The Ultimate 2 Film Collection From the Master of Rom-Com About Time At the age of 21 Tim is told an incredible family secret by his father: all the men in his family have the ability to relive their past. He can revisit any moment in his life to try things differently until he gets them perfectly right. He decides to use his special new gift to win the heart of the beautiful Mary but finds that the course of true love can be hilariously difficult - even with the ability to try try and try again. Love Actually Ten years after its release the smash hit movie from the makers of ‘Notting Hill’ and ‘Four Weddings and A Funeral’ continues to spread joy all around warming people’s hearts getting better richer and funnier every time you see it. With its fantastic all-star cast and an outstanding soundtrack it really is the Ultimate Romantic Comedy to enjoy again and again. The hilarious Love Actually explores the ups and downs of relationships in the weeks building up to Christmas. Boyfriends & girlfriends husbands & wives fathers & sons and rock stars & managers all combine to make Love Actually not just one story but ten very different ones. Because if you look hard enough you will find love actually is all around. Bonus Features for Love Actually: Audio Commentary with Richard Curtis Hugh Grant Bill Nighy and Thomas Sangster Deleted Scenes With Introductions by Richard Curtis Music Highlights Christmas Is All Around Music Video The Storytellers
This is the definitive live retrospective from one of the world's greatest performers from the nervous intimacy of his very first show in Paris back in 1997 to his record-breaking 'Close Encounters' tour that swept through Europe this summer. And Through It All charts Robbie's meteoric rise to the global superstar he is today. Along the way you'll see the triumph and majesty of some of his greatest performances as And Through It All takes you to the stage at his unprecedented and epic residency at Knebworth to the green and muddy fields of Glastonbury '98 which signalled his arrival on a global scale and to his show-stealing power at the Live 8 event. Featuring over 50 live tracks spans his entire solo career that has seen millions entertained and captivated in his wake as Robbie performs some of his biggest hits from the last ten years; too many to chart here from 'Feel ' 'No Regrets ' 'Let Me Entertain You' to 'Come Undone' and right through to 'Rudebox' taken from his new ninth studio album of the same name. This 2-disc set also includes rare footage from The Forum London (1998) exploring his earliest work as he lays down the tracks that launched his solo career from 'Old Before I Die' through to worldwide phenomenon that is 'Angels'. Elsewhere here youll see an intimate recording session at Abbey Road in 2003 for BBC Radio 2 Highlights from his Live In Berlin spectacular and live shows at Slane Castle Koln and Manchester. Dipping into TV archives from the world over viewers are also invited to experience some of his pivotal TV moments all over again. Highlights include a guest spot on David Letterman's Late Show (USA) and Otro Rollo (Mexico) while footage from the UK includes an appearance on Later with Jools Holland a duet with Kylie Minogue on the iconic chart show Top of the Pops his powerhouse Full Monty medley with Tom Jones at the 2000 Brit Awards and a recent festive performance with Ant and Dec. Disc 1 - Tracklist: Slane Castle (1999): 1. She's The One 2. Strong 3. No Regrets 4. Ego A Go Go Manchester (2000): 5. Millennium 6. Karma Killer 7. Kids 8. Rock DJ Koln (2001): 9. Rock DJ 10. Supreme 11. Angels 12. No Regrets 13. Let Me Entertain You Knebworth (2003): 14. Come Undone 15. Feel 16. Angels 17. Kids Leeds (2006): 18. Radio 19. Trippin' 20. Sin Sin Sin 21. Advertising Space 22. Let Me Entertain You 23. Rudebox Disc 2 - Tracklist: Live at The Forum (1998): 24. Ego A Go Go 25. Teenage Millionaire 26. Clean 27. South of the Border 28. Old Before I Die 29. Angels Live at Abbey Road (2003): 30. Come Undone 31. Me and My Monkey 32. No Regrets 33. Feel 34. Phoenix From the Flames Live in Berlin (2005): 35. Feel 36. A Place to Crash 37. Tripping 38. Make Me Pure 39. Sin Sin Sin 40. No Regrets 41. Advertising Space Other Performances: 42. Life Thru A Lens - Elyse Montmartre 1997 43. Old Before I Die - Elyse Montmartre 1997 44. Come Up and See Me/Leave Your Hat On - The Brits 1998 45. Millennium - The David Letterman Show 1999 46. Angels - Glastonbury 1998 47. It's Only Us - Apocalypse Tube 1999 48. Kids - Top Of The Pops 2000 49. Better Man - Later With Jools Holland 2000 50. Angels - Live 8 2005 51. Advertising Space - Otro Rollo 2005 52. White Christmas - Ant and Dec's Christmas Takeaway 2005
You'll finding yourself rooting for this movie to take off in a sustained flight of comic inspiration, but it seldom does. It's too bad that it doesn't, given the casting, because both leads (Eric Idle and Robbie Coltrane) are capable of extreme funniness. Idle and Coltrane play a couple of low-level crooks who decide to get a piece of the action for themselves and abscond with the loot from a big score. But they're discovered before they can getaway and their only avenue of egress is into a convent. So they don habits and hide out by pretending to be nuns, teaching parochial school to budding young girls. Now think about the possibilities in that premise and anything you can think of is in the film (though Coltrane remains one of the funniest men alive). --Marshall Fine
A tale of outsized ambition and outrageous excess, it traces the rise and fall of multiple characters during an era of unbridled decadence and depravity in early Hollywood.
A delightful family adventure based on a remarkable true story featuring amazing effects courtesy of Jim Henson's Creature Shop. Rene Russo stars as eccentric socialite Gertrude ""Trudy"" Lintz who adopts a baby gorilla into her already-bustling animal menagerie. Along with chimpanzees Maggie and Joe Buddy gets into all kinds of hilarious monkey business and proceeds to drive everyone bananas. .
Will Smith, Jared Leto, Margot Robbie and Cara Delevingne star in this action film following DC Comics supervillains who are transformed into a team of anti-heroes. Amanda Waller (Viola Davis) heads up a secret government agency for which she forms Task Force X aka the Suicide Squad - a group of unlikely heroes made up of imprisoned criminals. Once released from Belle Reve penitentiary, the squad, which includes Deadshot (Smith), Katana (Karen Fukuhara), Boomerang (Jai Courtney), El Diablo (Jay Hernandez), Killer Croc (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje), Slipknot (Adam Beach), The Joker (Leto) and Harley Quinn (Robbie), must carry out life-threatening covert operations, under the command of leader Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman), to protect the planet from unseen evils.
Mona Lisa
From the Arrow creative team of executive producers Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisberg and director David Nutter, The Flash is a fast-paced super hero drama that follows the high-speed adventures of the Fastest Man Alive. Written by Berlanti, Kreisberg and DC Entertainment's Chief Creative Officer Geoff Johns, the action drama follows Central City Police scientist Barry Allen, an everyday guy with the heart of a hero and the genuine desire to help others. Standing still emotionally since the day his mother was murdered (and his father unjustly jailed for the crime), Barry was taken in as a child by the investigating Detective West and raised in a cop's home alongside West's supersmart daughter (and Barry's dream girl) Iris. But when an unexpected and devastating accident at the S.T.A.R. Labs Particle Accelerator facility strikes Barry, he finds himself suddenly charged with the incredible power to move at super speeds. While Barry has always been a hero in his soul, his newfound powers have finally given him the ability to act like one. With the help of the research team at S.T.A.R. Labs - including billionaire visionary Harrison Wells, biogenetics expert Caitlin Snow and the eternally upbeat Cisco Ramon - Barry begins testing the limits of his evolving powers and using them to stop crime, ensuring that no one suffers a similar tragedy to his own family history. Working with his adopted father Detective West; West's conceited partner Detective Eddie Thawne and Iris West, who's earning her degree in Criminal Psychology, Barry uses his superhuman abilities to help the people of Central City and stop the rogues' gallery of villains -- many of whom have also been altered by the particle accelerator explosion. Concealing his identity behind his incredible velocity, Barry can not only accomplish feats faster than human comprehension, but also taps into an energy that allows him to access moments out of time -- both past and future. With a winning personality and a smile on his face, Barry Allen - aka The Flash - is finally moving forward in life, very, very fast.
Paul Finchley (Coltrane) is a cherished household name, one half of a much-loved comedy double act with a career that spans several decades. He's a bona fide national treasure until the day he receives a knock at the door. Faced with an accusation of long-past sexual offences, the life of this adored entertainer begins to unravel. Paul, and all those closest to him, are put under the intense pressure of the investigation and the merciless media circus that accompanies it, from his wife of 40 years Marie (Walters) and his troubled daughter Dee (Riseborough), to his manager and his loyal comedy partner, Karl (McInnerny). Throughout the investigation and criminal trial that follows, memories prove muddied, doubts flourish, loyalties are tested, and truths, half-truths and lies are all exposed. This powerful exploration of truth, memory, trust and family calls into question: how well do we really know those we love? The answer lies in a National Treasure.
Features the complete thirty-nine episodes from the ground-breaking comedy series.
Frank Randle was one of the great music hall comedians and arguably Britain's greatest comic character actor. Today fifty years after his death the mention of his name still brings a smile to many faces. He was the major attraction for years in Blackpool summer shows and a star of many films, all box office successes, including the three classics presented in this collection. Somewhere in Camp (1942): Army buddies help Private Trevor court the daughter of their commanding officer. Al...
Men Money And Moonshine: When It Comes To Vice Mama Knows Best. Get ready to rumble as a beautiful young widow breaks up her teen daughter's wedding and hits the road on an outlaw voyage to Waco Texas. Making pit stops for armed robbery and a mother-daughter striptease Angie Dickinson's Big Bad Mama teaches her girls the real facts of life.
To live in Barbie Land is to be a perfect being in a perfect place. Unless you have a fullon existential crisis. Or you're a Ken.
France 1940. As Hitler’s armies descend upon Paris Lucile (Michelle Williams) awaits news from her husband who is being held a prisoner of war. Leading a stifled existence with her domineering mother-in-law (Kristen Scott Thomas) Lucile’s life is turned upside down when a handsome and charming German officer (Matthias Schoenearts) is posted to live with them. Despite the many taboos they find themselves drawn to each other until the realities of war threaten to destroy them.
Tough, gritty and totally compelling, this hard-edged re-imagining of the iconic Prisoner: Cell Block H remains unmissable drama. Three months have passed since the catastrophic siege, during which time the Prison management has come under intense scrutiny and tougher measures have been imposed. With Allie now top dog, the fragile peace is tested with the arrival of a notorious former inmate. SPECIAL FEATURES: Behind the scenes featurettes and brand-new cast and crew interviews
To try and please all the fans of JK Rowling's novel was a challenge that the makers of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone met head on. The result of their efforts is one of the most lavish, beautiful and magical cinematic treats to hit our screens in years. Director Chris Columbus and screenwriter Steven Kloves (thankfully with the help of Rowling herself) prove that although you can't translate everybody's reading of this much-loved book onto the cinema screen--maybe Fluffy was a bit more Fluffy in your imagination or Hagrid (superbly played by Robbie Coltrane) a little more giant-like--it is nevertheless possible to transfer Harry's adventures with fidelity as well as superb energy and excitement. If there is a downside it's that the performances of the child leads tends to verge on the Sylvia Young-tastic in places. Nonetheless, the three young stars are both likable and watchable, showing great potential to grow into the parts as the adventures continue. The main disappointment is the substantial cutting of the ghost scenes and what promised to be a fine comic turn by John Cleese as Headless Nick, though with more Potter films on the way the ghosts will surely assume their rightful prominence later. There are, of course, some areas of the story that may frighten smaller children--such as the entrance of the evil Voldemort--and undoubtedly for any true Potter fan that cinematic entrance cannot live up to the images created in their imagination. All in all, though, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone is what it should be: an unmissable treat for the whole family. On the DVD: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone really is a magical experience in this lavish two-disc set. Disc one offers the film in all its surround-sound glory along with trailers and links to the Harry Potter Web site, but, disappointingly, there's no commentary. Disc two is where the real wizardry can be found, with a vast and beautifully designed selection of special features. Entering the Great Hall a mysterious voice invites you to explore and find the secret hidden within (though it's frustrating that in some cases you have to re-enter the Hall after viewing a feature). Various options let you tour around Harry's world: from Diagon Alley to a virtual 360-degree tour of Hogwarts. The interactive component is excellent, with real thought having been put into ensuring that, instead of just the standard behind-the-scenes stuff, there is material aplenty to keep children and adults alike entertained for hours. Throughout the emphasis is on the disc's educational value: yes there are insights to be had from the film crew, but it's in the Classroom where you will find the real precious stones! --Nikki Disney "Widescreen" vs. "Full Screen" Widescreen preserves the original theatrical picture ratio of the film (Panavision 2.35:1), which will appear in "letterboxed" format on a normal TV screen. Full Screen (or "pan and scan") crops the theatrical picture to 4:3 ratio (i.e., 4 units wide by 3 units tall), which is the shape of a standard (non-widescreen) TV screen. There is no letterboxing, but up to a third of the original picture is lost.
Murderland (2 Discs)
First screened in 1993, Jimmy McGovern's Cracker was at once a variation on a familiar theme and a daring new departure from the run-of-the-mill cop show. Robbie Coltrane's Fitz is an independent criminal psychologist called in by the police to help them crack intractable cases, usually involving grisly serial murders. But like its Granada TV stablemate Prime Suspect, Cracker also delves deep into the main characters' personal lives, revealing a chaos of emotional entanglements that become increasingly inseparable from their professional duties. Robbie Coltrane's charismatic presence dominates: the contrast between Fitz's professionalism and his complete inability to diagnose his own psychological failings provides much of the show's dramatic impetus. His frequent interrogations of murder suspects are tour de force demonstrations of coolly analytical method shot through with biting humour. But his drunken, intemperate behaviour towards his wife and everyone else is a telling contrast of extremes, and one that creates dangerous resentment among his colleagues. Coltrane is supported by a strong cast that includes Barbara Flynn, Geraldine Somerville, Lorcan Cranitch (as the terrifyingly unstable DS Jimmy Beck), Christopher Eccleston, and a pre-Royle Family Ricky Tomlinson. McGovern's screenplays balance gritty, Manchester-based realism with splendidly mordant wit, making Cracker simply riveting viewing. On the DVD: This complete Cracker 10-disc box set contains all three series that ran from 1993-95. The feature-length episodes are: "The Mad Woman in the Attic", "Say I Love You", "One Day a Lemming Will Fly" (Series 1); "Be a Somebody", "The Big Crunch", "Men Should Weep" (Series 2); "Brotherly Love", "Best Boys", "True Romance" (Series 3); "White Ghost" (1996 special). --Mark Walker
A nobody is about to become a somebody... and impress EVERYBODY. Ashley Tisdale (High School Musical The Suite Life of Zack and Cody) is picture-perfect and downright delightful in this hilarious comedy that gives cell phone a whole new meaning. Mandy has just been invited to the biggest party of the year by the most popular boy in school but there's one problem - she's grounded! When her father agrees to let her go study with friends he insists on checking in every half hour via video cell phone. Trapped by technology Mandy and her cell mates need a little ingenuity - and a lot of imagination - to make it to the party with exposing the plan to Dad's prying eyes!
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