The moment Rich meets Megan there is a spark which ignites an erotic passionate affair. An affair that creates an obsession some might think worth killing for. Rich is an ambitious eighteen year old who along with his older brother Wes works at the resort owned by the beautiful Megan's father. Rich and Wes have a mysteriously strained relationship haunted by a dark secret from their past. Megan is searching for an escape but she trusts no one. Rich fights hard to win her trust - she has everything he has ever wanted. It takes time but Megan eventually falls in love with him - and Rich vows that he will protect her and help her work out all of her problems. But he doesn't suspect until it's too late the solution Megan has in mind and how far she will go... to get everything she wants.
They're Watching...They're Waiting...They're Back. Judith (Markie Post There's Something About Mary) notices some very creepy things are happening around town. She and the town's Sheriff make a chilling discovery the town's teens are disappearing. When they reappear they are suffering from amnesia. Judith is even more troubled when her daughter Katie (Candace Cameron Full House) is missing. When she returns and begins acting strange it soon becomes evident alien powers have taken over the town. Judith must stand up to her fears and rid the town of aliens that have come to claim her daughter. Don't miss the unstoppable excitement of this smart and scary hit!
Superstar is a big-screen vehicle for Molly Shannon, the latest comic from the American sketch show Saturday Night Live to have a movie built around her. She isn't exactly funny--in fact, she's a little unsettling. Her creation, the neurotic Catholic schoolgirl Mary Katherine Gallagher, invites laughter because she's a little too close to the bone for anyone who grew up feeling ugly and unloved, which is a lot of people. Mary lives with her grandmother (Glynis Johns), who insists that Mary study business. Mary herself yearns to be famous and admired, though for what isn't exactly clear; she envisions some vague combination of singing, dancing, and acting that will make her a superstar. A talent show promises to be her ticket to stardom (the winning prize is a role in "a movie with positive moral values"), and she won't let her loser status or any hostile cheerleaders stand in her way. Meanwhile, Mary acts out dating fantasies with trees and signposts, envisions the school lunch room bursting into a Fame-like dance number, and longs for the biggest jock in school. What makes Superstar more than just a collection of bad high school memories is that, though the formulaic plot redeems Mary, the movie as a whole isn't so sure. Mary completely loses herself in her obsessive fantasies--many inspired by cheesy made-for-TV movies--but there's always someone watching, aghast, as Mary acts out her inner thoughts. Is she misunderstood or freakish? Superstar never commits to one side or the other, which makes it both comic and uncomfortable. --Bret Fetzer, Amazon.com
Everyone has to start school so join in the adventures and dilemmas of Timothy an enthusiastic five-year old raccoon who is starting at Hilltop Playschool. Meet his classmates including Yoko the kitten the Franks Fritz Nora and others who learn a lot not only from their teacher Mrs. Jenkins but from each other as well. Episodes comprise: 1. Timothy Goes To School 2. Yoko 3. On The Fritz 4. The Great Obstacle Race 5. Small Change 6. Shy Charles 7. Don't Lose It Lilly 8.
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