Intersection | DVD | (01/07/2002)
from £8.99
| Saving you £4.00 (44.49%)
| RRP Make every move as if it were your last. Richard Gere portrays Vincent Eastman an award-winning architect whose personal life is on shaky ground. Separated from his beautiful but aloof wife (Sharon Stone) Vincent has an affair with a joyful and passionate writer (Lolita Davidovich) whose love promises a new beginning. But Vincent remains emotionally torn between the two women leaving his future happiness - and that of his thirteen year-old daughter - hanging in the balance. A
D-Tox | DVD | (06/06/2005)
from £6.09
| Saving you £3.90 (64.04%)
| RRP Sylvester Stallone stars as an FBI agent who goes to a secluded D-Tox centre after a serial killer murders his girl friend, only to find the killer has followed him...
Beautiful Joe | DVD | (07/10/2002)
from £5.90
| Saving you £-2.91 (N/A%)
| RRP Beautiful Joe is a well-intentioned film. The problem is that it tries for both comedy and drama, and succeeds in neither. Amiable Irishman Joe (Billy Connolly), after one of the worst days imaginable, decides to leave his adopted New York home and seek adventure. Unfortunately, he runs into Hush (Sharon Stone) and gets "Far More Adventure than He Bargained For". Stone's character is the standard beautiful-but-messed-up-woman-who-needs-rescuing that is for some mystifying reason supposed to be appealing. And yes, of course she has a mute son who just might speak if only he had the right reason. Stone is "stretching" herself here, and is clearly eager to play a character: she mugs, she drawls, she wiggles and she cries. Not a scrap of scenery escapes her gullet; at times her attempts at comedy actually become sort of upsetting. Ally McBeal's Gil Bellows turns in a similarly inept and cartoonish "comic" performance. Beautiful Joe's one saving grace is Connolly, who manages to rise above his fellow cast members and the bizarre editing to turn in a charming, dignified performance. --Ali Davis, Amazon.com
New Blood | DVD | (28/10/2002)
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| RRP Small time gang...big time problems. Danny White (Nick Moran: Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels) and his crew of wannabe gangsters find themselves pitted against the local mafia headed by Leigh and Hellman (Carrie-Anne Moss and Joe Pantoliano: The Matrix) when they accidentally kill a local business man they were hired to kidnap. With nowhere else to turn and bleeding from a fatal gunshot wound Danny visits his estranged father Alan (John Hurt: Contact) looking for help. When Alan sees Danny's condition he only has one thought: Danny may be the organ donor he's been desperately searching for to save Danny's mortally sick sister. But Danny is not prepared to die for nothing. There is a price to be paid and a deal is struck between father and son. And so begins the most terrifying and bizarre night of their lives.
Greenmail | DVD | (15/09/2003)
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| RRP Alexander Scott (Stephen Baldwin) is the jailed leader of an environmentalist group thrown in the slammer as the chief suspect when a chemical plant mysteriously explodes. The bombings continue while Scott is in jail and he begins to suspect that the loose cannon of his environmental group Jeremy O'Brien (D.B. Sweeney) is responsible. Scott teams up with the cops to try and tackle the bombings and soon realizes that not only was his hunch correct but that Jeremy has become more of an out-of-control megalomaniac than he initially feared. The clock is ticking in the race to stop the bombings can the insane Jeremy be stopped? Find out in GREENMAIL.
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