"Actor: Mary"

  • The Mind Benders [Blu-ray]The Mind Benders | Blu Ray | (02/03/2020) from £20.98   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £N/A

    Dirk Bogarde, Mary Ure and John Clements give compelling performances in this tense, memorable thriller from BAFTA-winning director Basil Dearden. Tinged with Cold War paranoia but featuring, at its core, a very human drama, The Mind Benders is featured here as a brand-new High Definition remaster from original film elements in its as-exhibited theatrical aspect ratio. When experimental physiologist Professor Sharpey commits suicide, security officer Major Hall suspects treasonous motives. Deeply shocked at the accusation, Sharpey's partner sets out to prove that their sensory deprivation experiments were responsible - by experimenting on himself! Special Features: Theatrical trailer Image gallery

  • Stolen FaceStolen Face | DVD | (04/04/2005) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £12.99

    Skilled plastic surgeon Phillip Ritter meets and falls in love with concert pianist Alice Brent but he is devastated when she refuses his offer of marriage and goes away on a concert tour. Determined to recreate her beautiful image he seeks out a badly scarred prisoner Lilly operates on her and marries her. Now he has Alice back but he cannot change the criminal character behind the mask... With Jimmy Sangster as assistant director Fisher at the helm and Anthony Hind producing; this picture was a clear indication of what Hammer was set to achieve.

  • PervertPervert | DVD | (30/04/2007) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £15.99

    Sex. Death. Freedom. These three ingredients combine to create an orgiastic homage to the outrageous -- perhaps the most outrageous movie ever to be committed to celluloid -- Pervert! The shocking story of salacious scandal. An experimental explosion of mental mayhem. A bloodbath brimming with very big bubbles. A titillating travesty. A comedy of epic proportions equal only to those of its actresses. A morality play without morals. A cautionary tale lacking in caution yet abundant in tail. A word. What is the pervert? Sex freak deranged degenerate disturbed diabolical psychotic subversive embracer of things both erotic and erratic. What is to pervert? The twist of an object phrase or ideal in such a way it was never intended or even imagined. Who is the pervert? Why that's another story altogether... A young man (Sean Andrews as ""James"") comes to spend the summer at the remote desert ranch of his father (Darryl Sandeen as ""Hezekiah"") in hopes of repairing their estranged relationship only to find that he's become a psychotic madman. But who is responsible for the bizarre murders James has uncovered? Hezekiah pins the blame on his son and after a series of unexplainable incidents James begins to doubt his own suspicions. Little does he know that the real killer lurks just under his nose...

  • British Comedies of the 1930s Volume 1 [DVD]British Comedies of the 1930s Volume 1 | DVD | (20/04/2015) from £13.05   |  Saving you £-0.06 (N/A%)   |  RRP £12.99

    The ebullient comedy films of the 1930s brought escape and laughter to millions of British cinemagoers, enabling veteran stars of the music-hall and theatre to reach out to a wider audience making household names of performers like Leslie Fuller, Hal Gordon, Bobby Howes, Ernest Lotinga and Gene Gerrard.Although comedy would prove to be the decade's most successful film genre, many of these classic early talkies have remained unseen since their original release. This ongoing collection showcases a wealth of rare features, each presented uncut, in a brand-new transfer from the best available elements in their as-exhibited theatrical aspect ratio.LET ME EXPLAIN, DEAR (1932)A husband flirts with a pretty girl after a taxi smash, but a delicate situation ensues when he has to explain the presence of her necklace in his pocket!THE OUTCAST (1934)A music-hall star and his best mate are conned out of their earnings (twice!) and left with nothing but a beloved greyhound.

  • A Good Day to Die Hard [Blu-ray]A Good Day to Die Hard | Blu Ray | (02/09/2013) from £6.45   |  Saving you £18.54 (287.44%)   |  RRP £24.99

    The world has changed a lot in the 25 years between Die Hard and this fifth franchise rehash, but Bruce Willis is still the indestructible force of nature who is followed by gunfire and explosions everywhere he goes. In fact, he seems to have gotten more powerful and his body grown more resilient in spite of the crags in his face and the gray stubble over his ears. This time around, New York Police Department veteran John McClane has trekked to Russia for what he claims is a vacation, a running gag that lets Willis keep on quipping with the impeccable insouciance of a pedigreed action hero. What he's really up to is tracking his wayward son Jack (Jai Courtney), who John believes is on trial for murdering a mob kingpin. In the first of the movie's many dazzling set pieces, father and son meet cute just as Jack has broken out of a heavily fortified courtroom with a mysterious Russian businessman named Komarov (Sebastian Koch), who is in possession of some sort of information that's valuable on the world stage. Don't worry, the details aren't important as there's no room for plausibility in any direction. It's no spoiler to reveal that Jack is a covert CIA agent in pursuit of Komarov's file, and that instead of helping his estranged child, the senior McClane has actually bungled Junior's operation. This sets off a lengthy chase on the streets of Moscow (actually Budapest) that has father zooming after son with a tank full of caricatured Russian bad guys in the middle. Hundreds of vehicles sacrifice themselves for the hyperkinetic demolition derby between the three factions as they race through traffic-jammed streets, flattening everything made of metal and glass along the way. Though far less elegantly staged, the sequence recalls the opening chase in Skyfall, and the story rolls on in a similarly dumbed-down series of spy-movie showdowns that are all cranked up to 11. A Good Day to Die Hard is the most cartoonish sequel, given its superfluous plotting and nonstop spree of gratuitous destruction. There are a few plot twists--ultimately it's all about money, of course--but mostly it's an exercise in extravagant violence and automatic-weapons fire, with emotionless moments of rapprochement between John and Jack dropped in around the gunfights. Both of them survive beatings, car crashes, and ludicrous falls from tall buildings without injury as Komarov is lost, then found, then lost again. Dad helps his son mop up the mess by doing what they both like to do best: kill scumbags. The dizzying editing and breakneck pace builds to a crescendo at Chernobyl, where a magical anti-radiation gas explodes many things, a truck is driven out of a flying helicopter, buildings and people are shot to pieces, and a paroxysm of fetishistic, slow-motion digital mayhem turns the decrepit nuclear facility to rubble. Bruce Willis is firmly in charge throughout, delivering the mother of F-bomb catch phrases with a succession of increasingly eye-popping fireballs hot on his heels. Yippee-ki-yay, indeed. --Ted Fry

  • Gospel - LiveGospel - Live | DVD | (03/04/2006) from £6.73   |  Saving you £13.26 (66.30%)   |  RRP £19.99

    The Gospel Live is a celebration of faith in song that will bring you to your feet! Join host Anthony Anderson (Barbershop) for a live musical celebration at the Rialto Theatre in Atlanta.

  • Danger - Love At WorkDanger - Love At Work | DVD | (26/09/2005) from £21.58   |  Saving you £-5.59 (N/A%)   |  RRP £15.99

    In this 1930s screwball comedy lackadaisical lawyer Henry MacMorrow attempts to get the kooky Pemberton family to agree on a large property deal involving part of their estate. Frustrated by the family's scatty entourage which includes a Dali lookalike an exceedingly precocious child and their whimsical parents he turns to the beautiful Toni Pemberton the independently minded daughter of the family with a fake sob story. The two of them join forces in a bid to gather the signature

  • The Attic - The Hiding Of Ann Frank [1987]The Attic - The Hiding Of Ann Frank | DVD | (19/02/2007) from £12.94   |  Saving you £0.05 (0.39%)   |  RRP £12.99

    The Film portrays the lives of the Frank family before hiding and during hiding in Nazi Occupied Amsterdam

  • 3 John Wayne Classics - Vol. 2 - Paradise Canyon / The Dawn Rider / The Desert Trail3 John Wayne Classics - Vol. 2 - Paradise Canyon / The Dawn Rider / The Desert Trail | DVD | (01/11/2004) from £4.99   |  Saving you £-1.00 (N/A%)   |  RRP £3.99

    Paradise Canyon: An undercover federal agent is on the trail of a gang of counterfeiters. John Wyatt (Wayne) is sent under cover to follow Doc Carter's medicine show to expose a counterfeiting gang. When the main suspect is kidnapped with his daughter by the real villain Wyatt realises he has been chasing the wrong man and switches his attentions to the notorious Curly Joe... The Dawn Rider: John Mason is hit with a bullet. Alice who nurses him turns out to be the si

  • The Book Of Love - Starring Maisie Williams, Jessica Biel, Jason Sudeikis and Mary Steenburgen [DVD]The Book Of Love - Starring Maisie Williams, Jessica Biel, Jason Sudeikis and Mary Steenburgen | DVD | (22/04/2019) from £4.80   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £N/A

    Starring Maisie Williams 'Game of Thrones and X Men: New Mutants'. Also starring Jessica Biel The Sinner , Jason Sudeikis Horrible Bosses , Orlando Jones American Gods and Mary Steenburgen Back to the Future. Henry (Jason Sudeikis)is a widowed architect who strikes up a friendship with Millie (Maisie Williams), an independent but troubled teen. Hoping to find her long-lost father, Millie asks Henry to build her a raft that can sail across the ocean. After agreeing to do so, the unlikely duo embark on an incredible adventure that deepens their bond and lifts their spirits. This is an inspiring story about hope and self believe. Soundtrack by Justin Timberlake.

  • South Park: Complete Series 4South Park: Complete Series 4 | DVD | (16/04/2001) from £10.00   |  Saving you £29.99 (299.90%)   |  RRP £39.99

    Set in a Colorado mountain town that gets destroyed on a regular basis and is populated by the dumbest, most vulgar characters imaginable, South Park is an anarchic animated sitcom that owes more to the spirit of Monty Python than to its comparatively tame predecessor The Simpsons. The show's origins go back to a 1995 Christmas video "postcard" called The Spirit of Christmas that a Fox Studios executive had commissioned at the previous Sundance Film Festival for $2000 having seen the work of film-makers Trey Parker and Matt Stone (Cannibal: The Musical). The adventures of Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny became an instant ratings and merchandising smash and the foul-mouthed eight-year-olds have expanded to the cinema screen (Bigger, Longer and Uncut), found their way to the MTV Movie Awards and allowed the show creators/(song) writers/voice-artists to pursue equally anarchic comedy at the box office with Baseketball and Orgazmo. Constantly pursued by a censorship outcry, the series has survived several copycat cartoon threats and even the death of its lead female vocal-artist during its third season. Perhaps the show's biggest controversy has always been that--despite a disclaimer before every episode--under-aged children still see it. But lured by a universe full of Cheesy Poofs and Cookie Dings, where no-one's afraid to badmouth school bus driver Miss Crabtree and where it's OK to vomit from being in love, it's no wonder that children of all ages can't help but love it. Seriously. --Paul Tonks Season Four: Just three weeks after losing out on an Oscar for the song "Blame Canada", the show's creators aired their disgust at Phil Collins (who won for Tarzan) in the fantastic episode "Timmy! 2000". Not only did it prove how fast they can put a show together, it also reassured viewers that none of their comedic spark had been lost. More importantly we were introduced to the super-sweet wheelchair-bound child with learning difficulties. Timmy truly boosted the show's humour but also instilled some pathos to the gang's growing adventures (such as his poignant role in "Thanksgiving Special"). Proving the intention to take things in a new direction was the long-awaited move up to the "Fourth Grade". With a souped-up theme tune in an explosive new title sequence, the start of Kyle's adopted Canadian brother Ike in Kindergarten (cue super-cute baby voiceovers in a hilarious comment on the US Election farce in "Trapper Keeper") and lots more CGI inserts, this season really looks different from the others. The best two experiments were having Malcolm McDowell as "A British Person" narrating to camera for a new take on "Great Expectations" and linking all the way back to the video postcard that started it all--The Spirit of Christmas--in the downbeat finale "A Very Crappy Christmas". --Paul Tonks

  • Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World: Reel Heroes Sleeve [Blu-ray][Region Free]Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World: Reel Heroes Sleeve | Blu Ray | (16/01/2012) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £24.99

    Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera), besides being the bass player in an average garage band called Sex Bo-Bomb, doesn't have a lot going for him, he has no job, isn't very popular and doesn't have a girlfriend. But his life changes dramatically when he meets Ramona Flowers and becomes her boyfriend. Life seems great; he finally has a girlfriend who he really cares about but now must tackle a dangerous mission in order to keep her. He must defeat all of Ramona's evil ex boyfriends who are coming to kill him!Highly original action comedy from critically acclaimed director Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz). -M.F. Special Features: Feature Commentaries with Cast & Crew Deleted Scenes The Making Of Scott Pilgrim vs. The World Scott Pilgrim vs. The Outtakes Alternate Edits, Bits & Pieces Alternate Footage Documentaries –Music Featurette Music Promos Osymyso Soundworks Collection: Sound For Film Profile Visual Effects: Before & After Pre-Production Footage Casting Tapes Rehearsal Videos Animatics Blogs Galleries and much more!

  • Chopping Mall [1986]Chopping Mall | DVD | (27/09/2004) from £8.08   |  Saving you £-2.09 (N/A%)   |  RRP £5.99

    Teenagers working at the local mall sneak in supplies and wait until the mall locks up for an intimate party night. The mall has a sophisticated robot security system that goes into attack mode after a malfunction and kills the human security guards. Now the teens must run for their lives and try to find a way out of the mall using the materials they find within it...

  • Fever Lake [1996]Fever Lake | DVD | (22/12/2000) from £6.98   |  Saving you £-0.99 (N/A%)   |  RRP £5.99

    Howling winds whip through the trees on a stormy night back in the 1940's. An angered man enters the old Victorian house on the banks of Fever Lake. Inside a fearful mother hides her young son in the attic and he soon becomes the only witness to his mother's tragic murder. Years later a group of friends are planning a weekend getaway and are offered the use of the deserted old house on Fever Lake. It started out as a fun filled weekend. But as evil supernatural forces collide with innocent victims the group find themselves in for a terror-filled stay. Nobody knows exactly what evil went on at Fever Lake but what they do know is that something evil happened before and it's happening again. They must destroy the evil... before it destroys them.

  • Brimstone And Treacle [1982]Brimstone And Treacle | DVD | (25/10/1999) from £6.98   |  Saving you £3.01 (43.12%)   |  RRP £9.99

    In Dennis Potter's Brimstone And Treacle Sting delivers one of his finest performances as Martin Taylor a mysterious stranger who arrives on the doorstep of the Bates household and soon worms his way into their lives. Mr and Mrs Bates (Denholm Elliott and Joan Plowright) soon grow to trust Martin but his intentions are less than honourable when it soon becomes clear that he is lusting after their comatose daughter...

  • This Happy Feeling [DVD]This Happy Feeling | DVD | (08/08/2016) from £9.98   |  Saving you £3.01 (30.16%)   |  RRP £12.99

    To escape the attentions of her lecherous boss, spry dental receptionist Janet Blake (Debbie Reynolds) accepts a lift home from a rain-soaked society party in rural Connecticut from handsome upcoming actor Bill Tremaine (John Saxon). But when Bill also comes on a little too strong she takes flight, knocking on the door of Bill's neighbour, actor-turned-horse-rancher Preston ˜Mitch' Mitchell (Curd Jürgens). Short of options, Mitch and Janet agree she'll spend the night in his spare room. Mitch has chosen early retirement from theatrical life in the face of competition from a new tribe of wannabe Brandos: This is the age of dirty T-shirts and motorcycle jackets... If you don't know Method and how to mumble, slouch, and pick your nose, you haven't got a chance. But his worldy-wise on-off girlfriend Nita Holloway (Alexis Smith) is determined to drag him back onto the stage. Janet, now desperate for work, accepts a role as Mitch's secretary, and begins a playful flirtation with the older man, who in turn is seduced by her girlish charms. But Bill, right next door, is also smitten: cue a four-way tug-of-love between youth and experience, hope and wisdom from which all or none may emerge as victors. Adapted by Blake Edwards from the F. Hugh Herbert play For Love or Money, This Happy Feeling is a whimsical chronicle of romance, rivalry, true callings and contentment in art and life.

  • Daniel O'Donnel And Mary Duff - Give A Little Love [DVD]Daniel O'Donnel And Mary Duff - Give A Little Love | DVD | (05/10/2009) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £12.99

    Tracklist: 1. Give A Little Love - Daniel O'Donnell (Promotional Video) 2. Eileen McManus - Daniel O'Donnell & Mary Duff (The Classic Live Concert) 3. Wounded Hearts - Mary Duff (TV performance) 4. Just Walking In The Rain - Daniel O'Donnell (The Classic Live Concert) 5. Timeless - Daniel O'Donnell & Mary Duff (Promotional Video) 6. The Power Of Love - Mary Duff (An Evening With Mary Duff) 7. Limerick You're A Lady - Daniel O'Donnell (The Classic Live Concert) 8. Homeland - Mary Duff (Promotional Video) 9. Whispering Hope - Daniel O'Donnell & Mary Duff (The Classic Live Concert) 10. Singing The Blues - Daniel O'Donnell (Just For You) 11. Goin' Home - Mary Duff (An Evening With Mary Duff) 12. I Just Want To Dance With You - Daniel O'Donnell (Daniel O'Donnell & Friends Live) 13. Strangers - Mary Duff (The Best Of Country & Irish) 14. Never Be Anyone Else But You - Daniel O'Donnell (The Best Of Country & Irish) 15. Will The Circle Be Unbroken - Daniel O'Donnell & Mary Duff (The Classic Live Concert)

  • The Broken Hearts Club - A Romantic Comedy [2001]The Broken Hearts Club - A Romantic Comedy | DVD | (05/11/2001) from £9.99   |  Saving you £3.00 (30.03%)   |  RRP £12.99

    The cynical yet tender tale of a group of gay friends living in Hollywood, all ultimately in search of one true love.

  • Deliver Us From Evil [2006]Deliver Us From Evil | DVD | (10/03/2008) from £20.00   |  Saving you £-0.01 (N/A%)   |  RRP £19.99

    The story of the most notorious paedophile priest in the modern history is told in this Oscar-nominated documentary.

  • South Park: Complete Series 1South Park: Complete Series 1 | DVD | (07/05/2001) from £29.99   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £29.99

    Set in a Colorado mountain town that gets destroyed on a regular basis and is populated by the dumbest, most vulgar characters imaginable, South Park is an anarchic animated sitcom that owes more to the spirit of Monty Python than to its comparatively tame predecessor The Simpsons. The show's origins go back to a 1995 Christmas video "postcard" called The Spirit of Christmas that a Fox Studios executive had commissioned at the previous Sundance Film Festival for $2000 having seen the work of film-makers Trey Parker and Matt Stone (Cannibal: The Musical). The adventures of Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny became an instant ratings and merchandising smash and the foul-mouthed eight-year-olds have expanded to the cinema screen (Bigger, Longer and Uncut), found their way to the MTV Movie Awards and allowed the show creators/(song) writers/voice-artists to pursue equally anarchic comedy at the box office with Baseketball and Orgazmo. Constantly pursued by a censorship outcry, the series has survived several copycat cartoon threats and even the death of its lead female vocal-artist during its third season. Perhaps the show's biggest controversy has always been that--despite a disclaimer before every episode--under-aged children still see it. But lured by a universe full of Cheesy Poofs and Cookie Dings, where no-one's afraid to badmouth school bus driver Miss Crabtree and where it's OK to vomit from being in love, it's no wonder that children of all ages can't help but love it. Seriously. --Paul Tonks Series One: The animation may be old-style in the pilot show "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe" but audiences hadn't seen anything like these 20 minutes of bleeped expletives, alien abduction and rear-end insertions before. It set the style most episodes would follow, with the children turning to the school Chef (voiced by Isaac Hayes) for help only to get a dirty song instead, a regular death for poor white trash Kenny and a moral lesson being learned at the end. An overnight success, the show drew in surprising cameo voiceovers: George Clooney provides dog growls for Sparky in "Big Gay Al's Big Gay Boat Ride", "The Chick from Species" (Natasha Henstridge) is Ms Ellen in "Tom's Rhinoplasty" and The Cure's Robert Smith (Trey and Matt being big fans of the band) is himself in the Godzilla spoof "Mecha-Streisand", in which a hate campaign against Barbra Streisand was begun. Other series highlights are Chef reliving Michael Jackson's Thriller in the first Halloween special "Pink Eye", the beginnings of a TV legend in "Mr Hankey, the Christmas Poo", and the cliff-hanger finale of "Cartman's Mom is a Dirty Slut". --Paul Tonks

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