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Goosebumps: Night of Living Dummy 3

Goosebumps: Night of Living Dummy 3

»rank: 8934

directed by: Craig Pryce, Randy Bradshaw




The Dark Secret of Harvest Home

The Dark Secret of Harvest Home

»rank: 6457

starring: Bette Davis, David Ackroyd, Rosanna Arquette, Rene Auberjonois, John Calvin
directed by: Leo Penn




House IV

House IV

»rank: 4110

starring: Terri Treas, William Katt, Scott Burkholder, Denny Dillon, Melissa Clayton
directed by: Lewis Abernathy




Cast a Deadly Spell

Cast a Deadly Spell

»rank: 9102

starring: Fred Ward, David Warner, Julianne Moore, Clancy Brown, Alexandra Powers
directed by: Martin Campbell


:Description:A noir thriller set in 1948 L.A., pits Detective Harry Lovecraft against a cast of horrors in his search for a stolen book of ultimate mystical power. ' 'lmagine ?Who Framed Roger Rabbit?? with witches and zombies instead of toons.' ' (USA Today.) ' 'A great way to spend an evening.' ' (Entertainment Weekly)

Time Machine (1960)

Time Machine (1960)

»rank: 1452

starring: Rod Taylor, Alan Young, Yvette Mimieux, Sebastian Cabot, Tom Helmore
directed by: George Pal


: essential video:After scoring popular hits with When Worlds Collide and The War of the Worlds, special-effects pioneer George Pal returned to the visionary fiction of H.G. Wells to produce and direct this science-fiction classic from 1960. Wells's imaginative tale of time travel was published in 1895 and the movie is set in approximately the same period with Rod Taylor as a scientist whose magnificent time machine allows him to leap backward and forward in the annals of history. His adventures ...

House of Dracula

House of Dracula

»rank: 8317

starring: Onslow Stevens, John Carradine, Lon Chaney Jr., Martha O'Driscoll, Lionel Atwill
directed by: Erle C. Kenton


: essential video:After scoring popular hits with When Worlds Collide and The War of the Worlds, special-effects pioneer George Pal returned to the visionary fiction of H.G. Wells to produce and direct this science-fiction classic from 1960. Wells's imaginative tale of time travel was published in 1895 and the movie is set in approximately the same period with Rod Taylor as a scientist whose magnificent time machine allows him to leap backward and forward in the annals of history. His adventures ...

The Haunting of Julia

The Haunting of Julia

»rank: 1155

starring: Mia Farrow, Keir Dullea, Tom Conti, Jill Bennett, Robin Gammell
directed by: Richard Loncraine


: :After the tragic death of her child, a woman moves to an old gothic house to recover. ln the house, mysterious things begin to happen and the woman is confronted with the ghost of a child who was murdered there 30 years earlier. Based on the novel by Peter Straub.

Godzilla Vs Megalon

Godzilla Vs Megalon

»rank: 10916

starring: Katsuhiko Sasaki, Hiroyuki Kawase, Yutaka Hayashi, Robert Dunham, Kotaro Tomita
directed by: Jun Fukuda


: :After the tragic death of her child, a woman moves to an old gothic house to recover. ln the house, mysterious things begin to happen and the woman is confronted with the ghost of a child who was murdered there 30 years earlier. Based on the novel by Peter Straub.

Dracula: Prince of Darkness (Ws)

Dracula: Prince of Darkness (Ws)

»rank: 5356

starring: Christopher Lee, Barbara Shelley, Andrew Keir, Francis Matthews, Suzan Farmer
directed by: Terence Fisher


: essential video:For many years after becoming one of the definitive movie Draculas in the 1958 Hammer Films classic Horror of Dracula (in which he was pitted against Peter Cushing as Dr. Van Helsing), Christopher Lee refused to reprise his role as filmdom's most infamous vampire. He finally returned to the role in this belated 1965 sequel, once again directed by Hammer studios veteran Terence Fisher. lt's not as effective or as intelligently written as the earlier film, but it has ...

Hellboy (Dol Slip)

Hellboy (Dol Slip)

»rank: 3955

starring: James Babson, Ladislav Beran, Selma Blair, Brian Caspe, Garth Cooper


: :ln the ongoing deluge of comic-book adaptations, Hellboy ranks well above average. Having turned down an offer to helm Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban in favor of bringing Hellboy's origin story to the big screen, the gifted Mexican director Guillermo del Toro compensates for the excesses of Blade ll with a moodily effective, consistently entertaining action-packed fantasy, beginning in 1944 when the mad monk Rasputin--in cahoots with occult-buff Hitler and his Nazi thugs--opens a transdimensional portal through which a ...


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by Friedrich Nietzsche, Michael Tanner, R. J. Hollingdale
$9.96

Average customer rating: 4.0 ISBN: 0140445145

by James Robert Parish
$11.53

Average customer rating: 4.0 ISBN: 0809222272



Cannon Fodder originally was released for the PC in 1993. This latest conversion to the Game Boy Color features new soldier and unit types, improved enemy artificial intelligence, enemy bosses, modernized gameplay, full-motion video, and cutscenes. The third-person shooter has 72 levels, some of which feature environments that are more than 20 times the size of the screen. Players use an arsenal of military hardware that includes bazookas, grenades, jeeps, tanks, and helicopters.



Battle a group of terrorist robots as one of seven characters from popular Capcom games, like Mega Man and Cammy. Other familiar characters include Charlie from Street Fighter, Arthur from Ghosts 'n' Goblins, and B.B. Hood from the DarkStalkers series. New characters include Shiva, an ex-snowboarding champion, and Simone, a fencing champion. The action-shooter gameplay contains both shooting and hand-to-hand combat, and features an isometric view. Players fly around by using "motor boots," and strategically avoid enemies' projectile attacks while counterattacking.
$13.99



For saboteurs of records that sound good because of elements completely unrelated to the artist, Ashlee Simpson's sophomore effort, I Am Me, may well be a dream disc. The production is a tight-wrapped, A-type achievement and, with sounds running from hip-hop (the unstoppably infectious "L.O.V.E.") to vintage '80s (the lusty "Dancing Alone") to Synchronicity-era Sting (the energetic, pulsing "Boyfriend") to airwave-friendly ballads that sister Jessica might have choked her way through ("Catch Me When I Fall"), the music sucks you in more reliably than a bagless Dyson. But instead of Ashlee Simpson, credit for both those things - really, for the way this disc favorably insinuates itself into a listener's head overall - belongs to producer/keyboardist/bassist/guitarist John Shanks. Ardent Ashlee-ites, of course, will beg to differ, and they won't be without their points: In addition to co-writing each of these 11 songs, some of which ("Beautifully Broken," a response to her "Saturday Night Live" lip-synching debacle) are more sophisticated than others ("Burnin' Up," a Madonna-reminiscent, reggae-style romp), she sings in a voice as artfully burnished and appealing as it was on her 2004 debut. She makes you want to la la all over again, and for that, and for finding the right guy to orchestrate this acknowledgment-heavy jewel, you've got to like her. --Tammy La Gorce
$13.98



You hear a lot of echoes throughout Ashlee Simpson's Autobiography, but her big-eyed, bright-smiled sister Jessica isn't behind a one of them. That'll come as no surprise to fans and anyone who has caught the "darker" Simpson sister on MTV, which is responsible for hurtling the hard-edged "Pieces of Me" onto radio playlists across the country and creating a mini frenzy over this CD's content. Stoking the gossip-fueled flames is track three, "Shadow." On it, 19-year-old Ashlee spills her childhood resentment over her sister's attention-gulping career, ending up on a conciliatory note that has the surprising effect of making the Simpson divas' drama seem believable ("Everything's cool now…and the past is in the past," she sings). But serious music fans ought not to dilly-dally with the celeb stuff and dive right in, because this disc dishes up more than a lot of us bargained for. "LaLa" revs up the unsuspecting by way of out-and-out lustiness, "Love for Me" lays on the lovelorn angst thick, and the title track is a take-no-prisoners, love-me-or-leave-me rock anthem. Rippling throughout are cunningly malleable vocals, bending here for a kittenish Gwen Stefani effect, stretching there to sound Christina Aguilera-cathartic. Sweeter moments call to mind the indie sensibilities of Jill Sobule. More than others of her reality-show insta-star ilk, Ashlee Simpson's is an autobiography that shouts, "bring on the sequel." --Tammy La Gorce




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