A failed novelist takes his best friend for a week in California's wine country in this life affirming flick.
Jessica Alba stars as a hard-working dancer and choreographer who makes good but finds that working with a group of neighbourhood kids is worth far more than success.
From Emmy Award winner Dick Wolf* and the team behind the "Law & Order" franchise, FBI Season Two returns with more fast-paced drama about the inner workings of the New York office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. These first-class agents tenaciously investigate cases of tremendous magnitude, including terrorism, organized crime and counterintelligence, in a continued effort to keep New York and the country safe.
A Pedigree of the Highest Degree From Dick Wolf and the team behind the Law & Order franchise comes an eye-opening new procedural drama. The series follows the inner workings of the FBI, bringing to bear all the Bureau's skills, intellect and mind-blowing technology to keep New York and the country safe.
With two years under their belt the rookies of 15 Division are well on their way to becoming seasoned cops but experience isn't everything... and the boundary between job and personal life is no longer as black and white as it once seemed... Special Features: Making of featurettes Behind-the-scenes On-set cast interviews
All 21 episodes from the fourth season of the American crime drama created by Dick Wolf and Craig Turk. Centred around the office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the series follows a team of special agents who bring together their skills and expertise in order to solve major crimes on the streets of New York. In this season, the team investigate groups of extremists, hunt for serial killers and track down a deadly chemical weapon. The episodes are: 'All That Glitters', 'Hacktivist', 'Trauma', 'Know Thyself', 'Charlotte's Web', 'Allegiance', 'Gone Baby Gone', 'Fire and Rain', 'Unfinished Business', 'Fostered', 'Grief', 'Under Pressure', 'Pride and Prejudice', 'Ambition', 'Scar Tissue', 'Protective Details', 'One Night Stand', 'Fear Nothing', 'Face Off', 'Ghost from the Past' and 'Kayla'.
At the police academy they trained together, argued and celebrated together. Now Andy McNally (Missy Peregrym, Heroes) and her fellow rookie graduates are in the real world, getting to grips with their tough job as well as their turbulent private lives.This group of twenty-somethings is about to learn the hard way that no amount of training could have prepared them for the job...or for real life.
The Rookies are back. 6 months after Andy and Nick leave for their undercover operation we return to 15 Division with them but they quickly realise that everything's changed whilst they've been gone and now they have some bold choices to make.
Season five returns with two officers having been shot in the line of duty and their lives are hanging in the balance – but life at 15 Division must go on. As the shell-shocked officers struggle to pull the pieces of their lives back together they realise that even making the right choices can sometimes lead to serious consequences.
At the police academy they trained together, argued and celebrated together. Now Andy McNally (Missy Peregrym, Heroes) and her fellow rookie graduates are in the real world, getting to grips with their tough job as well as their turbulent private lives.This group of twenty-somethings is about to learn the hard way that no amount of training could have prepared them for the job... or for real life.
An ex-gymnastics star is forced back into the sport after one-too many arrests.
Although indisputably a film by Woody Allen, Interiors is about as far from "a Woody Allen film" as you can get--and maybe more people could have seen what a fine film it is if they hadn't been expecting what Allen himself called "one of his earlier, funnier movies." An entirely serious, rather too self-consciously Bergmanesque drama about a divorcing elderly couple and their grown daughters, it is slow, meditative and constructed with a brilliant, artistic eye. There is no music--a simple effect that Allen uses with extraordinary power. In fact, half the film is filled with silent faces staring out of windows, yet the mood is so engaging, hypnotic even, that you never feel the director is poking you in the ribs and saying, "sombre atmosphere". Diane Keaton, released for once from the ditzy stereotype, shines as the "successful" daughter. Some of the dialogue is stilted and it's hard to tell whether this is a deliberate effect or simply the way repressed upscale New Yorkers talk after too many years having their self-absorption sharpened on the therapist's couch. Fanatical, almost childish self-regard is the chief subject of Allen's comedy--it's remarkable that in this film he was able to remove the comedy but leave room for us to pity and care about these rather irritating people. --Richard Farr
The officers at 15 Division unearthed their sins of the past dug through it, aired it out, and paved the way to move forward. They have all grown and are more resilient than ever. They will have to learn to embrace living in the gray areas, because life is complicated and the best laid plans are just that. But sometimes it's the unpredictable things life throws our way that turn out to be exactly what we need.
You've never seen anything quite like Powder - an uplifting must-see film about an extraordinary human being with supernatural powers. Harassed by classmates who won't accept his shocking appearance a shy young man known as Powder struggles to fit in. But the cruel taunts stop when Powder displays a mysterious power that allows him to do incredible things. This phenomenon changes the lives of all those around him... in ways they could never imagine!
A harrowing, if limited, 1993 thriller, Desperate Justice stars Lesley Ann Warren as Carol, a mother whose young daughter is raped by the caretaker of her school and left in a coma. The culprit is quickly rounded up; however, the case against him is dismissed for lack of rock-solid evidence. In a moment of blind fear and rage, Carol metes out summary justice of her own--and must face up to the consequences. Desperate Justice is suitably restrained in dealing with the violence central to its subject matter. While competently enough scripted and acted to retain the viewer's interest and sympathy, it has a slightly fuzzy, sucrose feel about it that acts as a general anaesthetic against the inevitably disturbing subject matter. The final scenes in particular achieve a tidy, somewhat predictable sense of "closure" so beloved by Americans. Despite its made-for-TV air, Desperate Justice has just enough about it to ensure a passable late night 90 minutes over a mug of Horlicks. On the DVD: This is not the sort of movie that was ever designed to benefit from DVD enhancement. Picture format is 4:3. As well as trailers, there are included here items entitled "About the film" and "About the stars", which turn out to be perfunctory text-only blurbs. --David Stubbs
Urbanite boyfriend and girlfriend Alex (Jeff Roop) and Jenn (Missy Peregrym) head to the Canadian wild for a romantic getaway. Having visited the woods several times in his life, an overconfident Alex shuns bringing a map or mobile phone and is determined to veer away from the hiking trails into the true wilderness along the secluded Blackfoot Trail. His blind ambition grows stronger when a cocky intruder (Eric Balfour) insinuates Alex is just another soft yuppie pretending to know the area. Before they know it, Alex and Jeff find themselves lost and even worse, they end up stumbling into the hunting grounds of a black bear with a voracious appetite.
If you have a soul, you can’t help but be moved by the range of emotions of the Olympian during these 103 minutes. If you do not have a soul, you may find it here - NBC In the summer of 2012, the most talented young athletes from around the world responded to the call to compete in the London 2012 Olympic Games. This is their story. Director Caroline Rowland meets 12 of them as they prepare for London 2012, giving us a glimpse into what defines them as people and as athletes. With unprecedented behind the scenes access to the greatest moments of the Games, First is the closest you can get to experiencing the London 2012 Olympic Games firsthand. Soundtrack featuring tracks by Ellie Goulding, Underworld, Michael Kiwanuka, Seye, Jess Mills, Delphic, Olly Murs, Two Door Cinema Club, Jake Bugg, Beach House, Chase & Status, Jack Penate, Snow Patrol, Brandon Flowers.
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