Shooting Fish is the kind of movie that evaporates once the end credits roll, but it's lightweight fun while it lasts. An amusing prologue sets the tone: two young orphan boys--one in America, one in England--demonstrate their precocious ability to subvert the strict rules of society. Eighteen years later, the clever Yankee schemer Dylan (Dan Futterman) and techno-geek Jez (Stuart Townsend) are fast friends in London, pulling off a series of royal scams to finance their dream of building a luxurious home for orphans--of course, it's a selfish cause since they're the orphans. Their newly hired secretary Georgie (played by the delightful Kate Beckinsale) goes along with their con games in the belief that their intentions are good, and when she discovers their selfish motivations... well, let's just say the boys (who are both smitten with the charming medical student Georgie) manage to rise to the occasion and do the right thing. Despite a few clever twists, this frothy plot meanders too much to be very involving, but the three young co-stars make it all worthwhile. (Futterman had already played Robin Williams's son in The Birdcage and Beckinsale made a strong impression in The Last Days of Disco.) It's one of those featherweight British comedies that's so good-natured you feel Scroogey if you resist it, and director and co-writer Stefan Schwartz has made the movie just smart enough to hold its own against a wall-to-wall soundtrack of kitschy pop songs. If you don't consider "cute" a derogatory term, this movie will offer an agreeable diversion. --Jeff Shannon
Series 2 of ˜Hetty Feather' builds on the many strengths of the first series; the vivid, exciting characters; the deep emotional layers; the high-action plots and set-pieces; the wonderful textural details of the period the candlelight, the corridors, the rooms in the rafters, the ink and paper, staircases and dorms: the Victorian world will come alive for a contemporary audience. Across ten episodes of this BBC series, the Foundlings engage in sleuthing to unravel mysteries; they meet an explorer from outside who offers them a path for the future; they discover football; a snake goes on the loose; the Foundlings are spooked by ghosts; they have to keep their own personal meetings hidden from Matron and her side-kicks, particularly when one of the meetings is in a big house across the City.
An Oscar winning film of a gripping study of alcoholism and love. Jack Lemmon and Lee Remmick star as Joe and Kirsten a couple who fall in love get married and have a baby. This happy family scene gradually changes as Joe's addiction casts an ever-increasing shadow over all their lives...
Shot during the group's 35th Anniversary European Tour, Yesspeak offers a 169-minute documentary about the classic progressive rock band Yes, together with an audio-only presentation of their 2003 set. The feature, narrated by Roger Daltrey, is a refreshingly straightforward affair, with a near three-hour running time allowing rather more depth than the usual rockumentary. Divided into 10 chapters the programme systematically covers the background, history and outlook of the group before an extended interview with each of the five members of the classic line-up: Jon Anderson (vocals), Steve Howe (guitar), Chris Squire (bass), Alan White (drums), and Rick Wakeman (keys). Finally there are more general sections on touring and the band's music. Archive material and glimpses of the 2003 tour are interwoven with the interviews, but this is very much a documentary, not a concert (to see Yes at their modern best watch Yes: Symphonic Live, 2002). The documentary puts a positive spin on a sometimes chequered past, and it's clearly aimed at long-term fans, but for those who have followed Yes through the decades this is satisfyingly comprehensive and thoroughly enjoyable; from Steve Howe's famous but still entertaining guitar/Concord story, to Rick Wakeman's tea break during a typically expansive prog-rock solo. On the DVD: Yesspeak comes as a two-disc set. Disc 1 offers the first five chapters and 89 minutes of the documentary, while the remaining 80 minutes are featured on Disc 2. The picture is an excellent amamorphically enhanced 16:9 widescreen presentation, though by necessity the archive material is of variable quality. Switches into black and white and slow motion are a typically unnecessary distraction of the rock documentary format, but the DVD handles them well. There are excellent Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS soundtracks and optional French, Dutch, Italian and Spanish subtitles. Disc 2 also showcases 126 minutes of concert audio. This is accompanied by concert photos but the sound is only Dolby Digital 5.1, without a DTS option. Although the sound is good it does not match the crystal clear quality of the same music as heard in fragments during the documentary itself. Presumably a DVD of the concerts will follow with much better sound, and the audio here will simply serve as a trailer for that release? --Gary S Dalkin
Following a failed robbery a young hot-headed gunslinger by the name of Whitey finds himself the guest of Marshal Jim Crown in the Cimarron jail. Keen to locate the rest of the gang Crown tricks Whitey into revealing the outlaws' next target. When the Tinker Gang pull a no-show and Crown confronts him Whitey realises he has been duped by both the Marshal and his former employer. Set on revenge Whitey escapes with the beautiful young Dulcey as his prisoner and begins to hunt down those who have double-crossed him. When he helps capture gang leader Arn Tinker Whitey sets Crown an ultimatum - he'll return Dulcey unharmed... but only after Tinker is hanged!
14 Tracks Featuring 28 Tunes1. Come In Come In/Kenmuir's Up & Awa2. Orange Blossom Special/Wreck Of The Old 973. Jacqueline Waltz4. Harry Lauder Selection:- I Love A Lassie/Roamin' In The Gloamin'/Wee Deoch An' Doris/Stop Your Ticklin' Jock/Keep Right On To The End Of The Road5. Take The High Road6. Wee Todd Set: Morag Of Dunvegan/Cuttin' Bracken7. Bluebell Polka8. My Own Land/Archie McKinley/Kirks Hornpipe9. Mist Covered Mountains/The Island Spinning Song10. Dark Lochnagar11. Shetland Two Step12. Circassian Circle/Mason's Apron13. Lord Lovat's Lament/Pigeon On The Gate14. Scotland The Brave/Flower Of Scotland/ Take The High Road
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