Stream G-Saviour – The Movie Movie Online

3月 10th, 2010 by melina7834238
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Movie Title: G-Saviour – The Movie
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I am a die hard Gundam fan. Everything from the 0079 series to Turn A and even Wing. Gundam has a very big cult following and for us fans it is an animated world full of action, drama, mystery and suspense. It is sad to see how G-Saviour bastardized the Gundam universe. The only thing worth watching is the 5 minutes of CG which isn’t really all that great. The plot is REALLY bad, the acting is horrible, the characters are VERY plain and one dimensional. If you are a Gundam fan please don’t purchase this lame excuse for a movie…if you do they’ll only start making more garbage like this. Unfortunately this was an impulse buy and I am stuck with it (the people I have offered to give it away to don’t want it). Spend your money elsewhere…perhaps start exploring other Anime/Mecha titles such as Getter Robo or Big O. If not go ahead and burn your money…it’s probably more enjoyable to watch than this movie.

The year is Universal Century 223 and the Congress of Settlement Nations, or CONSENT, controls the Earth Sphere. At this time, the world is plagued with global famine that is taken the notice of everyone. Mark Curran, an ex-consent soldier, is forced to become the pilot of the Gundam G-Savior and to protect the discovery of a new type of Bioluminescence that could solve the world hungar crisis found by the Gaian Cynthia Graves and Dr. Reva from a conspiracy to have selective famine around the world by the corrupt Consent. They head towards the colony of Gaia where there will be a clash between Consent forces, Gaian defence forces, and the rebel faction called the Illuminati.

The Mobile suits look as if they were made from the One Year War Era and the plot seems to be slow in development. The only advanced technology that this movie has are the Beam Shield element from the series V Gundam. It is an okay movie, but it is suggested that you should be at least familiar with the world of Gundam or you will be completely lost in this world of giant robots, space ships, human emotion and trials, and corrupt world governments.

Watch Ulysses Online

3月 9th, 2010 by melina7834238
Watch Ulysses Online. Watch Ulysses Online.

Movie Title: Ulysses
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I fully agree with Mr Forsythe from London (Ontario). If like Mr Maitlin, you judge this movie with the special effects of the 1999, the movie is hokey. But the character, dedication and courage of Ulysse has never been so well portrayed as by Kirk Douglas. Sylvana Mangano doesn’t do much, but she portrayed only too well why a man will fight 20 years to return to her and their son. Anthony Quinn gives a fine performance as the suitor. The recent version with Armand Assante, while proficient in special effects, doesn’t exploit the richness of characters showned in the multi-european film. I have seen this movie in the 1960 and again this year. It is the same emotion and commitment. This is Homer’s Odyssey. If you have not seen this movie, get your hand on the vidéo. This is a film I would gladly buy in VideoLaser disc or the new DVD. It is worth the money.

…and that’s putting it mildly! Here Kirk is playing the Greek general Ulysses who spends twenty years away from the bosom of his family, ten at the Trojan War and ten on an ill-fated voyage back to Ithaca.

Now, when I first came across my brothers watching this video, I couldn’t believe my eyes that Kirk Douglas and Anthony Quinn were in such a cheap-looking movie! Nobody else is an actor or actress of any standing, and the production values are not up to Hollywood standards. Most distressing of all, everyone’s dubbed in, including Kirk!

Once I had gotten over all these obstacles, though, I was able to enjoy the movie. Ulysses’ adventures are recounted as a flashback as he recuperates from amnesia in a strange kingdom. We see him outwit the Cyclops, go mad from the siren’s song, and lose all track of time while being enchanted by Circe. Intersperced with Ulysses’ strivings are scenes back at Ithaca, where Penelope has all she can do to hold onto her absent husband’s throne from would-be usurpers vying for her hand. A new suitor emerges from the pack, played by Anthony Quinn, and he, like Kirk, plays his role straight despite the film’s other limitations. The VERY end, AFTER all the bloodshed in the banquet hall, seems to end abruptly with Kirk and Penelope talking very fast off screen about how they have to make up for lost time. That looks a little, “We have to give the cameras back, so let’s end it now.”

Still in all, “Ulysses” will entertain you if you let it; it did wonders for me, my brothers, and a two-year-old who wandered into the room and found the Cyclops really exciting.

Stream Desperate Housewives: The Complete Fifth Season Online

3月 7th, 2010 by melina7834238
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Movie Title: Desperate Housewives: The Complete Fifth Season
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Prior to purchasing the first four seasons of Desperate Housewives I had never watched any of the episodes on TV. By the commercials I had seen though I had a feeling it would be something I’d like. Recently I’ve taken the time to watch all four seasons and I’m chomping at the bit now waiting for Season five. I don’t know how I’ll make it all the way to September!!!

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This show is different than most, at least to me. I thought it was going to be more of a “Soap Opera” type but it’s more of a drama with comic undertones. It’ll make you laugh mostly, make you cry sometimes and make you sit there with your mouth hanging open thinking “I can’t believe she did that!”.

I find this series thoroughly enjoyable and addictive!!

In my opinion, in its first four years on the air, “Desperate Housewives” has had three out of four really good seasons. The first, third, and fourth seasons were excellent. Only the second season wasn’t quite as good. So going into the fifth season of this hit show I wondered if it was going to match the greatness of its best years. Sad to say it didn’t. The fifth season of “Desperate Housewives” was its weakest season yet. I still liked the fifth season of the show, and I’m giving it 4 stars out of 5 (it falls more under 3 1/2 stars than 4). But I’ve got a feeling that it might be running out of gas down the road in its later years to come.

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For the most part, “Desperate Housewives” season five is still pretty good. There are plenty of moments that are funny, sexy, and suspenseful. There was nothing wrong with the acting. The regular cast is back and the acting is fine as usual. There was nothing wrong with the presence of Teri Hatcher (Susan), Marcia Cross (Bree), Felicity Huffman (Lynette), Eva Longoria Parker (Gabrielle), Nicolette Sheridan (Edie), and season four newcomer Dana Delany (Katherine) on the screen. Same goes for the other cast members as well. Along the way in season five there were some newcomers. The most notable newcomer to season five was Neal McDonough, who plays Edie’s new husband Dave. This character provides most of the story arc to season five which means that this character has a deep dark secret that plays out during the season (quite similar to Dana Delany’s character in season four). McDonough is very good here and there’s no fault in his character’s storyline.

There were other newcomers to season five, and many of the new faces were provided thanks to the five year jump that this show took at the end of season four. There are now older actors who are playing the Scavo kids (Lynette’s three sons and one daughter). Susan and Mike’s son, born at the end of season four, is now five. And Gaby and Carlos have two daughters (also shown at the end of season four). The storyline with the five year jump into the future I think might have hurt the show a little. I think I liked it better with the way it was. It’s obvious that “Desperate Housewives” creator Marc Cherry wanted to make some changes so that way the show can stay fresh. Not a bad idea, but for me changes don’t always cut it.

As for which episodes were the best, I’d have to say the very best episode of season five was the show’s 100th episode, titled “The Best Thing That Could Have Ever Happened” (in the show’s fifth season, it’s episode #13). Here’s an episode that takes a total departure from its regular storyline to focus on Wisteria Lane’s local handyman, wonderfully played by Beau Bridges. The handyman dies of a heart attack at the beginning of the episode, and the ladies flashback on how this man affected their lives over the years. Bridges’ guest appearence provided “Desperate Housewives” with one of its only two Emmy nominations that it received this year. Another good episode was #8: “City on Fire”. This was supposed to be the big episode of the season, following on the heals of the tornado episode from season four and the supermarket hostage crisis episode from season three, which rank as the two best episodes of the show so far. In this episode, a nightclub fire puts the housewives and their husbands in danger. However this episode (even though its a good one) isn’t quite up to the tornado and hostage crisis episodes from the previous seasons.

Besides Bridges, other familiar guest stars from season five include: Gale Harold (”Queer as Folk”) as Susan’s new boyfriend Jackson (the mystery man Susan was kissing just as season four ended); Lily Tomlin as Mrs. McCluskey’s sister Roberta; Gail O’Grady (”NYPD Blue”) as a promoter who Lynette thinks her husband Tom is having an affair with, but it turns out she’s having the affair with one of the Scavo twins; Frances Conroy (”Six Feet Under”) as one of Carlos’ massage clients who integrates herself into the lives of the Solis family which in the process upsets Gaby; Steven Weber (”Wings”) as Julie Mayer’s much older new beau (Andrea Bowen, who played Julie in the first four seasons but is not a regular in season five reprised her role for this one episode); and Swoosie Kurtz (”Sisters”) as a worker at a school that Susan goes to work at who turns out to be a closeted lesbian. Besides Bowen, other regular “Desperate Housewives” actors from the past turn up, including Richard Burgi as Susan’s ex-husband Karl; Steven Culp in a flashback scene as Bree’s late husband Rex; and Christine Estabrook (also in a flashback) as season one neighbor Mrs. Huber.

Season five of “Desperate Housewives” has some problems. First of all the storyline, even though it’s good, isn’t as good as past storylines. This lead to a couple of episodes that were just downright dull. Plus a couple of minor storylines were kind of ridiculous. The most absurd was Bree’s current husband Orson becoming a kleptomaniac, where he was breaking into houses on Wisteria Lane and stealing items from each house. Another problem was Gaby’s selfish behavior, which was funny in earlier seasons but in season five was starting to get tiresome. One of the dumbest scenes of all time on this show comes in season five’s first episode, where Gaby plays a game with one of her chubby daughters. It’s where Gaby wants her daughter to lose weight by having her chase Gaby’s car while Gaby drives a little bit away just as her daughter reaches up to the car. Then the daughter, very tired from all the chasing that her mom is making her do, gets on a bus and takes the bus home much to the chargin of Gaby. This is not “Desperate Housewives” at its best. Plus, Lily Tomlin isn’t hardly given anything to do as Mrs. McCluskey’s sister Roberta. Tomlin is one of our finest comediennes. Couldn’t the writers given her something more to do?

Let’s hope that season six of “Desperate Housewives” will be an improvement, but I’m not all that enthusiastic. Nicolette Sheridan is now gone, thanks to her late season departure. That’s a shame because Edie was one of the very best characters on the show. But at least a familiar face has joined the cast for season six: Drea de Matteo, best known for her brilliant Emmy winning role as Adriana on the superb HBO series “The Sopranos”, will be coming to Wisteria Lane. I’m looking forward to seeing if she can give this once great show a much needed boost.

Buster Keaton Collection Streaming

3月 7th, 2010 by melina7834238
Buster Keaton Collection Streaming. Buster Keaton Collection Streaming.

Movie Title: Buster Keaton Collection
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Buster Keaton Collection is available for streaming or downloading.

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Boy, how I used to hate Ted Turner. Yes, hate. It wasn’t too strong of a word. When Turner Classic Movies first began broadcasting, they were intent on colorizing everything. Don’t remember colorization? Good! A handful of executives felt that for a classic black and white film to find an audience in the MTV age everything had to be colored in with day glow artificial colors, giving a number of films the look of a bad water color, everyone had the same skin color, making them unwatchable. At one point, Turner even wanted to colorize the early black and white episodes of “Gilligan’s Island”. I’m not sure (nor do I care) if that ever happened.

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Now, Turner Classic Movies is an invaluable resource for anyone who loves or studies films. Using the MGM vault as their toy chest, and later adding libraries of other studios, they show a remarkable number of hard to find films that are not available on DVD or even video. In the last few years, MGM and Warner Bros. have begun releasing a large number of these films on DVD, using pristine prints, restoring films and creating a host of attractive extras. What a difference a decade makes.

Turner Classic Movies has released “The Buster Keaton Collection”, a two disc set including “The Cameraman” (1928), “Spite Marriage” (1929) and “Free and Easy” (1930), Buster’s first talkie. There is also a short documentary called “Buster Keaton: So Funny It Hurt” about his brief tenure at MGM. The documentary premiered on Turner Classic Movies.

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Buster Keaton is one of my favorite film comedians, creating some of the funniest films I have ever seen. During much of his career, Keaton was his own boss. He produced the films he wanted to create and worked on them until he was happy with their content and then released them through distribution deals his partner, Joe Schenck, put together. Sound familiar? This is essentially what Chaplin and Harold Lloyd did as well. But Chaplin was savvier when it came to business. He extracted larger contracts, made more money and retained ownership of all of his films.

Because he was his own boss, Keaton had free reign while he worked helping him create such classics as “The General”. Widely acknowledged as Keaton’s masterpiece, the film follows the exploits of a lone Southern engineer as he tries to thwart the plans of the Northern soldiers he comes across. If you have never seen “The General”, you should. It is a great film and contains many classic comedy moments including an amazing sequence set on two trains speeding down the tracks.

“The General” is not my favorite Keaton film. That would have to be “Sherlock Jr.” Keaton plays a young man who imagines he is in a film. Amazingly, all of the special effects were created in the camera. When you watch, you will understand what I mean and why it is so amazing.

In “Seven Chances”, Keaton’s character has just one day to find a bride and get married to inherit a fortune. Botching the proposal to his girlfriend, his best buddy helps him find a mate and they ask several women, all of whom refuse. Rejected by everyone, Buster goes to the church and falls asleep, waiting for his buddy and lawyer to bring someone to the church. While he is asleep, a newspaper story reveals Keaton is looking for a bride and will inherit a large sum of money upon marriage. When he wakes up, the church is filled with women of all sizes, ages, races and appearances. When they realize Buster is sitting in front of them, they stampede, leading to one of the funniest sequences ever filmed. This films was, unfortunately, remade a few years ago starring Chris O’Donnell and Renee Zellweger.

Or “The Navigator”, or “Steamboat Bill, Jr”, or “Go West”. There are many more classics, too many to list and discuss.

What does any of this have to do with “The Buster Keaton Collection”? It is important to have a brief history to understand why this new DVD set is so important.

Even though “The General” is acknowledged as Keaton’s classic film, this is a development that happened many, many years after the film’s release. The film was a major financial disappointment for Keaton. His next film “College” earned more money, but the financial pressures experienced after “The General” led Schenck to look for a more powerful partner to produce and distribute Keaton’s films.

Watching “The Buster Keaton Collection” is a necessary evil for anyone who is interested in film or silent film history. Containing three films, it represents a good, a bad and one of the lowest points in Keaton’s career.

Keaton signed with MGM in 1928. As I watched “The Cameraman”, the first film produced at MGM, I listened to the commentary provided by Glenn Mitchell, author of “A – Z of Silent Film Comedy” and I learned a very telling fact. Both Chaplin and Lloyd advised Keaton against signing with MGM. As mentioned, Keaton had a tremendous amount of creative freedom when he worked for himself. At MGM, he became part of a factory and the fit wasn’t a good one and would ultimately lead to the end of his career as a filmmaker. MGM insisted that he work from tightly plotted screenplays and he was no longer allowed to work out gags on the set, with the camera rolling. Despite all of these problems, “The Cameraman” is quite good. It was also very successful and, according to Mitchell, used as a template for all of the studio’s future comedies, including many of the Marx Brothers films.

Keaton plays Luke, a tintype operator in New York City. During a large parade, he bumps into Sally (Marceline Day), the receptionist at MGM Newsreels. Pitying him, she agrees to let him take her picture. At the time, tintypes were already ancient. He follows her to the office to return the picture. In an attempt to impress her, he buys an old camera and waits for an assignment. In an effort to encourage him, and thwart the pushy office bully, she sends him on an assignment, which he botches. Later, he goes to cover a parade in Chinatown. At the parade, rival Tong gangs decide to start a war, and Keaton finds he is in the middle of the action.

“The Cameraman” is recognized as Keaton’s last great film and it is very good; there is a lot of “funny business”. Keaton’s efforts to photograph the Tong War are especially funny and inventive. Constantly racing around, he has to fend of the warring gang members as he tries to get as close to the action as possible. At one point, a gun shot hits one of the legs of his tripod making it useless. He then decides to put the other two legs in harms way and sure enough, they are soon the same size. Standing on a platform, with a great view of the action, he doesn’t realize that the scaffolding is about to give way and the platform swings gracefully to the ground, giving him a great shot.

The story is a little awkward and the third act seems sloppy. It was necessary to reestablish Sally’s feelings for Keaton and take the bully out of the picture. To do this, an elaborate set piece was created. But if you look at the story, the connection between the main plot and this bit was tenuous at best and detracts from the film.

“The Cameraman” was very successful and only served to re-affirm MGM’s belief that Keaton’s films should be more tightly scripted. Because the film made money, they felt they were right and Keaton was wrong. 1929’s “Spite Marriage” is one of those `hybrid’ films from the late twenties. Created after the invention of sound, it isn’t a `talkie’. MGM wasn’t ready to put Keaton in a talkie. Instead, the film contains synced sound effects and music. Much like a laugh track on a television comedy, these sound effects were intended to cue the viewers’ feelings and emotions. Watching a silent film with synced sound effects is like watching a foreign film with dubbed voices. It detracts from the film, taking you out of the story.

Keaton plays Elmer, a dry cleaner, infatuated with stage actress Trilby Drew (Dorothy Sebastian). He attends every performance of her play wearing a different suit borrowed from his customers. He also waits outside the stage door every night, for some indication that she is aware of his existence. One night, after fighting with her leading man, Trilby talks to Elmer, trying to make the leading man jealous. Elmer knows nothing of this spat and soon agrees to marry her. As the sham marriage progresses, he realizes that she doesn’t love him, but will always continue to love her.

“Spite Marriage” contains three memorable sequences. Early in the film, Elmer winds up backstage playing an extra in Trilby’s play. The extra has a significant scene in which he holds Trilby after her character has fainted. Naturally, he is so nervous the play becomes a disaster. After they are married, Trilby insists that they go to the same nightclub frequented by her leading man and his new girlfriend. Trilby proceeds to get stinking drunk. Returning to their hotel room, she passes out. Elmer attempts to move her unwieldy body and put her to bed, but she doesn’t cooperate and he struggles, in truly comedic fashion, to get her into the bed. The finale, set aboard a steamship involves a band of rumrunners who try to take over the nearly deserted ship. Elmer saves the day. My problem with this sequence is that it seems a retread of a superior sequence in “The Navigator”, one of Keaton’s earlier films. It is different, but doesn’t seem to stretch the envelope enough.

The less said about “Free and Easy” the better. Keaton’s first talkie, he essentially becomes a supporting character to Elvira (Anita Page) and Larry (Robert Montgomery), two budding lovers. Elvira wins a small town beauty contest and earns a trip to Hollywood, her mother and Elmer (Keaton) in tow. On the train, they meet Larry, a famous actor. The mother is overbearing. The jokes are completely wrong for Keaton. It is a mess.

MGM proceeded to cast Keaton in a series of talkies reliant on jokes and verbal puns, not physical humor, Keaton’s trademark. Unable to use his creative skills, Keaton’s personal life soon deteriorated and his drinking became excessive. MGM soon paired Keaton with an up and coming comedian, Jimmy Durante. Durante quickly became the headliner and Keaton’s contract was not renewed. He managed to eke out a living writing gags for people like the Marx Brothers, acting in two-reelers and industrial training films and appearing on television. A few years later, he began appearing in films like “In the Good Old Summertime”, “Sunset Boulevard”, “Limelight” and “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum”.

“Buster Keaton: So Funny It Hurt” is a short documentary, produced by Kevin Brownlow for Turner Classic Movies. Hosted by actor James Karen, the film follows Keaton’s short-lived career at MGM and, essentially, the end of his career. Why Karen? He met Keaton at MGM and they became friends. The documentary is interesting, but far too short to go into any interesting depth. Karen does discuss how Keaton met Eleanor, a young showgirl at MGM. They fell in love and married, the longest of Keaton’s marriages, lasting until he died. Eleanor was instrumental in reestablishing interest in her husband’s work, getting it shown at museums and repertory houses, leading to people writing about it, which lead to more people watching the films for the first time, which would ultimately lead to people remembering Keaton’s place in film history. If you consider how many silent film actors have been virtually wiped off the face of the Earth because their films have all but disappeared, we should all be grateful that Keaton’s memory and films live on.

Far more interesting is “Buster Keaton: A Hard Act to Follow”, also produced by Kevin Brownlow and his then partner David Gill. A multi-part documentary produced in the 80s for PBS, it follows Keaton throughout his life. His loves, life and work are all discussed in great detail. Try to catch this on VHS or TV, because it is not yet available on DVD.

“The Buster Keaton Collection” is an essential addition to the library of any film scholar and any fan of the great comedians.

This is one set as a Keaton fan that you should add to your collection.
The rating however should really be three and a half stars.
This set comes in a handsome pull apart case housing the two DVDs but I was disappointed to find no booklet/liner notes with details about these new releases,i.e.sources for the prints,restoration work,etc.
The Cameraman is the BEST thing about this set.The 90s release of it on VHS came in around 70 minutes and was a poor transfer.By comparison this new version comes in at about 75 minutes and is the most complete commercially released print so far.It has been re-released with a NEW score and not the original featured on the VHS version.I personally would have preferred the original score but the new one does have a certain charm and in the end does justice to the film.With the additional footage/title cards,its’ improved and adjusted contrast and overall picture quality, it has heightened,at least to this reviewer,its’ reputation and enjoyment as one of Keatons’ best films.
The next film is Spite Marriage.Two versions were released originally of this film,one a silent and THIS one with sound effects and a musical score.It would have been very nice to have had BOTH in this set for comparison/historical purposes but such was not the case.This print shows absolutely no improvement over the previously released VHS version also released in the 90s.It shows very few signs of being “cleaned up” at all.They have again adjusted the contrast but other than that and the sound being improved through digital means,the film as a re-release (technically) overall is a disappointment.
And the final film in this set “Free and Easy” is again, and even MORE so, a technical disappointment.This re-release print is even worse than Spite Marriage,quite “rough” throughout with some footage even out of focus.Seems they just took it out of the vault and with minimal work did a transfer onto DVD and it shows.Certainly unworthy in a release such as this.
Rating of these works based on their artistic merits also parallels their techinical merits.
The Cameraman is by far the best in plot structure and truest to the Keaton style.It was a fantastic start to his MGM phase but how unfortunate that the lions’ vision was so myopic.
Spite Marriage lags a ways behind the Cameraman because of the now more noticable studio interference.There are many true Keaton touches throughout but the cumbersome plot and pace often get in the way of enjoying this film more.
Free and Easy lags even farther still behind Spite Marriage.The iron fist of the studio is evident throughout this film and the Keaton we knew is now just a player with little room to maneuver.His character has now been “warped” and the “funny” business he speaks and performs fed to him by the script writers falls totally flat.Keaton was a consummate pro and even under these conditions his brilliance still managed to rise to the surface occasionally.His singing and dancing is one highlight out of very few.
To add to the enjoyment of this set are commentaries offered for both the Cameraman and Spite Marriage by familiar film historians.
Also,and a great delight to this reviewer,is the additonal inclusion of a 38 minute special produced by film historian Kevin Brownlow and narrated/hosted by Keatons’ friend and actor James Karen.Two special highlights included in this documentary of Keatons’ MGM years are further sound/video clips from his CBC interview of 1964 not included in A Hard Act To Follow and some tantalizing amateur footage of Keaton in New York City during the filming of The Cameraman.A wonderful complimentary piece to this set.
In conclusion although this set is technically disappointing in so far as Spite Marriage and Free and Easy are concerned(thus the 3 1/2 star rating),The Cameraman outshines them both.Historically and artistically, especially in so far as Keatons’ career goes,these films are quite important.And with the addition of the added Brownlow documentary this is one set no true Keaton fan should be without.

Vega$: The First Season, Vol. 1 Movie Streaming

3月 6th, 2010 by melina7834238
Vega$: The First Season, Vol. 1 Movie Streaming. Vega$: The First Season, Vol. 1 Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Vega$: The First Season, Vol. 1
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Vega$: The First Season, Vol. 1 is available for streaming or downloading.

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“Vega$-The First Season, Volume 1,” is the first release of the popular, but brief series starring Robert Urich as Las Vegas private eye Dan Tanna.

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As was typical with other Aaron Spelling action television shows of this era (and Urich himself starred as James Street in Spelling’s even shorter-lived series SWAT), Vega$ featured lots of fistfights, gunfights, car chases, and plots that not only strained credulity, but often broke it. But faithful viewers didn’t care about how realistic the show was, but how much fun and pure escapism it was. Urich as Tanna was a former Special Forces soldier now making his career as a rough and tumble private eye, who relied on help from girl Friday Bea (Phyllis Davis), a former showgirl, his buddy Binzer (Bart Braverman), his police contact, Lt. Dave Nelson (Greg Morris) and Vegas hotel owner Phillip Roth (Tony Curtis). A unique feature of Tanna’s apartment behind Roth’s hotel was the fact that he could drive his cool sports car into his living room.

It is great to have the late Urich’s work on DVD, and Vega$ will be enjoyed today by many who spent evenings enjoying the show in their youth.

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I absolutely LOVED THIS SHOW!!!!!!!!! As a kid I watched it live and loved it so much – yes, Charlie’s Angels, Starsky and Hutch, Love Boat and Fantasy Island TOO but this one I never thought would be released on dvd!! When I first started dating, I would come home and watch late night tv with my mom (10pm curfew…the old days) and this was one of my favorite childhood shows that was repeating at the time at 11pm, so there are great memories from the first airing when I was little and the repeats as a teenager(12am was Trapper John MD and 1 am was Love Boat-after dates were better than the dates!). I am about halfway through my dreadful vhs tapes of this show (transferring to dvd)- I only have about half the episodes, and they were repeats on TNT’s Lunchbox TV in the mid-90’s and they are in such poor condition, I’m just thrilled to get some in quality condition and will inevitably get my hopes up that I’ll get them all eventually.

The only reason it might be tied for the best release this year is because it’s been a good year for us fans of 70’s shows with the constant release of more Love Boat episodes, finally the 4th season of Charlie’s Angels, another season of Taxi on it’s way and the long awaited but finally given up on (prior to the miraculous announcement)of the second season of Knots Landing (not a 70’s show but still qualifies as a childhood favorite). It took so long for some of these, it leaves me in a position of perpetual hope that it will never be too late for a network to get their head out of their collective…or for someone else like SHOUT to buy the rights to some of the greatest shows ever made – dated as they may be.

HOWEVER………….I agree with everyone about this partial season garbage. I am so absolutely FED UP with that bull – If you’re going to test it out, either test a cheap half season or make us pay what’s necessary to produce a full season but to charge full price for a half season? This isn’t 2006 – Let’s not forget we’re in a major recession with huge unemployment, not a whole lot of entertainment money left in the budget and you’re gonna take this opportunity to join in with so many other institutions and stick it to us regular people right when we’re hurting the most? It’s more than the adult birthday budget in my family (which is getting less and less the older we get and less money we have!!!!! How about this…earn my loyalty for life (networks)and cut your prices for all your “half season” releases until this economic nightmare is over – I don’t mean “pretend” over, I mean low unemployment over. At least Amazon has more reasonable prices compared to everywhere else but they can only go so low when the people releasing it charge an arm and a leg to begin with.

Okay back to the point, Dan Tanna is the greatest!!!!!

Watch Playing Shakespeare Movie Online

3月 5th, 2010 by melina7834238
Watch Playing Shakespeare Movie Online. Watch Playing Shakespeare Movie Online.

Movie Title: Playing Shakespeare
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Playing Shakespeare is available for streaming or downloading.

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The actual DVD set is being reviewed. I didn’t see the book or TV in 1984.

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This series of 9 episodes (Or should we call them “instructions” in Shakespeare acting?) seem like they were shot yesterday. They are timeless. What, if anything is staged? What is entirely impromptu? It’s hard to say, nay, impossible. It’s that well done. The wealth within this educational, academic experience is difficult to quickly review, but we’ll give it a go.

“Playing SHAKESPEARE” is the DVD presentation of acting workshops, done like a play rehearsal underway, shot in 1982, led by John Barton, who is himself entertaining, plus an encyclopedia on Shakespearean acting. He directed over 50 plays by the (RSC) Royal Shakespeare Company. A Cambridge professor. His main interest in this series is teaching toward the marriage of the Elizabethan acting tradition and modern times or style. It is instruction dedicated to the actor–but it is of interest to so many more.

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Through detailed Shakespeare direction, Barton has provided a series that will delight all lovers of the celebrated playwright. Additionally it will encourage the viewer who is newly attempting appreciation of Shakespeare and his works. Novice Shakespearean audiences will want for more, want for a complete play to view.

Much of the success of this series is the famous & talented actors being instructed. The top of the U.K. entertainers, both within the RSC and out. The BONUS FEATURES of this DVD set includes several of their bios and RSC credits. Some, not all as there are over 20, are:

Peggy Ashcorft, 1907-1991, having at some time performed near all Shakespeare’s female roles.

Judi Dench, UK Superstar, fantastic in “As Time Goes By”

Ben Kingsley, “Gandhi” and “Schindler’s List” to name but 2

Ian McKellan, “The Lord of the Rings” fans will remember

Patrick Stewart, would you believe “Star Trek: The Next Generation”

David Sachet, “Poirot”, need more be said–yes–”The Way We Live Now”

Shakespeare wrote, “Our revels now are ended.” Nay, Nay.

Here’s the list of Episodes (Learning bits)

1 THE TWO TRADITIONS . . . . . . .2 USING THE VERSE

3 LANGUAGE AND CHARACTER . . . . .4 EXPLORING A CHARACTER

5 SET SPEECHES AND SOLILOQUIES . .6 IRONY AND AMBIGUITY

7 PASSION AND COOLNESS . . . . . .8 REHEARSING THE TEXT

9 POETRY AND HIDDEN POETRY

Each is a to-die-for opportunity for the student or the follower of Shakespeare. Not a full play or dramatic film, but an academic experience set in a working studio using excerpts.

In #3 language and words are discussed like Shakespeare’s double syllable use of the word Ti-ime. And his often capitalization of the word, even when it’s not the beginning word in the sentence. By watching another fine educational DVD series, “The Adventure of English”, one can learn Shakespeare invented over 2000 words.

___Also in this segment, John Barton is coaxed into performing a bit of Shakespeare, which he does twice again during episode 9.

___#4 is outstanding when Shylock (The Merchant of Venice) is performed by Suchet (who is Jewish) and Stewart. Both have played the role in RSC under Barton’s direction. The 3 demonstrate how Shakespeare characters can be played in different ways, all being good. Suchet also suggests to view this play, not as anti-Semitic, but without the 20th century Holocaust prejudice.

Other bonus extras include a trailer for “Slings & Arrows” and the much valuable SUBTITLES, recommended to be used by all, to catch the full value of the Shakespeare words.

This DVD set makes me thirst for a Shakespeare play–a Shakespearean Sundae.

If you are a William Shakespeare lover–BUY.

If you are an actor, or student of theatre–BUY.

If you are curious of those often talked about plays–BUY.

More elaboration on this would take as long as the 400+ minutes of the set. Instead, in Shakespeare’s own words: “So to him we leave it.”

I read John Barton’s ‘Playing Shakespeare’ when I was in college and was encouraged to watch the companion VHS tapes. Unfortunately, they were only available in our college library and were fought over by hundreds of actors. I’m thrilled that this magnificent collection is now available on DVD. It’s such a treat to see young, highly trained actors (McKellen, Dench, Stewart) from the RSC participating in Barton’s Shakespeare instructional course. Barton discusses the most basic techniques on how to find clues within Shakespeare’s text in order to perform it well. It is truly amazing that by simply approaching Shakespeare in a technical way; finding antithesis, lists, irony, and contrast-helps the actor figure out what is happening in a scene or monologue. Reading Barton’s book makes sense and is a good reference, but the power behind this course is hearing the text and the technical adjustments the actors make with their voice. Don’t be put off by the price; this instruction is rare.

Stream The Real Las Vegas – The Complete Story Movie Online

3月 5th, 2010 by melina7834238
Stream The Real Las Vegas - The Complete Story Movie Online. Stream The Real Las Vegas – The Complete Story Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Real Las Vegas – The Complete Story
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The Real Las Vegas – The Complete Story is available for streaming or downloading.

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The History Channel will always be praised for it’s outstanding and reavealing subjects no matter what the topic. They have brought us the definitive documentary on Las Vegas that will probably never be outdone.

Whether it is the Neon Oasis, The City of Sin, The City That Never Sleeps or whatever name has been attributed to it, Las Vegas is truly a magical and wondrous place that has grabbed the imagination and carefree attitudes of millions of people.

This DVD leaves almost nothing to the imagination and all the stops have been pulled out to give you the complete history of how it all came to be. You are treated with historical facts of how Indians first came to the Nevada ranges and tamed the land following with the Mormons who migrated in and set about to establish the early years in the area.

Without missing a beat, we then find out how the Mafia moved in and started to build casino’s and created a dynasty to last for many years to come. As time goes on, you will be treated to interviews with many big name entertainers and entepreneurs who have shaped the city into what it is today. These would include but not limited to, Howard Hughes, Steve Wynn, Wayne Newton, Debbie Reynolds, Alan King and a host of others.

You will get to visit all the mega-resorts with all their glamour and hype and majesty and be amazed at just how much there really is to see and experience in this city without limits. This is a very satisfying 2 disc DVD documentary at an excellent price and is most likely the best look at Las Vegas you will ever see. Highly recommended to all.

Resort owner Steve Wynn probably put it best, “this is the city people love to criticize. But they keep coming back, and back…and back…” This two DVD set does a superb job of telling the WHOLE story of Las Vegas and why people keep coming back, from its beginnings as a spring for Paiute Indians, through settlement, to the Mega-resort atmosphere of the new century. By using the thread of the two attractions of Las Vegas-gambling and sex- the documentary tracks its evolution in the mid 20th century.

Las Vegas was not much more than a whistle-stop on the railway from Salt Lake/Denver to LA until the early 1930s when liberal divorce laws, and of course legalized gambling started bringing folks from elsewhere in the Southwest. Hoover Dam brought in an influx of people and money into the tow;, and the creation of what would become Nellis AFB in the NE corner of the valley also pumped Government dollars into the local economy -though one industry, prostitution, had to be made illegal before the Army Dept would allow “our boys” downtown. (BTW it STILL IS in Clark County-tourists beware.)

The real strength of the DVD is in fully explaining the “mob era” when Bugsy Siegel built the Flamingo on the Strip, until Howard Hughes bought them out in ca 1968. Interviews with entertainers, promoters and casino executives are well matched with the theme. The Rat Pack and Elvis, key components of Las Vegas in the 60s are explored as well. Finally, the series ends with the story of Steve Wynn and his mission to redefine Las Vegas, and outlines some of the problems looming ahead that all Las Vegans are aware of: lack of a rapid transit system, explosive unmanaged growth, and dwindling natural resources.

The only area I can see that the series did not adequately cover is the time from 1969-1984 or so when Las Vegas was considered un-hip by singles, and couples (those who by definition have the most disposable income). This may well be due to the very people partly responsible were those interviewed, and had a hand in the direction and production of the series. It was the tired borscht-belt shtick comics, Elvis’ goofy productions, and the archetypal lounge acts that made the city un-cool for many years.

That said, this series is the best documentary to date on Las Vegas. If you are interested at all in that city that you glimpse from your hotel room on the Strip, or you happen to be one of the 5000 folks a month moving here, you will be impressed with these DVDs.

Stream The Prestige Online

3月 2nd, 2010 by melina7834238
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Movie Title: The Prestige
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The Prestige is available for streaming or downloading.

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2006 has been a quiet year for event films. The predicted blockbusters this past summer pretty much underperformed despite some being exactly as good as I thought they’d be. Other than Johnny Depp and the gang’s Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest, every blockbuster didn’t blow the industry out of the water. It’s a very good thing that I had smaller films to tide me over. This year has been a very good ones for some independent-minded and smaller films which came out during the slow first couple months of the year and during the graveyard release months between the end of summer and the start of the late year holidays. I’ve already had the chance to see such very good films like Running Scared from Wayne Kramer and Hard Candy from David Slade to The Proposition from John Hillcoat. I am glad to say that Christopher Nolan’s film adaptation of Christopher Priest’s novel, The Prestige is another non-blockbuster that excites, entertains and, in the end, keeps the audience mystified but not confused.

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I’ve read Christopher Priest’s novel about dueling late 19th-century London magicians. It’s a novel written in epistolary format with each chapter and section written as entries into the journal of one of the main characters in the story. The novel itself is pretty straightforward as it tells the story in near chronological order. I was hesistant to embrace this film adaptation when I first heard about it since alot of the mystery of of the story wouldn’t translate so well in film if they followed the strict order of how the story was told in the novel. For Christopher Nolan and his brother, Jonathan, to just adapt the novel straight-out would’ve made for a dull and boring mystery-thriller. I was glad that the Nolan brothers were inventive enough to borrow abit from Christopher Nolan’s first feature film, Memento. Their film adaptation of The Prestige doesn’t go backwards in its narrative, but it does mixes up the chronological order of the story somewhat, but not to the point that Tarantino does in Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill. The two Nolans fudges abit with the timeline to add some backstory filler to help give the characters that Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman portrays with the reason for their pathological obsession with each other.

Christopher and Jonathan Nolan’s screenplay for The Prestige was able to keep the mystery of the story intact, but it also keeps the amount of red herrings in such films to a minimum. Michael Caine’s character, Harry Cutter, opens up the film explaining just exactly what constitutes a magic trick on stage. How it’s divided into three parts. First, there’s “The Pledge” wherein the magician shows the audience something ordinary he or she will use in the trick. Soon, the magician will follow this up with “The Turn” where the abovementioned ordinary object does something extraordinary in front of the audience. The pay-off of the magician’s trick is “The Prestige” where the audience’s astonishment occurs as they fail to deconstruct and figure out the means of the trick. That’s pretty much the film in a nutshell. It’s one big magic trick. The clues are there for the audience to see, gather and extrapolate their answer to the mystery that is the story. The screenplay doesn’t treat the audience as if they need to be hand-held throughout the film. In fact, anyone who pays attention will be able to solve one-half of the mystery by the first hour. I won’t say exactly whose half of the mystery it will be but people will be kicking themselves afterwards if they don’t figure it out right away.

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This magic trick of a film does have its many underlying layers of themes to add some complexity, drama and tension to the characters of Alfred Borden (Christian Bale) and Rupert Angier (Hugh Jackman). I’ve already mentioned that throughout the film their mutual obsession about each other is due to a backstory detailing their past. A past where they were initially friends — rivals even — and apprentices to the magician Harry Cutter (excellently played by Michael Caine as the only voice of reason throughout the film). Borden and Angier’s obsession is not just in ruining and sabotaging each other’s magic tricks and lives, but also trying to find out each other’s secrets as they both learn magic tricks which amaze and thrill the gentry of London’s stage. From the beginning of the film these two characters begin a journey towards a path of destructive behavior which puts not just each other’s lives at risk, but those who they care about. All of it in the name of humiliating and upstaging the other due to a tragic incident early in their mutual careers. These two individuals were not sympathetic characters and I applaud Christopher Nolan and his brother for not softening up their hard edges.

Most adaptors will try to make a story’s characters more sympathetic and likable. They went the opposite in The Prestige. But even these two dark characters continue to exude the charisma and strong personalities that the audience will root for one or the other. Should they root for the charismatic and born shownman that Hugh Jackman’s Angier character plays or go for the perfectionist Borden character Christian Bale plays. A perfectionist whose technical skills surpasses that of Angier’s but whose introverted and brooding personality makes him little or no stage presence.

Both Jackman and Bale play their characters well. The film wouldn’t be so good if it wasn’t for the work of these two actors. It helps that they’re surrounded by quality supporting character like Michael Caine as the seasoned, veteran mentor to the dueling magicians. Even Scarlett Johansson does very well with the part she’s given. It’s a part that many sees as more of a throwaway character. A piece of very good-looking distraction for both the story and the audience. But she gamely plays the role of pawn for both Angier and Borden. Unlike Michael Caine’s character who remains the singular voice of sanity in the film, even Johansson’s character of Olivia gets pulled into the obsessions and betrayals that’s plagued both Angier and Borden. But in the end, she’s just part of the process of “The Turn” and if people have been watching the film closely right from the beginning then she’s also a clue as to the secret of one of the amazing magic tricks shown by the two magicians.

The Prestige also has a distinct look about it. The 19th-century London just before the start of the new millenium gives it a certain sense of Victorian-era familiarity. Production designer Nathan Crowley shows a London at the height of its Gilded Age, but soon gives way to a certain steampunk look as inventor Nikola Tesla makes an appearance during an integral part of the story. David Bowie portrays Tesla as an eccentric genius whose search for the secrets of the universe will lead to the discovery of what many of that era would consider magic. It’s the ingenius looking technology created for the Tesla sequence which finally gives The Prestige it’s root in fantasy and science-fiction. The film doesn’t dwell on this new development but from that part of the story and until the end, the film takes on a look and feel of a steampunk mystery-thriller. There’s not enough films that tries to mine this new subgenre and I, for one, am glad that Christopher Nolan added this new dimension to the film’s overall look.

In the end, The Prestige really needs to be seen to be appreciated and for people to make up their minds about the film. Some will see it as a thriller with twists and turns that doesn’t insult the intelligence of its audience. Some may see the film as just one large gimmick from start to end. Those people will probably be correct as well. The film at its most basic level is one long magic trick with all three acts. It has “The Pledge” which is then followed up by “The Turn” and then ends with “The Prestige”. It will be up to each individual who sees the film to make the final decision as to whether they’ve bought into all three acts of the magic trick that is The Prestige, or come away having felt like they’ve wasted their time. I’ve not come across many who felt like the latter, even those whose own feelings about the film don’t reach the same level of praise as I have for Christopher Nolan’s latest offering. All I know is that this is a film that delivers on its premise to confound and amaze. It also continues to validate my views that Bruce Wayne and Batman are in very good hands with Christopher Nolan at the wheel. The Prestige is easily one of the best film of 2006.

Like many other reviewers, I came into Christopher Nolan’s “The Prestige” with high expectations. He, thus far, has a pretty good track record in my book. “Batman Begins” ranks highly among adult comic book movies, but prior to that–he scored big with the sublime “Memento” and the underappreciated “Insomnia” (where, miraculously, he coaxed restrained performances from both Al Pacino and Robin Williams). So teaming Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman in a dark and twisty tale of obsession and revenge seemed like movie nirvana. And “The Prestige,” while not a perfect film, certainly provides its leads with robust roles and delivers much to admire.

Set in the world of magic, two practitioners (Bale and Jackman) start out together in an act devised by Michael Caine. When a tragedy strikes, Jackman loses his wife and holds Bale accountable. Though they go their separate ways, they never mentally disconnect. Jackman plots revenge, Bale retaliates and their lives become a complex game of one-upmanship–as each strives to be the better illusionist, to boast the better trick. The film is a sleek and nasty mechanism as rage and jealousy propel the action. While this has left some people feeling cold–there is no one to particularly root for–I found it refreshingly mean spirited and believable. Jackman and Bale both give great, passionate performances. Whether or not you like the movie, I think it would be hard not to see that these are two undervalued performers getting a chance to do some “big” acting. Caine is terrific, as always, and Scarlett Johansson is perfect as a woman caught between the feuding warriors.

As you might expect from a Nolan film, there are some surprises–some tricks to be revealed in the film’s prestige. Now I have an eye for movie “surprises,” I guess I’m too suspicious or analytical. I figured out one of the primary surprises early on–but that didn’t lessen my interest in the film, I was just as curious to see how it played out. The film is built in a multilayered flashback structure that is interesting and rewarding. It adds to the dramatic revelations of the final act. But there is a science fiction element that is dropped in at the last moment. And while I know that the film is actually based on a sci-fi work, this was the least compelling aspect of the film. In fact, it might have ruined a lesser movie altogether. After so much real emotion, such a fantastic setup, so much believability–this plot twist quickly brings what was a great film back to earth as a good one.

“The Prestige” is a satisfying and adult treat. It boasts some of the best performances of the year, and is beautiful and fascinating to look at. It’s quality filmmaking, one that is recommended despite the shortcomings of the final payoff. KGHarris, 12/06.

Stream Roots Rock Reggae – Inside the Jamaican Music Scene Movie Online

3月 2nd, 2010 by melina7834238
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Movie Title: Roots Rock Reggae – Inside the Jamaican Music Scene
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Roots Rock Reggae – Inside the Jamaican Music Scene is available for streaming or downloading.

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Anyone who is interested in roots reggae and dub will absolutely flip out over this documentary. Filmed in 1977, an incredibly important year in Jamaica, it covers the music/culture/politics of Jamaica (mostly music though). With unforgettable moments- like entering Lee “Scratch” Perry’s BlackArk studio while the Heptones are recording. Then there’s the late great Jacob Miller, in underwear, working out a song with the InnerCircle. The Gladiators recording, Mighty Diamonds live, and Joe Gibbs sings a beautiful trenchtown song. Get the idea? This is hugely important to anyone who loves this excellent music. The narration is also insightful and there are many scenes which capture tranchtown and the hard life of Jamaica.
This DVD is an absolute must-have for anyone who loves reggae. The picture and sound quality are totally fine, especially considering this was a small documentary that was probably made with very little money. I am sure that the DVD transfer was as good as it could be (and it’s perfectly fine).
One side-note to reviewers that complain about the picture/sound- this was a small project in 1977, this is not Star Wars or Terminator. Don’t have some ridiculous expectation that everything has to be up to the level of a big-budget hollywood blockbuster Ultimate edition DVD. It seems that reviewers all over Amazon like to complain too much about picture/sound quality. I personally own hundreds of DVDs and find that many complaints i’ve read are just flat-out wrong. I think people just feel the need to complain about something, but don’t let them fool you.

Are you a musician who needs some heavyweight inspiration? Do you love roots reggae? Ever wonder what the Black Ark/Randy’s/ Randy’s Record Store etc looked like from the inside in ‘77? It’s all here, plus the Congos, a great Joe Gibbs acoustic song, Jacob Miller writing a tune with Inner Circle and a lot more.

633 Squadron Movie Streaming

2月 28th, 2010 by melina7834238
633 Squadron Movie Streaming. 633 Squadron Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: 633 Squadron
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633 Squadron is available for streaming or downloading.

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World War II adventure film about a Royal Air Force fighter-bomber squadron assigned to destroy a Nazi nuclear weapons research facility in Norway. Cliff Robertson headlines the movie as a former Eagle Squadron pilot in command of 633 Squadron with a colorful assembly of international pilots. They embark on the hazardous assignment with the target located inside a Norwegian fjord, guarded by an immense array of anti-aircraft artillery. Worth noting is the story was probably inspired by the real-life exploits of RAF Mosquito squadrons that conducted such dangerous missions, hunting down Nazi ship convoys along Norway’s rugged coastline.

The real attraction of this film is abundant footage of authentic World War II-era De Havilland Mosquito bombers used for the movie production. The scenes of these rare aircraft in flight are a delight, especially since there the are no airworthy examples left in the entire world today (the last one was lost with its crew in a tragic crash in 1996). The model airplane special effects are too obvious, especially when compared to the quality of “The Bridges of Toko Ri” starring William Holden. Nonetheless, it’s still pretty exciting and viewers can’t help but compare the squadron’s climatic attack in the treacherous fjord with “Star War’s” Jedi attack on the Empire’s Death Star.

The script and several scenes could have been better, but the authentic aircraft are worth watching. Overall a decent adventure, dated, but enjoyable if you’re a fan of the famous De Havilland Mosquito fighter-bomber built of wood, and flown by pilots in daring missions that helped win World War II.

For those interested, there’s a nice De Havilland aircraft museum north of London, England, on the actual grounds where these impressive aircraft were built. The original prototype Mosquito airplane, and another production model used in the later movie “Mosquito,” are on display.

This film seems to have attracted a number of interesting, positive reviews–there is little for me to add except to say that is is a fine World War II thriller, featuring Cliff Robertson, George Chakiris and a solid British cast in support.

Of course, the real “stars” of the movie are the Mosquitos–seeing them fly is a feast for aviation fans. Some scenes really seem to put you in the cockpit with our heroes as they train for their “mission impossible”. There is also a fair bit of model work involved, and this is perhaps the only area of the movie that is dated. Special effects have made huge strides since the sixties–when these planes crash or blow up, it is not done in a convincing way for modern audiences.

Cliff Robertson is fine in the lead–later in the decade, he was to win an Oscar for “Charly”, yet he has always been under-rated. His career certainly had it’s “ups and downs”–in the seventies, he blew the whistle on a Hollywood executive who was embezzling money, and good movie roles seemed to “elude” him for a while. Clearly, he is a man of great integrity. It was nice to see him, after so many years, have an important role in the monster hit, “Spiderman”.

George Chakiris aquits himself well as a Norwegian resistance leader. British character actors, Harry Andrews and Donald Houston, provide the mandatory “stiff upper lips” ! When the movie is over though, it is those fabulous planes that you remember most.

The DVD is widescreen, with decent colour for its age–the sound is mono ( imagine those Mosquitos in surround ? ! ). The packaging is very rudimentary, but I suppose this is in keeping with the low price ?

If you like war films with the accent on aviation, this one is for you. Try it !