My Best Friend's Tush: Grace discovers that one of Karen's friends is the notorious Helena Barnes (guest star Joan Collins) one of New York's most celebrated interior designers and her primary competition for a lucrative design job. Meanwhile Jack might regret it when he convinces Will to help him try to obtain financing for his latest venture The Subway Tush - a portable seat to make subway rides comfy. Girls Interrupted: Grace becomes chummy with her unpredictable neighbour Val (guest star Molly Shannon) from down the hall and while the pair surprisingly find they share a mutual rapport Grace's glow dims when she tells Will that a sentimental music box has disappeared during her new pal's visit. Meanwhile Jack poses as a straight man to attend a party for former homosexuals who have become heterosexual - fully intent on swaying a new convert (Neil Patrick) back to his side of the gender-preference aisle. Ben? Her? (Part 1) To help make peace between Grace and Ben Will has them both over to dinner only to have their relationship go beyond friendship. But then Will finds out that Ben is dating someone else. Meanwhile Jack catches Rosario in a clinch with a lover and learns that she wants a divorce. Ben? Her? (Part 2) Forced by his boss to betray both of his friends Will quits - only to discover that everything isn't as it seems. Frustrated he leaves a lost Jack and Grace behind and ends up on a tropical island without a care in the world. That is until Ben shows up...
Featuring eighty-two minutes of extremely rare never-before-seen international concert performance footage of bands such as Rancid Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros Dropkick Murphys The Slackers Roger Miret and the Disasters and Tiger Army - to name just a few the GIVE 'EM THE BOOT DVD is a gritty look into the underworld of Hellcat Records through the eyes of founder Tim Armstrong and a hoard of his Hellcat family members! Highlights include performances and extra footage from to
The year is 1987 and NASA launches the last of America's deep space probes. In a freak mishap Ranger 3 and its pilot Captain William 'Buck' Rogers (Gil Gerard) are blown out of their trajectory into an orbit which freezes his life support systems and returns Buck Rogers to earth 500 years later...
Hit American sitcom Will and Grace is as perky as Friends and as wittily urbane as Frasier. The premise concerns Will (Eric McCormack), a mildly uptight lawyer who agrees to have as a flatmate his best friend, interior designer Grace (Debra Messing). Their relationship has all the hallmarks of one between lovers--emotional dependency, little things that get on each other's nerves, strong mutual interests and volcanic arguments. The only snag is that while Grace is straight, Will is gay. Though not shy of poking sharp fun at that situation, Will and Grace is among sitcom's most potent and sophisticated antidotes to homophobia. Though initially a little too pleased with its own camp pertness, the show grows and grows on you with successive episodes, finally becoming indispensable. It also benefits from secondary characters Jack (Sean P Hayes) and Karen (Megan Mullally), also gay and straight respectively, both outrageously and hilariously irresponsible characters: he's a free spirit and freeloader, she's "working" as Grace's assistant even though she doesn't need the money, having married some. Despite its diamond and rapid-fire punch lines, Will and Grace conveys enough sense of the lovelorn predicament of the main characters to prevent it becoming too cute. --David Stubbs
A woman who manages to escape her brutal husband is forced to fight for the children she left behind...
Gilbert & George join Tim Marlow in a walk around their Major Exhibition at Tate Modern and London Pictures at White Cube. The self-proclaimed living sculptures discuss humanity, sex, death, race and religion; their love of the city and their dislike of the countryside.They explain how they go about creating their art, their iconic dress sense and their tricky relationships with the art establishment and the media. This film is a fascinating insight into their world and an important document of their motivation and consequent art.
Obviously the Disney suits gave more than two figs about the legacy from the first Beast film, as they reassembled the former cast and spent some cash on production and tune-smithing for this straight-to-video effort. The events unfold between the time in the first film where Belle bartered herself to the Beast and her later return to the village to save her father. So the Beast's heart still hasn't been melted yet and he's susceptible to the inky persuasions of Forte (Tim Curry), a malevolent pipe organ (and former music teacher to the prince). Belle is still trying to win over the Beast and decides that bringing Christmas to the castle will be the way to do it. Please control that gag reflex for this does work remarkably well and though entirely unnecessary and certainly not a complement to the original, it doesn't tarnish its good name. --Keith Simanton
Scary Movie A parody of modern horror films about a group of teenagers who are being terrorised by a serial killer. Some of the send-ups include: Scream I Know What You Did Last Summer The Blair Witch Project The Sixth Sense and The Matrix. Scary Movie 2 All your favourite Scary Movie characters are back in a laugh-packed sequel that scares up even more irreverent fun than the original! Marlon Wayans Shawn Wayans and Anna Faris lead a stellar cast that takes extreme pleasure in skewering Hollywood's most frightening feature films and spoofing popular culture. Also starring Regina Hall Christopher Kennedy Masterson Tori Spelling plus Tim Curry Chris Elliott and James Woods - nothing's sacred and anything goes in this outlandish must-see comedy...
This delightful Fifi Gift Set contains a 2 hour Bumper DVD, 2 Scribble Pads and Crayon Pack for hours of Fifi fun!Fifi Forget-Me-Not is full of energy and creativity, always smiling and looking for excitement! Fifi lives in Forget-Me-Not Cottage and is always busy with her friends Bumble, Primrose and Violet, out gardening or cooking or keeping a watchful eye on the naughty Stingo and Slugsy. Enjoy all the fun, mayhem and laughter in 12 great stories.
Director Tim Burton's eagerly awaited new take on the story of an astronaut (Mark Wahlberg) who crashlands on a strange planet, only to find a civilisation where Apes are the dominant species!
Former hairdresser turned smart-mouthed junkie/loser known as J (Segal) spends his days looking for 'just one more fix' as his lifestyle alienates all those around him... This film is a gritty story of lust greed and deceit with Segal playing small time hustler lurking in the back alleys of the Big Apple trying to escape the self-spun web of treachery that threatens to enslave him. 'Born To Win' is a harrowing trip into the minds of a disturbed man trapped by his own compulsions.
Billy Cobham's Glass Menagerie - Live In Riazzino
Steven Spielberg directs Tom Cruise in a present day retelling of the classic HG Wells story.
One of a series of revisionist Vietnam cinema released in the late 1980s, Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket is essentially split into two stories linked by a number of characters. The film follows new recruit Joker (Matthew Modine) and his fellow soldiers through their basic training and into combat in Vietnam. The first half is a chilling portrayal of military brutality and de-humanisation, mainly at the hands of Sgt Hartman (played at a level of staggering intensity by ex-Marine Lee Ermey), that centres around the tragic character of Private Pyle, a young man pushed to the edge of his endurance. The tone of the film is no less harsh when transported to the combat zone as we see the results of the training process in action: the young men turned into unquestioning killing machines. Joker is perhaps the one exception, a soldier with "Born to Kill" written on his helmet who also sports a peace sign on his lapel. But the film finds itself caught in the trap of many of the war movies of the time--how to create audience empathy with characters who are essentially in the wrong. It's a dilemma that Full Metal Jacket never really solves, although as a spectacle the film is a masterpiece. Made in the days before CGI became the norm, the battle sequences--filmed, rather bizarrely, in London's Docklands before its redevelopment--are hugely realistic and are perhaps the key moments of the movie, heightening the disorientation and fear felt by the soldiers. By offering no more than a snapshot of the Vietnam conflict (the action deals with one individual skirmish), Kubrick cleverly leaves any judgement on the war to the audience, although clearly attempting to influence them. The fate of the characters who survive is also left in the balance, but we can perhaps imagine what awaits them. On the DVD: Part of a series of Kubrick DVD reissues, Full Metal Jacket has been treated to the full remastering and restoration treatment. The battle sequences have benefited the most, gaining a new audio and visual crispness and clarity that adds to their already impressive sense of realism--you can almost feel the heat searing from the screen and the explosions detonating around you. Maybe not the best war film ever made, as some may claim, but certainly one to take you right to the heart of the action. --Phil Udell
An insider's outlook on the music and lifestyle behind the 'Hip-Hop' scene in five chapters: 'Ride' 'Beef' 'Twisted' 'Friends' and 'Mad Love'. Features 50 Cent Busta Rhymes Nelly LL Cool J and many more.
Government corruption makes strange bedfellows when a straight-arrow Treasury Agent partners with a weapons-trading Greek Mafioso for protection from his agency colleagues all of whom are on the take and aiming to bump the Mafioso off. Add to the mix the Mafioso's lovely wife and soon there's no loyalty that can't be rent asunder.
The first live Cactus performance in over 30 years was greeted by a wildly enthusiastic New York City audience. Filmed at B.B.King's Blues Club in Times Square the hard driving boogie based blues-rock band took control of the stage from the first note and never released their grip. The original Cactus (and Vanilla Fudge) rhythm section of bassist Tim Bogert and drummer Carmine Appice two names often celebrated more than the actual groups they were members of live up to expectation. Original Cactus guitarist extraordinaire Jim McCarty (Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels) rounds out the rock engine. The now deceased lead singer Rusty Day has been replaced with the more bouyant but still bluesy vocals of Jimmy Kunes and Randy Pratt has been added on the harmonica. Tracklist: 01: Long Tall Sally 02: Let Me Swim 03: One Way or Another 04: CACTUS Music 05: Bro Bill 06: Muscle And Soul 07: OLEO 08: Part Of The Game 09: EVIL 10: Cactus Boogie 11: Parchment Farm 12: Rock N Roll Children
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