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Tank Battle Paintballing

Posted by Notcot on Oct 2, 2010 in Gadgets
Tank Battle Paintballing

Paintballing just got interesting… ; ; Paintballing is one of the greatest action sports of all time allowing regular folk the chance to blast away like Rambo at friends and foe alike. Combine the action and adrenaline of paintballing with several tons of mechanised fighting machine and you have the ultimate combat experience. A three person crew drive arm and fire the specially modified 432 APC at the opposing team who for fairness sake are also in a tank. It’s war games but not as we know it…FIRE!!! ; ;

Price : £ 84.99

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5

Fellini’s Roma

Posted by Notcot on Jun 11, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (8 Reviews)

Amazon.co.uk Review
Federico Fellini’s 1972 ode to the city of Rome is far from a coherent narrative, but as a selection of images and sounds celebrating the famed Italian capital, it’s dazzling and hugely enjoyable. Stylistically, it’s a perfect bridge between the excesses of Satyricon and the nostalgia of Amarcord, and it showcases the true love that Fellini had for the Eternal City. Mixing autobiographical flashbacks with the travails of a present-day movie company making a film about the city (headed up by Fellini himself), Roma is an impressionistic tour de force, delivered via Fellini’s unique cinematic vision. If you can’t tolerate Fellini’s larger-than-life approach, the sometimes-garish colours, or the circus atmosphere, you’ll probably find Roma insufferable. But fans of Fellini will be in seventh heaven, especially during some of the wonderful set pieces–a music dance hall performance that’s interrupted by bombing during World War II; a papal fashion show that’s so surreal it must be seen to be believed; and a breathtaking sequence in which the film crew, tagging along with an archaeological dig, happens upon an ancient Roman catacomb and watches as the beautiful murals disintegrate before their eyes. Through it all, Fellini’s passion for Rome (and moviemaking) shines through, especially in the film’s climax, a dialogue-free sequence of motorcycles roaring through the city at night, a tour that ends at the magnificent Colosseum. At that marriage of past and present, Roma is about as perfect as cinema can get. –Mark Englehart

Fellini’s Roma

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5

Solaris – Criterion Collection

Posted by Notcot on May 30, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 4.0 / 5 (37 Reviews)

Amazon.co.uk Review
Released in 1972, Solaris is Andrei Tarkovsky’s third feature and his most far-reaching examination of human perceptions and failings. It’s often compared to Kubrick’s 2001, but although both bring a metaphysical dimension to bear on space exploration, Solaris has a claustrophobic intensity which grips the attention over spans of typically Tarkovskian stasis. Donatas Banionis is sympathetic as the cosmonaut sent to investigate disappearances on the space station orbiting the planet Solaris, only to be confronted by his past in the guise of his dead wife, magnetically portrayed by Natalya Bondarchuk. The ending is either a revelation or a conceit, depending on your viewpoint.

On the DVD: Solaris reproduces impressively on DVD in widescreen–which is really essential here–and Eduard Artemiev’s ambient score comes over with pristine clarity. There are over-dubs in English and French, plus subtitles in 12 languages. An extensive stills gallery, detailed filmographies for cast and crew, and comprehensive biographies of Tarkovsky and author Stanislaw Lem are valuable extras, as are the interviews with Bondarchuk and Tarkovsky’s sister and an amusing 1970s promo-film for Banionis. It would have been better had the film been presented complete on one disc, instead of stretched over two. Even so, the overall package does justice to a powerful and disturbing masterpiece. –Richard Whitehouse

Solaris – Criterion Collection

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The American Way a.k.a; Riders Of The Storm

Posted by Notcot on May 24, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: / 5 ( Reviews)

Product Description
Very rare mid-80’s cult film, also known as RIDERS OF THE STORM.
It’s a satirical drama about the last trip for S & M TV, America’s most popular and controversial pirate tv station, which broadcasts from an old B29 bomber aircraft and is crewed by a very diverse bunch of Vietnam veterans.
Dennis Hopper (Easy Rider, Speed, Waterworld) stars as the Captain, S & M’s boss, and he and his crew set out on their final flight to try to expose the first woman candidate for US President, Mrs Willa Westinghouse, as a warmonger and deviant..

The American Way a.k.a; Riders Of The Storm

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