4 hankerchief material and one that will never fail to move you with each viewing. Enjoy!

beautiful and tender5
An exquisite romance, a love that survives “for better for worse, for richer for poorer”, and a wartime tragedy all make this well written melodrama very engrossing, and it stars two of the most gorgeous and popular stars of their era: Ronald Colman was one of the handsomest men that ever drew breath, with a voice of liquid gold…a voice that helped him make the most successful transition from silent films to “talkies” of any actor, and this was Greer Garson’s year, as “Mrs. Miniver” was also released in 1942, which won her a Best Actress Oscar.
There are many unexpected twists to the plot, saving it from being “sappy and sentimental”, and it is blessed with lovely cinematography (by Joseph Ruttenberg, who also filmed and received an Oscar for “Mrs. Miniver”), an atmospheric score by Herbert Stothart, and sensitive direction by Mervyn LeRoy.

There are some numbers connected with this film: It is # 36 in the American Film Institute’s “Top Romances”, it was nominated for 6 Academy Awards (Best Picture and Best Director lost to “Mrs. Miniver”, and others were Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress with the excellent Susan Peters as Kitty, Screenplay, and Score), and Ronald Colman was my mother’s # 1 heartthrob, as he was for so many women during those golden years of the cinema. Total running time is 2 hours and 7 minutes.
Recommended additional viewing for these two marvelous actors is of course, “Mrs. Miniver”, and Ronald Colman as a Shakespearean actor in the superb psychological thriller “A Double Life”.

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Get Your The WAVE by The FIRM – Rock Solid Buns Amazon Discount!

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

The WAVE by The FIRM - Rock Solid Buns

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The WAVE by The FIRM – Rock Solid Buns Details:

Rock Solid Buns is a comprehensive lower body workout that will lengthen and strengthen from your hips to your calves. You’ll also use the WAVE Band and CardioWeights in combo with your rocking WAVE to define and sculpt your legs and shape your gluts. Buff your ASSets – butt, hips and thighs – in just 30 power-packed, speed-slimming minutes designed to strengthen and tone.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #20369 in DVD
  • Published on: 2008
  • Formats: Color, NTSC, Full Screen, DVD
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 30 minutes

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Castle in the Sky: Special Edition – 2 Disc DVD Normally $29.99 – Only $21.49 At Amazon!

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

Castle in the Sky: Special Edition - 2 Disc DVD. Castle in the Sky: Special Edition – 2 Disc DVD

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Introduce your entire family to Castle In The Sky, featuring a timeless story of courage and friendship with stunning animation from acclaimed Academy Award–winning director Hayao Miyazaki (2002, Best Animated Feature, Spirited Away). Plus, this special edition DVD includes never-before-seen bonus features that transport you deeper into the film’s amazing world! This high-flying adventure begins when Pazu, an engineer’s apprentice, finds a young girl, Sheeta, floating down from the sky, wearing a glowing pendant. Together, they discover both are searching for a legendary floating castle, Laputa, and vow to unravel the mystery of the luminous crystal around Sheeta’s neck. Their quest won’t be easy, however. There are greedy air pirates, secret government agents, and astounding obstacles to keep them from the truth—and from each other. Add Castle In The Sky to your DVD library, and this magical and uplifting classic from Studio Ghibli and Disney will thrill and amaze your family for years to come.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #956 in DVD
  • Brand: BUENA VISTA HOME VIDEO
  • Released on: 2010-03-02
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Animated, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English, Japanese
  • Subtitled in: French, Japanese
  • Dubbed in: English
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Running time: 125 minutes

Features

  • ISBN13: 0786936791617
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Winsome fantasy5
“Castle in the Sky” is a masterpiece of one of Japan’s finest filmakers. There is a simple artistry to Miyazaki’s stories. This is a children’s film, but it is in the tradition of children’s stories that appeal to all ages. A rare, pure fantasy, the film has the same magic as “Snow White and the Seven Dwarves” and other early Disney films.

I first saw this movie when it was released in US theaters as “Laputa the Floating Island.” The mythical floating island of Laputa is taken from Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels.” Like Swift, Miyazaki cloaks a political statement with a fantasy, giving deeper meaning to his story. Environmentalism has always been central to his films, and “Castle in the Sky” is no exception.

Visual, the film is a literal flight of fancy. Much of the film takes place in the air. Air pirates travel in unwieldy flying machines. Giant dirigibles sail the skies. Travel by kite is an acceptable option. The animation is of the highest quality, as is the sound and acting.

The story may seem familiar to followers of animation. Miyazaki also work briefly on the script of “Nadia: Secret of Blue Water” using some of the same concepts. The story was also adapted by Disney as their film “Atlantis,” sending the characters underground instead of up to the sky. However, “Castle in the Sky” is the story in it’s original, best form.

I cannot recommend this film enough.

Disney: Put this film on DVD!5
More than four years ago I rented the VHS tape of Kiki’s Delivery Service, and there was an ad for Castle in the Sky before it. It was listed as “coming soon.”

Since then, I’ve gotten the Japanese version of Castle in the Sky on DVD, and I love it. However, I’m still baffled by the fact that Disney has paid professional actors to voice the characters and gotten the film prepared for release in the US — even advertised it — and has since then just sat on it.

It’s almost criminal to hold such great films as Nausicaa, Castle in the Sky, and Pon Poko in your possession and not share them with the English speaking world.

If and when they see the error of their ways and make this film available, do yourself a favor and buy it. We need to let the media juggernauts know how much we love Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli.

Most Admired and Adored Miyazaki Film5
Laputa, Castle in the Sky, is the most creative, ambitious, and adventurous Miyazaki film I have ever seen. I like Miyazaki’s work very much for its grandeur, originality, and imagination. Sadly to say that Disney has lost its creative edge. It has been copying stories all over the world. Disney promised to release the Castle in the Sky video in 1999 but they failed to keep their promise. (Disney, please include the original Japanese soundtrack on the US release because I don’t like the English voice actor behind Pasu.)

After 16 years since Castle in the Sky was first released in the theatres, I still consider it the creme da la creme of all anime movies. Certainly Laputa’s art direction cannot compare to today’s S/B CGI and S/B 3D animation. However, the story is much more fascinating and breathtaking than KiKi Delivery Service, My Neighbor Totoro, and even Princess Mononoke. Princess Mononoke is a graphically stunning piece of art but Castle in the Sky is a wonderful story of courage and determination. While there are a few graphically violent scenes in Princess Mononoke, Castle in the Sky is packed with action without graphic violence.

I considered myself fortunate to be able to see it on the big screen (the original English version.) Castle in the Sky is a grand movie that deserves the big screen. I love the soundtrack of the movie very much. It is very uplifting and motivating. The title song, Carrying You, communicates the same kind of warmheartedness that permeates throughout all of Miyazaki’s films.

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Amazon’s Sideshow – Alive on the Inside Lowest Price!

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Sideshow - Alive on the Inside. Sideshow – Alive on the Inside

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No Description Available.
Genre: Performing Arts – Concerts
Rating: NR
Release Date: 19-AUG-2003
Media Type: DVD

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #75724 in DVD
  • Brand: ALEXANDER,JASON
  • Released on: 2003-08-19
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .30 pounds
  • Running time: 104 minutes

Very odd, but effective documentary4
I bought this DVD on a whim and I was pleasantly surprised. The documentary provides an in-depth look into the dying world of the sideshow. The best parts for me were the interviews with former sideshow performers while the worst parts were the cheesy sideshow re-enactments and transitions from topic to topic.
I was left wishing for more old footage of sideshows, but the footage they did show was amazing.
The documentary treats the performers with respect and compassion while not omitting the unusual lives they had.
The sequence of the “monkey woman” and her romance with the “lizard man” was surprisingly moving and should bring many people to tears.
If anything, this documentary brought a new awareness to me regarding people born with unusual physical deformities.

Sensitive portrayals5
SIDE SHOW takes a look at circus “freaks” in a sensitively done documentary that shows these extraordinary people’s lives and loves. No exploitation here, just a wonderful tribute to those who are different and how they managed their unusual lives as performers and privately. Especially compelling were the interviews with 7-foot-7 giantess Sandy Allen and Percilla the Monkey Girl. Well-done!

Inside the tent4
A documentary that brings insight on the lives in the sideshow and the era that once existed. Very, very interesting and a chapter in American culture . . .

With interviews done of many of the original circus celebrities, the viewer get’s a chance to see what life was like for people in that business. were sideshow good/bad? I don’t know? That’s up to you to decide. However, if you’re too shy to run off with the circus and you’re curious to what it would be like then watch this DVD.

Plus Jason Alexander is the narrator-if you’re into Seinfield???

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