Posted by Notcot on Apr 30, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 5.0 / 5 (12 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
The Heathers are a clique of bitchy classmates in this dark comedy from 1989. The film itself was a good showcase for Winona Ryder, the Queen of Teen in the late 1980s, playing a high-school girl forced into the social world of “the Heathers”, and Christian Slater, doing his early Jack Nicholson thing. While Ryder’s character muddles over the consequences of giving up one set of friends for another, her association with the new boy in school (Slater) turns out to have deadly consequences. Director Michael Lehmann turned this unusual film into something more than another teen-death flick. There is real wit and sharp satire afoot, and the fusion of horror and comedy is provocative in itself. Heathers remains a kind of benchmark in contemporary cinema for bringing surreal intelligence into Hollywood films. –Tom Keogh, Amazon.com
Heathers
Buy Now for £3.19
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Posted by Notcot on Apr 29, 2010 in
Photography
Tags: amazon, Average, Battery, camera, Compatible, compatible digital camera, Digital, digital camera battery, DMC-TZ, DMC-ZX, DMCTZ10, DMCTZ6, DMCTZ7, DMCTZ8, DMCZX1, DMCZX3, dmw, DMW-BCG, DMWBCG10E, FIRMWARE, fmc, FMC-ZX, FMCZX1, iBox, lumix panasonic, Panasonic, panasonic dmc, panasonic lumix, Product, rating, Reviews, SECURED, TZ10, Warranty, zx1
Posted by Notcot on Apr 28, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.0 / 5 (47 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
With the advent of satellite broadcasting resurrecting the art of the TV movie, films like the invigorating The Boondock Saints are becoming more frequent. Made for Sky, the movie eschews big-screen production values but is still good value for money. Although the story of two Irish-American brothers who set out on a believed divine mission to wipe out the worst of the criminal element of Boston at times seems like an imitation of the superb Dogma, both films were actually made in the same year. The film is not without its faults, notably the poor performances of Sean Patrick Flanery and Norman Reedus as the two brothers–both of whom adopt ludicrous Irish accents. Far better is Willem Dafoe, who steals the show as FBI agent Smecker, and the manic David Della Rocco. Still, The Boondock Saints is highly watchable and keeps the viewer interested throughout with a strong story, frequent black humour and arresting visuals. And there aren’t many places where you will come across Billy Connolly as a Mafia contract killer. –Phil Udell
The Boondock Saints
Buy Now for £6.47
Tags: Advent, amazon, amazon co uk, art, Average, Billy Connolly, black humour, Boondock, boondock saints, Boston, broadcasting, contract killer, criminal element, David Della Rocco, divine mission, fbi agent, irish american, Movie, Norman Reedus, Phil Udell, poor performances, production, rating, Reviews, ReviewWith, Saints, satellite, satellite broadcasting, Sean Patrick Flanery, Sky+, story, Willem Dafoe
Posted by Notcot on Apr 28, 2010 in
Portable Sound & Vision
Average Rating: 2.0 / 5 (14 Reviews)
Product Description
100% Brand New Headset
Volume control and mute switch let the users adjust the headset volume or switch mute on and off easily
Boom microphone can be adjusted for optimal sound quality
Lightweight, over-the-head design enables comfortable use.
Noise-canceling microphone improves game response to voice commands, and provides crisp and clear voice communication
The headset plugs directly into either the Xbox 360 Controller or Xbox Wireless Controller for easy use.
Charger into the PC or Xbox360 console
- Exclusively Sold & Distributed On Amazon by MicroVillage
- Volume Control And Mute Switch Let The Users Adjust The Headset Volume Or Switch Mute On And Off Easily
- Boom Microphone Can Be Adjusted For Optimal Sound Quality
- Lightweight, Over-The-Head Design Enables Comfortable Use
- The Headset Plugs Directly Into Either The Xbox 360 Controller Or Xbox Wireless Controller For Easy Use
DELUXE HEADSET HEADPHONE MICROPHONE FOR XBOX 360 LIVE
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Posted by Notcot on Apr 27, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.0 / 5 (1 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
The “lost” sleeper hit of 1980 has since become one of the most revered cult movies of all time, largely due to its bawdy, irreverent story about the art and artifice of filmmaking and an outrageously clever performance by Peter O’Toole. As megalomaniacal film director Eli Cross, O’Toole plays a larger-than-life figure whose ability to manipulate reality is like a power-trip narcotic. The focus of his latest mind game is a fugitive (Steve Railsback) recruited to replace a stuntman killed during a recent on-set accident. In return for protective sanctuary, the fugitive takes a crash course in stunt work but soon discovers that he’s the paranoid player in a game he can’t control, with the dictatorial director making up the rules. Or is he? The Stunt Man is a game of its own, played through the fantasy of filmmaking, and half the fun of watching the movie comes from sharing the stuntman’s paranoid confusion. Barbara Hershey has a smart, sexy supporting role as a lead actress who won’t submit to her director’s seemingly devious behaviour; but it’s clearly O’Toole who steals the show. Director Richard Rush adds to the movie’s maverick appeal–in a career plagued by struggles against the mainstream studio system, Rush hasn’t made a better movie before or since. The Stunt Man clearly represents the potential of his neglected talent. –Jeff Shannon
The Stunt Man
Buy Now for
Tags: amazon, amazon co uk, Average, Barbara Hershey, bawdy, crash course, Cross, Cult, cult movies, director, director richard, Director Richard Rush, film director, game, half the fun, Jeff Shannon, Man, mind game, Movie, O, peter o toole, Peter O'Toole, power trip, rating, Reviews, ReviewThe, richard rush, sleeper, Steve Railsback, Stunt, stunt man, stunt work, stuntman, time
Posted by Notcot on Apr 27, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.0 / 5 (22 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
Sometimes a movie achieves such legendary status that it can’t quite live up to its reputation. Plan 9 from Outer Space is not one of these movies. It is just as magnificently terrible as you’ve heard. Plan 9 is the story of space aliens who try to conquer the Earth through resurrection of the dead. Psychic Criswell narrates (“Future events such as these will affect you in the future!”) as police rush through the cemetery, occasionally clipping the cardboard tombstones in their zeal to find the source of the mysterious goings-on. More than just a bad film, Plan 9 is something of a one-stop clearinghouse for poor cinematic techniques: the time shifts whimsically from midnight to afternoon sun, Tor Johnson flails desperately in an attempt to rise from his coffin, and flying saucers zoom past on clearly visible strings. Fading star Bela Lugosi tragically died during filming but such a small hurdle could not stop writer-producer-director Ed Wood. Lugosi is ingeniously replaced with a man who holds a cape across his face and might as well have “NOT BELA LUGOSI” stamped on his forehead. Plan 9 is so sweetly well intentioned in both its message and its execution that it’s impossible not to love it. And if you don’t, well, as Eros says, “You people of Earth are idiots!” –Ali Davis
Plan 9 From Outer Space
Buy Now for £4.14
Tags: afternoon sun, Ali Davis
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Posted by Notcot on Apr 25, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 5.0 / 5 (10 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
When Ridley Scott’s cut of Blade Runner was finally released in 1993, one had to wonder why the studio hadn’t done it right the first time–11 years earlier. This version is so much better, mostly because of what’s been eliminated (the ludicrous and redundant voice-over narration and the phoney happy ending) rather than what’s been added (a bit more character development and a brief unicorn dream that drops a big hint about Deckard’s origins). Star Harrison Ford originally recorded the narration under duress at the insistence of Warner Bros. executives who thought the story needed further “explanation”; he later confessed that he thought if he did it badly they wouldn’t use it. (Moral: never overestimate the taste of movie executives.) The movie’s spectacular futuristic vision of Los Angeles–a perpetually dark and rainy metropolis that’s the nightmare antithesis of “Sunny Southern California”–is still its most seductive feature, another worldly atmosphere in which you can immerse yourself. The movie’s shadowy visual style, along with its classic private-detective/murder-mystery plot line (with Ford on the trail of a murderous android, or “replicant”), makes Blade Runner one of the few science fiction pictures legitimately to claim a place in the film noir tradition. And, as in the best noir, the sleuth discovers a whole lot more (about himself and the people he encounters) than he anticipates. The cast also includes Sean Young, Edward James Olmos, Daryl Hannah Rutger Hauer and M. Emmet Walsh. –Jim Emerson, Amazon.com
In the Box Set: It is a fitting testament to Blade Runner‘s enduring appeal that it should receive the red-carpet box set treatment in this Collector’s Edition, which represents a sizeable outlay not least in terms of shelf space. The chunky black box (about the size of the yellow pages) houses a slide-out tray containing the DVD, eight original lobby cards an original one-sheet movie poster, the draft shooting script and a movie image card with the corresponding 35mm film frame attached. As with all such sets the whole is rapidly diminished by removing its parts, presenting the dilemma of whether to mount the poster and pictures, or leave them pristine but unseen in their original state.
The DVD included contains Ridley Scott’s director’s cut version of the film, but offers no new features or commentaries which would have added considerably to the set’s desirability. The original draft shooting script by Hampton Fancher and David Peoples does, however, provide some fascinating insights in its moments of departure from the version that was finally filmed. Perhaps the most compelling example is Deckard’s final, decisive contribution to the “is he or isn’t he” debate: “I knew it on the roof that night. We were bothers, Roy Batty and I! Combat models of the highest order. We had fought in wars not yet dreamed of in vast nightmares still unnamed. We were the new people … Roy and me and Rachael! We were made for this world. It was ours!” –Steve Napleton
Blade Runner
Buy Now for £9.83
Tags: amazon, amazon co uk, Blade, blade runner, box, cut, daryl hannah, Daryl Hannah Rutger Hauer, David Peoples, Deckard, draft, DVD, Edward James Olmos, FILM, Hampton Fancher, Harrison Ford, Jim Emerson, Los Angeles, M. Emmet Walsh, Movie, mystery plot, narration, Noir, original lobby cards, Poster, private detective, Rachael, Ridley Scott, Roy, Roy Batty, Runner, rutger hauer, script, Sean Young, sheet movie poster, Steve Napleton, Sunny Southern California, unicorn dream, version, voice over narration
Posted by Notcot on Apr 25, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (43 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
Having proven itself as a favourite film of children around the world, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory is every bit as entertaining now as it was when originally released in 1971. There’s a timeless appeal to Roald Dahl’s classic children’s novel, which was playfully preserved in this charming musical, from the colourful carnival-like splendour of its production design to the infectious melody of the “Oompah-Loompah” songs that punctuate the story. Who can forget those diminutive Oompah-loompah workers who recite rhyming parental warnings (“Oompah-loompah, doopity do…”) whenever some mischievous child has disobeyed Willy Wonka’s orders to remain orderly?
Oh, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves … it’s really the story of the impoverished Charlie Bucket, who, along with four other kids and their parental guests, wins a coveted golden ticket to enter the fantastic realm of Wonka’s mysterious confectionery. After the other kids have proven themselves to be irresponsible brats, it’s Charlie who impresses Wonka and wins a reward beyond his wildest dreams. But before that, the tour of Wonka’s factory provides a dazzling parade of delights, and with Gene Wilder giving a brilliant performance as the eccentric candyman, Wonka gains an edge of menace and madness that nicely counterbalances the movie’s sentimental sweetness. It’s that willingness to risk a darker tone–to show that even a wonderland like Wonka’s can be a weird and dangerous place if you’re a bad kid–that makes this an enduring family classic. –Jeff Shannon Amazon.co.uk Review
Starring Gene Wilder in the title role, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory may not be the most faithful Roald Dahl adaptation to hit the big screen, but there’s a strong argument that it’s the best. Even Tim Burton and Johnny Depp, with their 2005 release Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, couldn’t come close to this 1971 musical version.
Even nearly four decades later, it’s a surprisingly dark yet ultimately utterly joyful film, as Charlie Bucket finds his golden ticket and gets to join four gruesome children on a tour of the factory of the film’s title. What’s more, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory is packed with toe-tapping, memorable musical numbers, a terrific cast of young performers, and a memorable lead performance from Wilder. His Willy Wonka is a complex creation, veering unpredictably between likeable and quite sinister. And it’s a performance that sticks in the mind long, long after the credits have rolled.
The Blu-ray release sadly doesn’t present the copious extra material in high definition, but the main feature has benefited from a solid improvement. It’s a bright, colourful and imaginative film for long periods, and the transfer work is up to the job. There are moments where the material shows its age a little, but this is a good upgrade from the DVD edition, and the picture and audio both show genuine improvements. It’s also the finest way to own what’s undoubtedly the best version of the book to make it to the big screen to date. As fine an actor as Johnny Depp is, his Willy Wonka simply doesn’t hold a candle to Mr Wilder’s…. –Jon Foster
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
Buy Now for £12.95
Tags: amazon, amazon co uk, Burton, Charlie, charlie and the chocolate, charlie and the chocolate factory, Charlie Bucket, chocolate, Factory, FILM, Gene Wilder, golden ticket, Jeff Shannon, Johnny, Johnny Depp, Jon Foster
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Posted by Notcot on Apr 25, 2010 in
Photography
Average Rating: 4.0 / 5 (41 Reviews)
Product Description
iBox – PANASONIC DMW-BCG10E Compatible Digital Camera Battery For Panasonic DMC-TZ6 DMC-TZ7 (PLEASE NOTE NOW WORKS WITH FIRMWARE 1.1 , 1.2 , 1.3 AND NEW FIRMWARE 1.4) ID SECURED
- Exclusively Sold & Distributed On Amazon By iBox
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- Lithium Technology for The Ability to Supply High Current Demands and For Exceptional Life
- Compatible With Following: Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS1, DMC-TZ6, DMC-ZS3, DMC-TZ7 Etc
- C.E Certfied **2 Year Warranty** Replacment Battery Not Genuine
iBox – PANASONIC DMW-BCG10E Compatible Digital Camera Battery For Panasonic DMC-TZ6 DMC-TZ7 ID SECURED
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Posted by Notcot on Apr 24, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (53 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
With an ingenious script, engaging characters, nerve-shredding suspense, genuinely frightening set-pieces and laugh-out-loud funny bits An American Werewolf in London is a prime candidate for the finest horror-comedy ever made. Americans David (David Naughton) and Jack (Griffin Dunne) are backpacking in northern England when Jack is killed by a wild beast and David is bitten. Back in London David finds himself falling in love with a nurse, Alex (played with winning charm by Jenny Agutter), and turning into a werewolf. Adding to his problems, an increasingly decomposed Jack keeps coming back from the dead, and he is not a happy corpse. The Oscar winning make-up and transformation scenes still look good and rather than send itself up Werewolf plays its horror seriously, the laughs coming naturally from the surreal situation. Naughton is engagingly confused and disbelieving, desperately coping with the ever more nightmarish world, while Landis delivers one absolutely stunning dream sequence, an unbearably tense hunt on the London Underground and a breathtaking finale. Gory, erotic, shocking and romantic, this unforgettable horror classic has it all. Tom Holland’s Fright Night (1985) remixed the formula with vampires, as did Landis himself in Innocent Blood (1992). A disappointing sequel, An American Werewolf in Paris, followed in 1997. –Gary S Dalkin
American Werewolf in London
Buy Now for £5.68
Tags: Alex, amazon, amazon co uk, American, american werewolf in london, american werewolf in paris, Average, beast, candidate, David, David Naughton, Gary S Dalkin, Griffin Dunne, horror, horror classic, horror comedy, jack, jack griffin, Jenny Agutter, Landis, London, love, nightmarish world, northern England, nurse, Oscar, Paris, rating, Reviews, ReviewWith, script, Suspense, Tom Holland, transformation scenes, werewolf, werewolf in london, werewolf in paris, wild beast