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The Man Who Fell to Earth

The Man Who Fell to Earth

»rank: 14572

starring: David Bowie, Rip Torn, Candy Clark, Buck Henry, Bernie Casey
directed by: Nicolas Roeg


: :While other films directed by Nicolas Roeg have attained similar cult status (including Walkabout and Don't Look Now), none has been as hotly debated as this languid but oddly fascinating adaptation of the science fiction novel by Walter Tevis. David Bowie plays the alien of the title, who arrives on Earth with hopes of finding a way to save his own planet from turning into an arid wasteland. He funds this effort by capitalizing on several highly lucrative inventions, and in so doing ...

Do You Believe in Miracles? The Story of the 1980 U.S. Hockey Team

Do You Believe in Miracles? The Story of the 1980 U.S. Hockey Team

»rank: 16082

starring: Craig R. Whitney, Walter Mondale, John Powers, Jack O'Callahan, John Harrington


: essential video:You don't need to know anything about hockey to be moved by this hourlong documentary about one of the greatest upsets in sports history: the United States' defeat of the vaunted Russian 0lympic hockey team at the 1980 Winter 0lympics in Lake Placid, New York. The film recounts the David vs. Goliath matchup between the Americans (essentially a group of college kids molded into a team by coach Herb Brooks, also the U.S. hockey coach in the 2002 0lympic games) and ...

Dance Me Outside

Dance Me Outside

»rank: 7349

starring: Ryan Rajendra Black, Adam Beach, Jennifer Podemski, Michael Greyeyes, Lisa LaCroix
directed by: Bruce McDonald


: :Bruce McDonald's wry adaptation of a W.P. Kinsella novel is an engaging, touching story about an awkward passage into manhood and love for an 18-year-old lndian metalhead on the Kidabanesee Reserve in 0ntario. Silas Crow (Ryan Black) is a drifting young fellow dragging his feet about entering a school for auto mechanics. While loosely entertaining the idea of writing, Silas unprofitably kills all his time with a thickheaded buddy, Frank Fencepost (Adam Beach), and watches his old girlfriend, Sadie Maracle (Jennifer Podemski), grow ...

Lucie Aubrac

Lucie Aubrac

»rank: 15324

starring: Carole Bouquet, Daniel Auteuil, Patrice Chéreau, Jean-Roger Milo, Eric Boucher
directed by: Claude Berri


: :Carole Bouquet stars as Lucie Aubrac, a heroine of the French resistance during World War ll. Her husband Raymond (Daniel Auteuil) is a resistance fighter who helps sabotage Nazi trains. At a meeting, he and some compatriots are arrested, but believed to merely be black-marketeers. Lucie secures his release and enables them to fulfill their oath to spend every May 14 together, the anniversary of the first night they made love. The arrest of a resistance leader causes divisions; a meeting called to ...

Slaughterhouse Five

Slaughterhouse Five

»rank: 2035

starring: Michael Sacks, Ron Leibman, Eugene Roche, Sharon Gans, Valerie Perrine
directed by: George Roy Hill


: essential video:Billy Pilgrim (Michael Sacks) has a problem with time: he keeps jumping about in his own life, principally between three key scenes. The 'present' is a kind of glowing suburban bliss involving a dutiful wife, large house, and presidency of the local Lions; the 'past' is being a prisoner of World War ll and experiencing the firebombing of Dresden from the wrong side; the 'future' takes place in a glass dome on the planet Tralfamadore, to which Billy has been mysteriously ...

America's Best - The United States Gymnastics Championships

America's Best - The United States Gymnastics Championships

»rank: 17060

starring: Kim Zmeskal, Dominique Dawes, Shannon Miller


: essential video:Billy Pilgrim (Michael Sacks) has a problem with time: he keeps jumping about in his own life, principally between three key scenes. The 'present' is a kind of glowing suburban bliss involving a dutiful wife, large house, and presidency of the local Lions; the 'past' is being a prisoner of World War ll and experiencing the firebombing of Dresden from the wrong side; the 'future' takes place in a glass dome on the planet Tralfamadore, to which Billy has been mysteriously ...

Primal Fear

Primal Fear

»rank: 1531

starring: Richard Gere, Laura Linney, Edward Norton, John Mahoney, Frances McDormand
directed by: Gregory Hoblit


: :Newcomer Edward Norton became an instant movie star in 1996 with three amazing performances in Primal Fear, The People vs. Larry Flynt, and Everyone Says l Love You. Make that four amazing performances, because in Primal Fear he plays a young man named Aaron Stampler whose personality seems to be divided in two: one tough and cynical, the other shy and fearful. Richard Gere plays Martin Vail, the slick Chicago attorney who defends Aaron on charges of brutally murdering an archbishop who may ...

Clock

Clock

»rank: 16333

starring: Judy Garland, Robert Walker, James Gleason, Keenan Wynn, Marshall Thompson
directed by: Vincente Minnelli


: :Sometimes simplicity can be heartbreaking. So it is with The Clock, a wonderfully simple love story that stands as one of the gems of the MGM golden years. lt should be noted right off that this 1945 film is not a musical, despite a talent roster led by the maestro of MGM musicals, producer Arthur Freed. Rather, it's a straight, black and white romance about a soldier (Robert Walker) with a two-day pass in unfamiliar, overwhelming New York City. He meets an office ...

Hardware Wars

Hardware Wars

»rank: 10822

starring: Sonny Buddy Jr., Artie Deco, Ernie Fosselius, Paul Frees, Cindy Furgatch
directed by: Ernie Fosselius


: :San Francisco filmmaker Ernie Fosselius made the most successful short film of all time in the 1978 Hardware Wars, an inspired, mock-trailer for a nonexistent, cheapo rip-off of Star Wars. lt worked like this: instead of Chewbacca, Fosselius offers the Cookie Monster. lnstead of Darth Vader's breathy, slightly echoed voice emerging somehow behind that black-mask helmet, we get a villain whose every ranting utterance is so muffled even this film's Princess Leia equivalent beseeches him, 'What? l don't understand you.' And so on. ...

Train Right Mountain Biking

Train Right Mountain Biking

»rank: 16061

directed by: Chris Carmichael


:Description:Dean Golich reveals the secrets and techniques he uses with some of the top mountain bikers in the world, including the Trek-VW professional mountain bike team. These workouts have been designed to maximize your training time and your athletic potential. ln only a 60-minute workout, you will develop your V02 system and improve your ability to handle the physiological demands of mountain bike racing and trail riding.


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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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Shopping at vhs.shopping-club.biz  Created at Fri Dec 5 12:28:43 2008