James and the Giant Peach Streaming

February 9th, 2010 by stanley2696674
James and the Giant Peach Streaming. James and the Giant Peach Streaming.

Movie Title: James and the Giant Peach
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James and the Giant Peach is available for streaming or downloading.

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Roald Dahl’s modern classic tells the story of James, an orphan who is treated cruelly by his aunts, until one day a benevolent stranger gives him some magical crocodile tongues — and then marvelous things begin to happen! With new friends, James discovers that he is resourceful and loyal. He learns to believe in himself and trust in others.

This terrific story is given the treatment it deserves by director Henry Selick and producer Tim Burton (who also made Nightmare Before Christmas together). Stop-motion, live action and special effects combine to bring this incredible story to life, and the effort is dazzling, even though the work is almost a decade old.

The dvd features are marginal at best. While it’s nice to have the option of DTS or Dolby Digital sound, the other features do not merit calling this a special edition. You can hear the dialogue in English, French or Spanish, and subtitling is available in Spanish or for the hearing impaired. There is also a 4-1/2 minute featurette, a trailer and a Randy Newman music video. Still photos are categorized as Concept Art (9), Puppets (9), Behind-the-Scenes (36) or Live Action (18), and they can be seen as thumbprints or enlarged. There are trailers for NBX, Toy Story 2 and Lady and the Tramp 2. Menus are a bit clunky.

Great film. Mediocre DVD edition.

This is a wonderful & amazing adaptation of Ronald Dahl’s classic book. A definite addition to anyone’s dvd collection. the story as you many know, tells of James and how his wish to get away from his evil aunts comes true in the form of a giant peach. James floats away to NYC in a giant peach being carried by a flock of seagulls and lots of sticky spider web. He learns to stick up for himself… that he really can make a difference, that he indeed counts!

The voice talent is great and the story ties up nicely at the end. Keep in mind, this Ronald Dahl, and anything can happen! =)

As for the Special Edition features.. There isn’t much here. A still-frame gallery, a short making-of piece, trailers for the movie, and “sneak peaks” (more trailers) for other movies that are already out on DVD. I was hoping they would have at least included a director’s commentary (which is most often ’standard’ with the Special Edition designation) but no such luck. It is still worth owning of course, but just don’t expect much in the way of Extras. This film is definitely worth the repeated viewings!! Go now & get it!
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Watch The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Movie Online

February 8th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Watch The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Movie Online. Watch The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
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The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy is available for streaming or downloading.

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There’s a simple reason this movie has taken so long to make, and it’s this: while Douglas Adams’ classic The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy is a hilarious book, it’s a rubbish novel.

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I mean that in the nicest possible way - it’s one of my favourite books, but it’s barely a story at all - more a set of dead-eye, deadpan observations on the absurdity of life, and particularly the British way of life, revolving very loosely around a chap in a dressing-gown. While that’s great fodder for a comedy read, it’s no basis for a coherent, 90 minute motion picture, especially one having the American market in mind.

It’s a matter of record that Douglas Adams realised there was no story, but not until it was too late to fix it (about halfway through book two). From that point onwards made several attempts to pull everything back into a single coherent, archetypal story but totally failed, and in the process ruined the remaining three and a half books themselves, none of which are funny, let alone a good story.

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A film-maker has a choice, therefore: stick with the material and film something which is not so much a screenplay as an extended, themed version of Saturday Night Live, or do some significant damage to the source material - “zap straight off to its major data banks and reprogram it with a very large axe”, if you will - and make a story out of it.

The first option will in equal measure thrill and infuriate the party faithful, but bore the rest of the population; the second will most likely infuriate the party faithful, but at least has a chance with everyone else. Since the Hitch-Hiker’s Guide is now twenty years old, there is probably a whole generation who, so far in their lives, have missed it altogether, so you can hardly blame director Garth Jennings for choosing option two.

What instead we should do is take our hats off to him: he’s fashioned a great story but preserved surprising amounts of the source; his innovations are sympathetic and in a couple of cases (the point-of-view gun and the face-slapping devices on the Vogsphere) are a match for the original material; the wonderful production design thoroughly captures the loveable Britishness of Adams’ story (the Vogons hover somewhere between the schoolmasters of `70s Pink Floyd and the sort of bureaucrats whom you might find behind the desks of some Ministry of Monty Python’s devising), and on top of all that he’s coaxed some wonderful performances out of the cast. Martin Freeman captures Arthur Dent’s everyman perfectly and has real chemistry with Zooey Deschanel’s Trillian; John Malkovich, Bill Nighy, Bill Bailey and both the original Arthur Dent and Marvin from the BBC TV series make hilarious cameos, as does the smiling face of the late creator himself, Douglas Adams, as the very last shot of the movie. That was a splendid touch.

The less forgiving purists are bound to gripe about what’s missing; but on the whole I’m the more forgiving sort of purist. Perhaps there is something sinister in the conspicuous omission the Babel Fish “proof” for the non-existence of God - was that a Disney-required edit or just my perfectly normal paranoia? - and I was a bit sad my favourite exchange in all of Douglas Adams’ writing was omitted (Arthur: “It’s at times like this, when I’m trapped in a Vogon airlock with a man from Betelgeuse, and about to die from asphyxiation in deep space that I really wish I’d listened to what my mother told me when I was young.” Ford: “Why? What did she say?” Arthur: “I don’t know, I didn’t listen”), but overall this was an extremely enjoyable, touching experience and I can’t think of a better way to have rounded off an otherwise trying Thursday.

Thursdays. I never could get the hang of Thursdays.

Olly Buxton

Having owned the first release of this movie on DVD, when I heard it was coming out on Blu-Ray I had to pick it up; after all, this was the movie that convinced me to pick up Douglas Adams’ spectacular written novels (from Hitchhiker’s to Dirk Gently) and give them a read. While watching the movie in 1080i was a pleasure, I was rather disappointed to find that many of the special features found on the original disc - including the absolutely brilliant interface with the interactive improbability drive that occasionally took you to an Easter Egg - were stripped out of the Blu-Ray disc. I could have even dealt with the loss of the interface in exchange for the movie showcase menu that allows you to access features, select scenes, and access the setup while the movie is playing, if only they had provided all the content on the original DVD. I’ve experienced this now on a couple of Blu-Ray discs and I find it quite upsetting (officially entering rant territory), that despite the capacity for Blu-Ray discs to hold 80% more data than a DVD, and 40% more data than a HD disc, that companies are skimping on features and selling the discs at an inflated price. While Blu-Ray may be the superior format, it’s not going to gain in market standing by the release of inferior products.
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Stream Ip Man Dual Subtitled Online

February 8th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Stream Ip Man Dual Subtitled Online. Stream Ip Man Dual Subtitled Online.

Movie Title: Ip Man Dual Subtitled
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Ip Man Dual Subtitled is available for streaming or downloading.

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My husband and I were at a friend’s place the other day and they put this DVD on with the English subtitles. What a really good movie. We both enjoyed it very much. So much so that I am searching amazon.com for a copy to purchase for our own viewing any time we want. Really great movie.

This movie is a must see! The movements of Donnie Yen are intense. He captures the character of the film with finesse. A humble husband and father trying to provide for his family during a time of war is backed into a corner. He is skilled, daring and this film is his best to date, and I am an avid Donnie Yen fan. The casing for this DVD is beautiful, came new wrapped in plastic. Don’t miss out!
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Stream The Bridges at Toko-Ri Movie Online

February 7th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Stream The Bridges at Toko-Ri Movie Online. Stream The Bridges at Toko-Ri Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Bridges at Toko-Ri
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The Bridges at Toko-Ri is available for streaming or downloading.

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The Korean War is the setting for “The Bridges At Toko-Ri,” a story of individual sacrifice and the high cost of freedom, from director Mark Robson. Navy fighter-pilot Harry Brubaker (William Holden), a veteran of World War II, is called to serve again when the conflict in Korea escalates, which takes him away from his wife, Nancy (Grace Kelly), two young children and a successful law practice. When his plane goes down after a mission, into the sea just short of the carrier, he survives; but he bitterly questions the fairness of what he has been asked to do, while everyone back home is able to go on with the routine of their lives, uninterrupted. Rear Admiral George Tarrant (Fredric March), a man who has had his own share of personal tragedy (he looks upon Brubaker as the son he has lost to the war, himself), tells Brubaker it’s a matter of distance; we do this because we’re here; back home they’re only doing just as you would be doing if you were there. When Brubaker is granted shore leave, strings are pulled, and arrangements are made for Nancy and the children to join him; a brief respite, after which he must return to face his most formidable challenge yet, flying against the bridges that span the canyons at Toko-Ri. Very probably a suicide mission, it is nevertheless believed that knocking out these particular bridges could bring about a turning point in the war, and Lieutenant Brubaker is called upon once again to play a pivotal roll in deciding the outcome. An excellent supporting cast ably brings to life the characters that infuse this drama with humanity. Mickey Rooney is unforgettable as Mike Forney, the fighting, Irish helicopter pilot who fishes Brubaker out of the sea when his plane crashes. Memorable as well are Earl Holliman (Nestor Gamidge, Forney’s partner), Robert Strauss (Beer Barrel), Charles McGraw (Commander Wayne Lee), Keiko Awaji (Kimiko) and Willis bouchey (Captain Evans). An excellent precursor to the more recent “Saving Private Ryan,” and “U-571,” “The Bridges At Toko-Ri” is an intimate study of individual courage and responsibility, and of the moral fortitude of which man is capable in times of crisis. There is a finality to the climax of this film that underscores the intense personal aspects of the larger conflict, and of the price demanded by certain individuals chosen to fulfill a seemingly random destiny. At the end of the movie, Admiral Tarrant sums it up succinctly when he ponders aloud: “Where do we get such men?” To which we can only answer: Where, indeed.

I read this book when it first appeared in “Life” magazine and later reread it several times. I consider Michener’s novel to be among the very best I’ve ever read and highly recommend it. It follows that Hollywood should (would)jump at the chance to adapt this short novel into a great anti-war film. As I remember the story, the film pretty much follows Michener’s plot, with at least one notable exception that doesn’t detract from the story’s theme and impact. A strong cast, led by William Holden adds to the film’s overall quality. Holden simply is outstanding as Lt. Harry Brubaker, a reserve World War II pilot called back to fly against the North Koreans and Chinese. But the supporting players, including Frederic March, Mickey Rooney, Robert Strauss and Charles McGraw are equally effective at depicting hard-nosed professionals. I only wish the staff and crew that put together the special effects were still around to share their thoughts on the spectacular bombing scenes using miniature sets, planes, etc.
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Sacagawea - Heroine of the Lewis and Clark Journey Movie Streaming

February 7th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Sacagawea - Heroine of the Lewis and Clark Journey Movie Streaming. Sacagawea - Heroine of the Lewis and Clark Journey Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Sacagawea - Heroine of the Lewis and Clark Journey
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Sacagawea - Heroine of the Lewis and Clark Journey is available for streaming or downloading.

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This documentary has many reenactments and features a young, female narrator speaking as Sacagawea. This work doesn’t have the sophistication that one finds in PBS’ “American Experience” series. However, that series is for adults. This documentary is surely made for a younger audience. It’s the type of work that an elementary school teacher could show while killing time before the Thanksgiving holiday begins. So when you take it for its intention, then you may find it acceptable or decent.

Enjoyed the movie altho I think it was geared to school children, of any age. It was factual, but some of the obscure facts may go over little kids heads. Movie is not as good as the Natl Geo Lewis & Clark movie (narr. by Jeff Bridges), but it is shorter and would be good for schools.
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Watch The Who - Live at the Royal Albert Hall Movie Online

February 7th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Watch The Who - Live at the Royal Albert Hall Movie Online. Watch The Who - Live at the Royal Albert Hall Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Who - Live at the Royal Albert Hall
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The Who - Live at the Royal Albert Hall is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download The Who - Live at the Royal Albert Hall

During the playing of John’s song, “My Wife”, the cameras capture a sequence that literally, says it all. The band has just entered an instrumental break. Pete is introduces the line, John tosses his pick to the wind and grabs up great handfuls of bass strings. From there, it’s a race. At their best the Who were always like that. They played as if they were trying to run away from the each other but kept landing in the same place. They were evenly matched and “read” each other so well it usually worked. Mistakes happened, but hell, those only showed how many chances they were willing to take. Crowds loved that and it literally, cemented their reputation as the greatest live band ever. When Keith died they were still an excellent band but his part of that chemistry was lost. John (Rabbit) Bundrick was (and still is) fine with it, but Kenney Jones wasn’t. It was that simple.

Then Zak Starkey came along. When (yet) another tour was announced for the spring of 2000 critics were quick to label it to end up as another zip-less grab for money. Little did they know. Zak had been with the band for a few years and largely restored the vitality Keith had injected. More important, he gave Entwistle and Townshend someone they could “run” with again. When they stripped the band back down again the old fire came back. In the spring, summer and fall of 2000 they hit north America with a roar that hadn’t been seen from anyone from any genre in decades. New material or no, the most explosive live band in rock was back!

Live at the RAH more than illustrates this. That it’s a “greatest hits” set (with an “all-star” guest list to boot) put me off for a while. Don’t make the same mistake. The catalogue the Who have to offer is a great one. When it’s performed this amount of passion by a band like this it never gets old. Roger can’t quite hit all the high notes any longer, Pete doesn’t jump a often, or as high and John’s singing voice, never great, by this time was close to shot. All of this matters little. Roger has enough passion for ten singers. As well, he brings a level of intelligence and understanding to the material that’s rare in the industry. And don’t forget, he never takes any nights “off”. What Pete lost in leaping ability he’s gained in musical finesse. This man is playing the guitar the way he did thirty years ago but with all the skill that time and practice have added. Nobody plays like him. Nobody! John was a fabulous player. Ultimately this band may end up missing him even more than they missed Keith. His ability to pick up Townshend’s threads and add immediately add to them was the glue which held them together.

The importance of John (Rabbit) Bundrick can’t be overstated. He’s played with the Who since the late 1970’s and it shows. It’s hard to imagine keyboard player better suited to working with this outfit. He’s literally all over everything Pete and John do as fast as Keith ever was. The guest stars, for the most fit in well. Eddie Vedder is a long time friend of Townshend and a fan. To watch him up there you could swear he knows their music as well as they do. Brian Adams looks a little nervous (for about ten seconds) but then cuts loose. His rendition of “Behind Blue Eyes” is classic. Nigel Kennedy comes in and plays the violin part from “Baba”. He and Townshend have so much fun it has to be illegal (somehow anyway). Noel Gallagher doesn’t leave the impact on “Won’t Get Fooled Again” that Eddie Vedder leaves on “I’m One” but he doesn’t hurt anything either. The only guest stars who fall a little short are Paul Weller and Kelly Jones. Weller and Townshend just don’t mesh all that well. Kelly Jones, unfortunately, leaves you wanting Roger back on the mike to remind everyone what “Substitute” is “supposed” to sound like. The only other problem lies with the neck mounted camera used to spotlight John’s bass solo. This was just a bad idea. It was supposed to give a close look. All it does is give wide angle close-ups that make Entwistle seem disembodied from the rest of the concert. It’s too bad. The solo was a good one. Thankfully that camera was only used on the one segment.

This is nit picking though. The performance is a great one. The camera work is superb and the sound quality is fabulous. Buy it, turn it up and enjoy a great rock band doing their thing.

I was really torn about purchasing this DVD. I love the Who, but was worried that this show might contain shopworn and perfunctory performances from a band well past its prime and relevence.

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Wrong!

Live at the Royal Albert Hall is, I think, the ultimate Who documentary — should music historians wish to the study the group years from now.

Buy,Download, Or Stream The Who - Live at the Royal Albert Hall! Click Here

While the band isn’t as kinetic on stage as they once were (thank goodness!) — they still have plenty of gas in the tank. Pete Townshend windmilled, Roger Daltry swung his mike like a crazed rodeo clown, John Entwistle rattled the rafters with his bass runs — and Zack Starkey (all hail Zack) is clearly Keith Moon reincarnated. (Are we sure he’s Ringo’s son? Did Barbara - Ringo’s wife - hang out with Keith much???)

This concert was a fundraiser for a cancer research charity, so in that spirit, many of the Who’s musical friends stop by to sit in on several songs. This was a wonderful addition as it lent new texture and life to some old time songs. It didn’t work everytime, but for the most part — a delight!

Eddie Vedder sounds amazing on “I’m One.” The Sterophonics’ Kelly Jones turns “Substitute” into a modern day punk anthem. Paul Weller’s (The Jam) acoustic duet with Townshend on “So Sad About Us” is a wonderful surprise. The only one of these guest appearences that fails is Bryan Adams’ flaccid treatment of “Behind Blue Eyes.” A singer of dubious talent, Adams belongs on stage next to Roger Daltry about as much as I do. And while most guests chose more obscure songs from the Who catalog thus muting possible comparisons, Adams chose the high-profile “Behind Blue Eyes,” my personal favorite Who song. Um, let’s just say that Roger sings it better.

That one little set back aside, I am so happy I purchased this little slice of rock ‘n’ roll history. Besides the special guests, it’s all here: Pinball Wizard, Bargain, Baba O’Riley, Won’t Get Fooled Again, Who Are You, You Better You Bet, The Real Me, 5:15… and on and on. They do quite a few tunes from Quadrophenia, in fact, and that makes me happy too.

The sound, the lighting, the format — it’s all excellent. If you are a Who fan, a rock fan — this one is for you!
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Watch The Guyver - Bio-Booster Armor, Vol. 2 Movie Online

February 7th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Watch The Guyver - Bio-Booster Armor, Vol. 2 Movie Online. Watch The Guyver - Bio-Booster Armor, Vol. 2 Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Guyver - Bio-Booster Armor, Vol. 2
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The Guyver - Bio-Booster Armor, Vol. 2 is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download The Guyver - Bio-Booster Armor, Vol. 2

As my title says, this is a fantastic series! A normal high school student named Sho Fukamachi comes into contact with an living cybersuit called the Guyver. The Guyver is basically a living creature that merges with humans and gives them incredible superpowers. Sho has this thing on his shoulders that opens a dimensional portal that the Guyver comes through, then the Guyver wraps itself around Sho’s body (However, we don’t learn that the Guyver comes from another dimension until later in the series.). However, there is the evil Kronos corporation that created the Guyver, along with 2 other Guyver suits. The Kronos corporation wants all the Guyver suits back, and they’ll kill anyone who tries to get in their way! The Kronos corporation experiments with people and turns them into horrible monsters called Zoanoids which they use as soldiers. Fortunately, the Guyver has incredible weaponry that Sho uses to fight the Kronos coporation. One of these weapons is the Mega-smasher, the Guyver’s most powerful weapon. Sho grabs ahold of two fleshy panels on the Guyver’s pectorals, and pulls them open to reveal two powerful lasers which can destroy anything. The Guyver can also make incredibly sharp blades come out of each of it’s elbows. With weapons like these, the Kronos corporation had better watch out!

Well, actually just one thing: Manga Video. Manga Video is to Anime what Clear Channel is to Radio. That may not sound entirely fair considering that Manga Video is responsible for bringing us Ghost in the Shell, Perfect Blue, the Patlabor Movies, and now Magic Knight Rayearth (on one disc!), but they are not without their poor decisions and bad calls. Yoshiki Takaya’s Bio-Booster Armour Guyver epitomizes this.
Originally, the episodes were available in six VHS volumes with two episodes each (at about twenty to thirty dollars a pop) with original opening and closing credits and music. They were released through U.S.Renditions and L.A.Hero. Later, Manga Video revived the series by releasing each episode on its own videotape (called “datas” and for about twelve to fifteen dollars a pop) which seemed pretty economical (especially if you were picky about your favorite episodes) until you actually watched the tapes and found out that Manga video had changed the opening and closing credit music with “Guyver Rock!” If that does not make you cringe, you are of a stronger will than I. Also, Manga decided to change some of the voice actors for the english track (namely the Zoanoid Data files and some of the zoanoids themselves) which should probably not bother anyone, but I think it is still worth pointing out.
The quality of the transfer is spot-on, which may not exactly be a good thing. We get to see all of the poorly cleaned cels, all the sloppy camera moves, all the discolorations in skin-tones, and all the lousy english-text-boxes laid over the japanese credits. But fear not, you can see and hear the original opening credits in the special features menu. Why Manga did not just simply present the credits in their original format in the first place is beyond reasoning, so I have given up trying. My advice for watching: neither the english nor japanese audio tracks are particularly impressive, so just hit that mute button, pop in your favorite KMFDM album (or whatever you like) and let the images do what they do best.
The highlight of the disc, in my mind, apart from the archival quality of DVD over VHS (which should go without saying) is the complete collection of Zoanoid Data files. Reminiscent of the animation sequences of Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (which is the ONLY time you will hear H2G2 and Guyver in the same context), these sequences are informative, imaginative, and give some great insight into character designs. Yoshiki Takaya did not simply draw monsters and let them go to town on each other, he was trying to create a universe. If only Guyver’s escapades into the world of audio/visual media did the source material justice.
Final Word: Four out of Five for presentation, Two out of Five for butchery. Average is Three. NOW, ON TO VOLUME 2 AND THE FINAL INJUSTICE!
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Streaming Dr. Strangelove Online

February 6th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Streaming Dr. Strangelove Online. Streaming Dr. Strangelove Online.

Movie Title: Dr. Strangelove
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Dr. Strangelove is available for streaming or downloading.

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…Kubrik masterminded Dr. Strangelove, loosely basing the movie upon the book “Red Alert” (the book is a completely serious Cold War nuclear war scenario, but Strangelove is a complete and total farce). “Strangelove” came out a year or two after the Cuban October missile crisis, a year after US President John Kennedy was assassinated as well as 2 other contemporaneous films, the brilliant and paranoid “The Manchurian Candidate” and the serious treatment of the same book, “Fail Safe.”

Kubrik originally set out to do a serious treatment of the book. But Kubrik found as he tried to develop the screenplay that he kept running into scenes that he ended up writing as satire. Recognizing the challenge, Kubrik enlisted the talents of one of the best comedic screenwriters in Hollywood, Terry Southern, to do the screenplay.

Casting the film was part genius and part hit-and-miss happy accident. … Somehow Slim Pickens’ name came up and Pickens accepted the role of the B-52 bomber pilot. Even more ironic yet, Slim Pickens was more conservative than Dan Blocker, but Pickens never caught on during the film’s production that Dr. Strangelove was a comedy, much less a satire and a farce unsympathetic to the official propaganda of the cold war.

In of itself, it was a comic master stroke telling Pickens play the role seriously. Pickens was apparently no great wit, so Kubrik was able to keep Pickens completely unaware that Pickens was actually playing in a comedy, not a serious war movie (one can only assume that the humor of the situation was not lost on the other cast members, including James Earl Jones who played Capt. Kong’s bombardier.. “Don’t tell Slim this is all a big joke, we have to let him think this is a real war movie.” ).

Other than Peter Sellers’ roles, George C. Scott (later in “Patton”) and Sterling Hayden delivered memorable performances. Both were obviously instructed to play their roles “over the top.” Kubrik instructed Scott to overact the role of the cigar-smoking, gut-slapping, martini-drinking & womanizing General Buck Turgidson (get it? Turgid-son?). In the scene in the war room where Turgidson exuberantly proclaims the spectacle of a B-52 bomber evading radar by hedge-hopping, Kubrik instructed George C. Scott to deliberately overact the part. Kubrik had Scott re-take the scene several times, asking Scott to make it even more over-the-top than before. On the last take of that scene, Scott practically performed it as a burlesque parody, which was of course, the final take that Kubrik actually used.

Sterling Hayden delivered a brilliant performance as the psychotic Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper, the Air Force general who unilaterally orders the nuclear strike against the USSR. The confusion of Cold War paranoia, paranoid psychosis and false sexual power in Hayden’s scenes is the blackest of black satire. Totally over the top, ludicrous and frightenlingly possible (what if one of your top military brass really went insane and over-rode all the safe-guards against nuclear war?). The insane babblings of General Ripper set the film’s direction and act as its centerpiece, delivering both Kubrik’s satire of anti-communist propaganda and the air of impossible odds for the rest of the film’s characters to overcome that they might somehow avert doomsday.

Peter Seller’s performances as the President, the British officer and Dr. Strangelove (a left-over Nazi scientist) are memorable, Sellers delivers the title role as the deranged wheelchair-bound Nazi scientist who suffers from involuntary palsied “Seig Hiels!” in his right arm. Again sex is the real underlying motive to yet another character and the opportunities for a sexually prodigious post-apocalyptic eugenic world brings the deranged Strangelove to a frenzied outburst of libidinal energy: “Mein Fuhrer! I can vwalk!” But as much as I enjoy Sellers’ roles, they seem overshadowed by the rest of the film’s characters. P>It comes probably of no surprise that the U.S. Air Force refused to assist Kubrik in shooting the movie. Having to choice, Kubrik had to resort to mocking up the B-52 flying scenes and bomber interior cabin scenes as best he could (the bomber interior was apparently such a good replica of the real thing that the FBI launched an investigation into who gave Kubrik such a detailed layout of a B-52’s flight deck). Appropriately, the exterior B-52 flying scenes hold a comic flaw if you look closely enough: In one scene, as the damaged bomber hedge-hops across the Siberian taiga (northern boreal forest), you can see that the underlying shadow of the plane is actually that of a four-engine propellor aircraft and doesn’t match the profile of the overlaid B-52 model.

Suffice it to say, when the movie came out, it was not universally received or even widely understood. It was drummed by political commentators and movie reviewers who found it to be tasteless and sophomoric. The studio was very concerned about the potential a negative backlash from its release (consider that in the same year, the Manchurian Candidate was withdrawn from theaters after Kennedy was assassinated). An internal memo described Dr. Strangelove as “a huge, sick malefic joke” and questioned the wisdom of even releasing the movie at all. After all, the movie starts off with B-52’s and tanker planes copulating during mid-flight refuelings, displays Air Force “Peace is Our Profession” billboards in the midst of a fire fight between the US Army and Air Force security, depicts two Air Force generals as complete sex-obsessed baffoons, one a psychotic and the other a braying ass, delivers a deranged Nazi scientist and finally a cowboy pilot bucking the biggest phallic bronco of his career (never mind blowing up the world).

I can think of few other films whose film makers so defied convention and created a story that really turned conventional wisdom on its head. Dr. Strangelove keeps coming at you as one outrageous scene after another, interspersed with segments of complete straight-faced dead-pan, piling them all on until the fateful end. When Pickins died in 1983, CBS news anchor Dan Rather delivered the obituary replete with the out take of Pickins riding the bomb (Perhaps DeForest Kelley topped that and made good on his threat to have “He’s dead, Jim” engraved on his tombstone….).

There are some things you just can’t live down: Being the face that gets a great closing falling scene that leads to the end of all life on Earth happens to be one of those things. Poor Slim, he’s probably suffering in a purgatory of a Liberal Methodist heaven.

In closing, I have to agree with that long-forgotten studio executive who wrote in the memo: Dr. Strangelove *IS* a huge, sick malefic joke. But it is one of the finest huge, sick malefic jokes ever created, and stands as a film masterpiece. Those who extoll the virtues of this fil

I doubt that you could imagine how much it would pain me to give a single-star rating to an edition of the film I consider to be the singular greatest contribution to the motion picture. However, the new “40th Anniversary” edition of Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb is, unquestionably, requiring of such a rating. Why?, you ask.

Buy,Download, Or Stream Dr. Strangelove! Click Here

Because about fifteen to twenty percent of the screen image has been removed!!!

If you take a look, you will see that this new “Special” edition of Dr. Strangelove is presented in anamorphic widescreen, with a 1.66:1 aspect ratio. This, as you can find from examining older editions of the film, is the first time the film has ever been presented in such a manner. The reason why (and you may cross-check this with the Internet Movie Database [IMDb] or any book on Stanley Kubrick worth its salt) is because Dr. Strangelove was NOT FILMED in 1.66:1. It was technically filmed with a varying aspect ratio (the reasons for which are still not fully explicated, as far as I’ve seen), but, in general, it was filmed in about 1.33:1.

Buy,Download, Or Stream Dr. Strangelove! Click Here

So, you ask, how does a film shot in 1.33:1 get presented in 1.66:1? Did someone return to the original negative and uncover material previously hidden from sight, lost on every print and VHS, Beta, laserdisc and DVD copy heretofore released?

NO!

They simply cut off the top and bottom of the screen!!!

Such things are not unprecedented. An extremely similar case is the so-called “panoramic” Gone With The Wind. The film, made in 1939 (before there was anything BUT 1.33:1, the “Academy” aspect ratio), when released in the Panavision/Technorama age of the mid-1960’s was similar chopped and changed to magically become 2.35:1. This edition was released on video and DVD a few times before, finally, it was restored to its original 1.33:1 glory.

Stanley Kubrick was absolutely notorious for his perfectionism and auteur status in the film industry, and I cannot believe that a company proposing to release a definitive “Special” edition of his greatest masterpiece would be so heartless as to unnecessarily delete a good portion of the screen.

Please avoid this new, bastardized Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb. While the few new extras thereon are of interest, they can easily be seen via rental from the local video store, as suplemental to the last “Special Edition” of the DVD (which, incidentally, clearly states on the back that it is “Presented in the original aspect ratio of approximately 1.33:1″.

Thank you,

Marc-David Jacobs

P.S. For those of you interested in seeing the terrible editing job for yourselves, feel free to go out and rent the new edition and the previous edition and go to seven minutes and forty-eight seconds, which is the extreme tight shot of the B-52’s CRM-114 decoder book. As you will see, an entire line of text on the top, and about one-and-a-half on the bottom are not completely missing.
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Doctor Who - Logopolis Movie Streaming

February 6th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Doctor Who - Logopolis Movie Streaming. Doctor Who - Logopolis Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Doctor Who - Logopolis
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Doctor Who - Logopolis is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download Doctor Who - Logopolis

Most regeneration stories are specifically meant to wrap up their era. It had to be in “The Caves of Androzani”, for example, that we learn why Peter Davison wears celery on the lapel of his blazer. It’s why we could only learn of the Doctor’s origins in “The War Games”. However, for my all-time favorite “Doctor Who” story, I make the argument that “Logopolis” worked just as well as the pilot for a new series of Tom Baker adventures.

If you had to isolate one image to explain “Doctor Who”’s fall from grace in the 1980s, it’s Anthony Ainley. The final actor to play the Master on the BBC also held on to the role the longest, dragging his hammy character kicking and screaming alongside four different Doctors, until he was fat and possessed by the spirit of the Cheetah People. Although this may have been a fitting end for the character, some of us preferred Roger Delgado, all dignity and cigars.

In 1981, though, Anthony Ainley was magically new. In “The Keeper of Traken”, he played the Doctor’s friend, good guy Tremas, whose body was stolen by the decaying Geoffrey Beevers. A rejuvenated Master sneaks away into his TARDIS, chuckling, whispering, “A new body, at last. A new body. At last”. That disembodied chuckle is all that remains, fading into the electronic scream of the end credits. More, please!

Director Peter Grimwade, who showed up with a zillion directorial flourishes, wisely kept the Master off-screen for more than half of Tom Baker’s swan song. Menace is restored to the character for the first time, since, oh, “The Mind of Evil”, because we can’t see him, just hear him off-camera, as another character dies, shrunken to a corpse. Music composer Paddy Kingsland, the best there was in 26 years, punctuates the revelation of each doll-sized body with another mini-electronic scream.

When the Master finally does appear, in Part Three, we learn he’s been working to a plan even since before Part One: follow the Doctor to Earth, leave deadly calling-cards, and then stow away on board to Logopolis to steal the Monitor’s secrets for himself. But it’s there the Master is beaten: for Logopolis is the keystone of the Universe, holding the moment of heat death at bay through sheer force of chanted numbers. And the Master’s technological interference has caused the city to crumble to dust, unleashing an entropy field that will reduce the Universe to ash within hours. It’s the Doctor’s utterance that the Master is “mad… utterly mad” that finally convinces us this is the most dangerous Master we’ve seen in years.

But Ainley’s not the only revelation in this story. There’s Tom Baker. Just listen to his dialogue, especially in the early TARDIS scenes alone with Adric It’s so dense, and delivered so rapid-fire, so naturally. We are now a million light years away from the Tom Baker who worked with Louise Jameson and Mary Tamm, trampling all over the script, clearly bored with proceedings. This Baker loves the script, giving the dialogue all sorts of inflections, loaning the Doctor a whole new scared dimension. “Nothing like this has ever happened before.” It’s something to say that a man could so compellingly reinvent the character in his final hour, when he could well have gone through the motions as if this were “The Power of Kroll”.

The sense of newness is also borrowed from the supporting cast. Matthew Waterhouse, surprise of surprises, is compelling; witness his constant questioning of the Doctor in Parts One and Two. He even pulls an audience, getting thoroughly confused by the script: “We’re going to measure Logopolis too?. When Tegan and then Nyssa arrive in Part Two, Adric starts to exhibit the bossy I’m-in-charge nature that made him so unbearable for most of Season 19, but one senses that Baker would have kept him in line. Even working with Janet Fielding, an actress he really didn’t need to know at all, Baker planted the convincing seeds of a Doctor who really wanted to time-travel with this young flight attendant. It’s a shame he never worked with either of them again.

And then there’s the script. Chris Bidmead, with his emphasis on hard-sounding science, helped mold the “Doctor Who” of not just the 1980s, but the `90s as well. But his script in “Logopolis” far exceeds in quality any book out of the technobabble-drenched Simon Bucher-Jones oeuvre. Not only is “Logopolis” full of phrases like “unraveling the causal nexus” and “my biomechanisms are unaffected”, but it’s also got poetry: “And now the world I grew up in, blotted out forever”; “We are beyond recriminations… beyond everything”, and my understated favorite: “Time has changed little for either of us, Doctor. You continue to roam the Universe, while we persist in our humble existence on this planet.”

Special praise must be reserved for John Fraser, who, as the Monitor, played quite possibly the smartest, least hammy character in 26 years of “Doctor Who” guest turns. He has no rants, no over-the-top bursts of comedy. He’s just a smart guy who knows more about what’s going on than the Doctor, and actually saves the day with his computer code: he just has the good graces to die early in Part Four. That’s done so Tom Baker can save the Universe and then fall to his death. Just when we were looking forward to at least another season of this exciting new Doctor.

I don’t know, but only suspect that Tom knew this was going to be the final call. It’s asking quite a lot of co-operative coincidence - Logopolis falls into the middle of a rather well planned trilogy, and beginning with The Keeper Of Traken, weaves a certain type of gloomy elegiac mood which is uncharacteristic of the final phase of Tom’s career in the series.

This is one of the few stories which would stand very well outside of the Who circuit. It’s so well crafted that the minor faults are easily overlooked. The story starts with the the constant feeling of portentiousness that is only vaguely hinted at in City of Death, and then rather flatly - the lack of resolution of this nagging feeling that something is dreadfuly amiss continues throughout and it isn’t until far into play that you see the parts of the picture fall into place.

There are multiple tangential references to mathematics and the kind of spacial and geometrical paradoxes that would be excellent discussion points for a bunch of physics or topology enthusiasts (which Dr Who was so valuable for). The ideas behind Logopolis are connected in some inprecise way to Godel, but you might think this is stretching things too far.

I don’t think it would be fair to see this story in isolation from The Keeper Of Traken or Castrovalva. The three are the essential bridge between the world of Tom and his sucessor, and really form a unified set.

Incidently, the name Castrovalva come from an Escher painting, which is worth looking at for some time. It isn’t so much a puzzle painting, but a study of distance and space, which I don’t think has many equals.
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Robotech - The Masters - Complete Collection Movie Streaming

February 6th, 2010 by stanley2696674
Robotech - The Masters - Complete Collection Movie Streaming. Robotech - The Masters - Complete Collection Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Robotech - The Masters - Complete Collection
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Robotech - The Masters - Complete Collection is available for streaming or downloading.

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While the Robotech story is original, full of action, and human emotion; the second act was lacking many of the things that made the first one so irresistable. There is no hint of intelligence until well towards the end of the story and it only makes the involvement of the famous “protoculture” all the more confusing. Despite these problems, I did enjoy this era in the robotech story, but it sure didn’t have the feel of a real military background that I found so appealing in its first act.

I have been hooked on Robotech since it came on Sci-Fi I I’m 20 now so it’s not been long, I watched teh Macross Saga and Masters Saga on Cartoon Network and got the New Gen. from here. But I must say this, Macross and the New Gen. have great story lines while the Masters falls somewhat short of greatness.

Dana Sterling is the main Character, buring the whole things she show little in leadership skills and acts more like a child. Though in the books it’s differenet ( hard to find but worth the trouble of getting) I find myself comparing the show to the books, while the Macross show and book runs very well as one the Masters is isn’t. Dana in the books is more of a leader with a Rebal edage. Then a kid with a hoovertank.

I really want to list the problems with this dvd,
1. Characters are block and dull nothing really great about them
2. The Saga has more battles and talking about battles than anything else which makes it dull (but atleast they are good fights)
3. To much inforamtion is put on the viewer and sometimes viewer has to watch an ep. a few times to get it all.
4. In Macross and New. Gen alot of human emoations are put into the show to get the viewer to really get into the show, but the Masters has so little that is dry and fells almost bland.

All though the show has it problems it is still key to the Robotech Saga anyway you look at it. It answers questions about Robotech, about the Masters and yes even the awful and hated Invid. It also answer that bigest question people ask when they first geting to the Macross Saga.

“What Happiend to Rick, and Lisa and the others?”

With that I will leave it as this Robotech Master is key to the story no matter how bad you hate it or love it. It is a must see even with it’s problems it is still good and enjoyable just leaves that feeling of emptiness after you finish watching it. But for those of you who are looking at this and thinking about buying it I would get it hands down and with out second thought. Just remember to get Macross and New Gen. along with it and you will have yourself a good ol’ time and lot of sleepless nights.
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