"Actor: Yuliya Snigir"

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  • A Good Day to Die Hard [DVD]A Good Day to Die Hard | DVD | (10/06/2013) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £19.99

    John McClane travels to Russia to hep out his seemingly wayward son, Jack, only to discover that Jack is a CIA operative working to prevent a nuclear-weapons heist, causing the father and son to team up against underworld forces.

  • A Good Day to Die Hard (Blu-ray + UV Copy)A Good Day to Die Hard (Blu-ray + UV Copy) | Blu Ray | (10/06/2013) from £7.99   |  Saving you £17.00 (212.77%)   |  RRP £24.99

    Iconoclastic take-no-prisoners cop John McClane for the first time finds himself on foreign soil after traveling to Moscow to help his wayward son Jack. With the Russian underworld in pursuit and battling a countdown to war the two McClanes discover their opposing methods make them unstoppable heroes. Special Features: Feature – Theatrical and Extended Versions Deleted Scenes Making It Hard to Die Anatomy of a Car Chase Two of a Kind Back in Action The New Face of Evil Pre-Vis Segments VFX Sequences Storyboards Concept Art Galleries Theatrical Trailers Audio Commentary by Director John Moore and First Assistant Director Mark Cotone Maximum McClane

  • Dark Planet [DVD]Dark Planet | DVD | (16/02/2015) from £8.98   |  Saving you £9.00 (128.76%)   |  RRP £15.99

    Russian sci-fi action film. In 2157, Maxim (Vasiliy Stepanov), a pilot on a misson in deep space, crash-lands on an unknown planet after colliding with an asteroid and losing his ship. Maxim finds the planet Saraksh to be similar to Earth some 100 years previous - being torn apart by social problems and devastating wars. He is appalled by the totalitarian dictatorship that governs the Fatherland and resolves to help the repressed population form a rebellion to overthrow the powerful regime, aided by native Rada (Yuliya Snigir) and her brother Guy (Pyotr Fyodorov). But Maxim's revolution proves more difficult when he discovers those in charge, known as the Unknown Fathers, have the technology to control their citizens' minds...

  • Freezer [Blu-ray]Freezer | Blu Ray | (09/06/2014) from £21.58   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £N/A

  • A Good Day to Die Hard [Blu-ray]A Good Day to Die Hard | Blu Ray | (02/09/2013) from £6.45   |  Saving you £18.54 (287.44%)   |  RRP £24.99

    The world has changed a lot in the 25 years between Die Hard and this fifth franchise rehash, but Bruce Willis is still the indestructible force of nature who is followed by gunfire and explosions everywhere he goes. In fact, he seems to have gotten more powerful and his body grown more resilient in spite of the crags in his face and the gray stubble over his ears. This time around, New York Police Department veteran John McClane has trekked to Russia for what he claims is a vacation, a running gag that lets Willis keep on quipping with the impeccable insouciance of a pedigreed action hero. What he's really up to is tracking his wayward son Jack (Jai Courtney), who John believes is on trial for murdering a mob kingpin. In the first of the movie's many dazzling set pieces, father and son meet cute just as Jack has broken out of a heavily fortified courtroom with a mysterious Russian businessman named Komarov (Sebastian Koch), who is in possession of some sort of information that's valuable on the world stage. Don't worry, the details aren't important as there's no room for plausibility in any direction. It's no spoiler to reveal that Jack is a covert CIA agent in pursuit of Komarov's file, and that instead of helping his estranged child, the senior McClane has actually bungled Junior's operation. This sets off a lengthy chase on the streets of Moscow (actually Budapest) that has father zooming after son with a tank full of caricatured Russian bad guys in the middle. Hundreds of vehicles sacrifice themselves for the hyperkinetic demolition derby between the three factions as they race through traffic-jammed streets, flattening everything made of metal and glass along the way. Though far less elegantly staged, the sequence recalls the opening chase in Skyfall, and the story rolls on in a similarly dumbed-down series of spy-movie showdowns that are all cranked up to 11. A Good Day to Die Hard is the most cartoonish sequel, given its superfluous plotting and nonstop spree of gratuitous destruction. There are a few plot twists--ultimately it's all about money, of course--but mostly it's an exercise in extravagant violence and automatic-weapons fire, with emotionless moments of rapprochement between John and Jack dropped in around the gunfights. Both of them survive beatings, car crashes, and ludicrous falls from tall buildings without injury as Komarov is lost, then found, then lost again. Dad helps his son mop up the mess by doing what they both like to do best: kill scumbags. The dizzying editing and breakneck pace builds to a crescendo at Chernobyl, where a magical anti-radiation gas explodes many things, a truck is driven out of a flying helicopter, buildings and people are shot to pieces, and a paroxysm of fetishistic, slow-motion digital mayhem turns the decrepit nuclear facility to rubble. Bruce Willis is firmly in charge throughout, delivering the mother of F-bomb catch phrases with a succession of increasingly eye-popping fireballs hot on his heels. Yippee-ki-yay, indeed. --Ted Fry

  • Freezer [DVD]Freezer | DVD | (09/06/2014) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £12.99

    Dylan McDermott of Hostages and Olympus Has Fallen stars as Robert Saunders, a New York City mechanic who is knocked unconscious at his birthday dinner and wakes up to find himself locked inside the restaurant's walk-in freezer. But why he's there - and how he'll survive - will reveal a chilling nightmare of mistaken identity, the Russian mob, a missing $8 million, and a wounded cop (Peter Facinelli of the Twilight saga) who may hold the key. The temperature is dropping. The fear is growing. .

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