FoneM8 – Car Charger For HTC Desire, Google Nexus One, HD mini, HD2, Legend, Wildfire
Product Description
The Car Charger features a Micro USB adapter for HTC phones with a Micro USB charging port.
* Work with all cars.
* Consist of a tangle proof cable.
* CE approved.
This car charger for your HTC is perfect for keeping your battery topped up whilst in the car, or keeping your phone going during a long journey. Simply plug in and charge, works in conjunction with your phones battery to automatically stop charging once the battery is full.
- Unique FoneM8 Product
- No Quibble Full Refund If not 100% Satisfied
- New Style Micro USB Connection
FoneM8 – Car Charger For HTC Desire, Google Nexus One, HD mini, HD2, Legend, Wildfire
FoneM8 – Car Charger For HTC Desire, Google Nexus One, HD mini, HD2, Legend
Product Description
The Car Charger features a Micro USB adapter for HTC phones with a Micro USB charging port.
* Work with all cars.
* Consist of a tangle proof cable.
* CE approved.
This car charger for your HTC is perfect for keeping your battery topped up whilst in the car, or keeping your phone going during a long journey. Simply plug in and charge, works in conjunction with your phones battery to automatically stop charging once the battery is full.
- Unique FoneM8 Product
- No Quibble Full Refund If not 100% Satisfied
- New Style Micro USB Connection
FoneM8 – Car Charger For HTC Desire, Google Nexus One, HD mini, HD2, Legend
The Crow
Amazon.co.uk Review
The Crow set the standard for dark and violent comic-book movies (like Spawn or director Alex Proyas’s superior follow-up, Dark City), but it will forever be remembered as the film during which star Brandon Lee (son of martial arts legend Bruce Lee) was accidentally killed on the set by a loaded gun. The filmmakers were able to digitally sample what they’d captured of Lee’s performance and piece together enough footage to make the film releasable. Indeed, it is probably more fascinating for that post-production story than for the tale on the screen. The Crow is appropriately cloaked in ominous expressionistic shadows, oozing urban dread and occult menace from every dank, concrete crack, but it really adds up to a simple and perfunctory tale of ritual revenge. Guided by a portentous crow (standing in for Poe’s raven), Lee plays a deceased rock musician who returns from the grave to systematically torture and kill the outlandishly violent gang of hoodlums who murdered him and his fiancée the year before. The film is worth watching for its compelling visuals and genuinely nightmarish, otherworldly ambience. –Jim Emerson