King of Queens- The Complete Fifth Season Movie Streaming

January 14th, 2010 by lana4619754
King of Queens- The Complete Fifth Season Movie Streaming. King of Queens- The Complete Fifth Season Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: King of Queens- The Complete Fifth Season
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King of Queens- The Complete Fifth Season is available for streaming or downloading.

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I love this show, I have been following through all the seasons and just bought the 6th one coming soon also. Bad news is that some shows are old and came from previous seasons but I don’t mind at all because it always keeps me entertained! Contains 25 episodes in 3 discs

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1. Arthur, Spooner - Carrie has to work the graveyard shift, and Doug can’t sleep until he discovers that having Arthur watch TV with him in bed guarantees sweet dreams.

2. Window Pain - Doug Carrie’s new neighbors seem to have it all, and Carrie is afraid they’ll think she and Doug are too middle class.

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3. Holy Mackerel - Doug and Carrie run into their neighborhood priest and decide to go to church and end up competing to see who’s holier.

4. Kirbed Enthusiasm - When Deacon asks Doug to coach his son’s peewee football team, Doug realizes his dream of playing semi-pro ball is still alive.

5.Mammary Lane - Carrie babysits for her boss’s young son, who turns out to be a little too mature and Doug gets into trouble at the bowling alley.

6. Business Affairs - Doug becomes jealous of Carrie’s friendship with a male co-worker and Arthur has to deal with a new dog on his daily walk.

7. Flame Resistant - Doug’s high school flame returns to town and Carrie feels threatened by her relationship with Carrie’s mother in law.

8. Flash Photography - A boring wedding brings out the prankster in doug and he decides to take a photo of his own party favor.

9.Connect Four - Carrie winds four Knicks tickets but theres something a little “off” about the couple she and Doug invite to the games.

10. Loaner Car - Newly divorced Deacon wants his family’s Thanksgiving to be perfect and Carrie steps in to try to save the day.

11. Mentalo Case - Christmas is here and everyone knows exactly what they want.

12. Jung Frankenstein - After an egg rolleating contest leads to a disastrous night out, Doug decides to see a therapist about his love for food.

13. Attention Deficit - Carrie is worried about her upcoming job evaluation and Doug is obsessed with making sure his Super Bowl party is the best.

14. Prints Charming - When Doug and Carrie accidently pick up another family’s photo, they realize their life isn’t as exciting as it could be.

15. Animal Attraction - It’s Valentine’s Day and love is in the air. Carrie gives boyfriend advice to Holly, Arthur and Spence double date and Doug drives a cargo of penguins to Albany.

16. Golden Moldy - A dream vacation in St. Croix turns into a nightmare when Doug and Carrie find out they cant afford to spend any money.

17. S’poor House - When the Heffernan home is attacked by mold they can’t pay to have it fixed, Doug tries to put Carrie on a budget.

18. Steve Moscow - Doug and Carrie hire a temperamental Rusian mold expert to fix their house. All goes well until his crew starts to disappear in the middle of the job.

19. Cowardly Lyin’ - Doug lies his way out of going to the opera, and Carrie wonders if he’s afraid to tell her the truth.

20. Driving Reign - Things get competitive when Danny gets a job as an IPS driver and Doug has to show him the ropes.

21. Clothes Encounter - When Carrie tries to stop spending so much on clothes, she learns a little trick called Wear it and return it.

22. Queens Bro Bridge - Arthur reveals that he owns a house with his hated half brother Skitch and Doug tries to get them to reconcile.

23. Dog Shelter - While visiting his parents in Florida Doug finds out that they’ve been hiding more than a few things from him about his childhood.

24. Taste buds - Carrie always gives in to her father’s demands, so Doug decides to use Arthur to get what he wants.

25. Bed Spread - They can’t afford a new bed, so Doug and Carrie get Deacon’s old twin beds. They are forced to sleep apart, which might not beas bad as it sounds.

My name is Ben McCosker, and I’m from England. King of Queens has not been given the most prominent time-slot on our terrestrial channel four over here, so it probably hasn’t acquired the audience it deserves. The Paramount Comedy Channel has treated it very well however. It is a fantastic show. Kevin James, Leah Remini and Jerry Stiller do excellent work and are believable as a family unit.

Unfortunately, I can’t submit an episode list for this set because over here, the show is on daily-which is great-but it is hard to know when one season ends and another begins, unlike shows that are syndicated successively, an episode per week.

I can only vouch that it is a fantastically funny show. I have seasons one and two on dvd and intend to collect them all-I just can’t afford them all at once, which is a shame.

One of my favourite lines from the show is from the season 2 premiere “Queasy Rider”. Kevin James’ character, ‘Doug’, and Jerry Stiller’s character, ‘Arthur’, are discussing motorcycles and Arthur remarks on the,

“comradery of your gang brothers”

Doug is naturally surprised by this and proceeds to ask Arthur if he was in a gang, to which Arthur replies,

“not really…I asked them to let me in, but they drank heavily all weekend and beat me pretty severely.”

absolutely golden! If you love good comedy, you’ll love the King of Queens and should purchase seasons one through as many as they manufacture!

CBS, if you ever read these reviews, you should definitely renew King of Queens for this fall, it’s brilliant and you know it!

Ben McCosker

Stream Targets Online

January 13th, 2010 by lana4619754
Stream Targets Online. Stream Targets Online.

Movie Title: Targets
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In the early 1960s, celebrated director Peter Bogdanovich (1971’s THE LAST PICTURE SHOW; 1972’s WHAT’S UP, DOC?; 1973’s PAPER MOON, et al.) was just starting his career in the motion-picture industry as an interviewer and critic. By the middle of the decade, he was working as a technical assistant for renowned low-budget producer/director Roger Corman, with whom he developed a good working relationship and a great mutual respect.

Impressed with Bogdanovich’s creative and aesthetic contributions to the projects of others on his staff, Corman offered him the opportunity to write and direct a horror cheapie of his own, and of course, Bogdanovich jumped at the chance. But this would be a true test of Bogdanovich’s mettle, Corman warned, because there would be three restrictions placed upon the project: Bogdanovich must keep the cost of making the film within its meager budget; the film must make prudent use of footage edited out of Corman’s earlier cheapie, THE TERROR; and the film must feature actor Boris Karloff (yes, THE Boris Karloff, who was contractually indebted to Corman’s production studio for one last film). The result? TARGETS, Bogdanovich’s suspensful and intriguing two-pronged study of the effects of unrelenting ennui.

In the film, Karloff portrays Byron Orlok, an aged horror star of yesteryear who, despite opposition from his assistant and a director friend, wants to retire from filmmaking. The world has become so apathetic towards violence, he believes, that everyday events can sometimes be scarier than any of his fright flicks, and thereby his work has become passé.

Tim O’Kelly plays a dissatisfied young husband whose lack of genuine success is making it difficult for him to live in the shadow of his overbearing father. When he finally reaches his breaking point, he stoically murders his wife and parents, after which he takes his father’s rifles and goes on a sniping spree.

The two stories converge at a drive-in theater, where Byron Orlok is preparing to make a public appearance (and where he plans to deliver his swan song and announce his retirement to his fans). After shooting at passing cars on a nearby highway, the sniper hightails it to the drive-in, being drawn there when he notices Orlok’s name on the marquee. When the two men actually meet, the ennui in the lives of each finally comes to a head, but with quite different consequences.

The performance that Karloff delivered in TARGETS is arguably one of the best of his career. But it wasn’t much of a stretch for him, to be honest, as the film was shot just a few years before his death and he was, therefore, merely playing himself. Peter Bogdanovich not only directed the film, he also played Sammy Michaels, the director friend of Orlok who is trying to talk the actor out of retiring. A beautiful young asian woman named Nancy Hsueh played Orlok’s personal assistant, and she did an excellent job of complementing both Karloff and Bogdanovich. (Her performance really is outstanding, especially considering that she plays a secondary character, and it’s a shame that she didn’t go on to greater recognition before her death in 1981.)

Tim O’Kelly also derserves some kudos for the work he did as the discontented sniper. The role required little dialogue, so O’Kelly had to express most of his feelings and thoughts through facial expressions. It is really amazing to see the dichotomy of emotion–sometimes a mix of boredom and desperation, sometimes both anger and sadness–that he was able to convey at any given moment.

By the way, Bogdanovich did comply, for the most part, with Corman’s requisites. Though production did go a bit over budget, TARGETS was still a low-budget film, even by the standards of the 1960s. (Since it was both critically acclaimed and a commercial success, the film actually earned a moderate profit for Corman’s studio.) And obviously Karloff was, as required, the star of the film. But what of those snippets of footage from THE TERROR that Bogdanovich had to add in? They were were used as the “movie” that plays at the drive-in just before the Orlok character is scheduled to address his fans. Clever, eh?

Priase to Paramount for finally releasing TARGETS on DVD; the long-awaited disc is just fantastic! Though it doesn’t appear as if much, if any, restoration was done, the print that was used for the transfer seems to be in very good shape. Colors are crisp and vibrant, and there are few intrusive wear artifacts. There are few extras, but an interesting feature commentary with director and co-star Bogdanovich is included. And at the going retail price, this DVD is a steal! Not often is such an excellent gem offered at for so little, especially one that has gained as big a cult following as this film has over the years.

This is certainly one film that is a must-own for Karloff fans. And those who love well-made, suspenseful thriller will be remiss if they don’t add TARGETS to their collection.

The story of how this film was made is almost as interesting as the film itself. Bogondavich was assigned a ridiculously short period of time by Roger Corman and a very small budget to come up with a contractual-obligation last film quickie for Karloff, with the only condition being that he had to incorporate scenes from the last two AIP Karloff films, flops that the studio was hoping to reawaken interest in. In just a few days, working on a shoestring, first-timer Bogdonavich comes up with this great, self-reflexive, funny, and disturbing film about an aging horror film star who wants to retire, because he feels his old gentle style of scaring people can’t compete with modern horrors such as serial killers. This means that the “showdown” at the end of the film, where the sniper fires FROM BEHIND THE SCREEN, is not only great plotting, but thematically relevant; throughout the film, we’re asked to consider our desire to watch horror movies in the first place. Anyone who really likes THINKING about cinema should love this — it belongs on the shelf with PEEPING TOM and REAR WINDOW. It also has one of the funniest things I’ve seen in cinema — a scene where Karloff catches his reflection in the mirror in an off-moment and, associating the image with years of monster movies, jumps in fear, before realizing it is only himself he’s looking at… A great little movie.

Watch Trouble Along the Way Movie Online

January 12th, 2010 by lana4619754
Watch Trouble Along the Way Movie Online. Watch Trouble Along the Way Movie Online.

Movie Title: Trouble Along the Way
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This movie features John Wayne not as a cowboy but as a football coach. It is not one of his most famous ones probably because it is not the genre of what most fans think of when they think of John Wayne, comedy. It is a good movie though. When I first watched it I was amazed. Everyone (from Wayne to the actress that plays his daughter) does an excellent job. John Wayne’s first role was in a silent in which he played a football player, and he also played football at USC for a couple of years with Ward Bond. So it is a subject he knows well. Overall, it gives light to a new side of the Duke, the comical side (which isn’t bad). It isn’t one of the best, I grant you, but it is great because it shows Duke’s acting talents with a great script and cast.

I thought this was a very good movie. It was different having John Wayne as a football coach instead of a cowboy. I reccomend this movie to people who like John Wayne movies, and to people who like older movies.The reason why I watch these movies is because my family likes them so I watch them to.

Streaming Heroes - Season One Online

January 11th, 2010 by lana4619754
Streaming Heroes - Season One Online. Streaming Heroes - Season One Online.

Movie Title: Heroes - Season One
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Heroes - Season One is available for streaming or downloading.

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What if you discovered that you had a superpower — great strength, flight, teleportation, or amazing healing? And what if you could use it to save the world?

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Superheroes are everywhere in entertainment, from comic books to movies. But few manage to be as intelligent, geeky and well-written as “Heroes,” a solid comic-book style TV series that explores the repercussions of several “ordinary” people who discover that they have strange — and sometimes dangerous — powers.

It opens with Mohinder Suresh (Sendhil Ramamurthy) reflecting on the human quest for knowledge — even knowledge that we shouldn’t have — right before learning that his father has been killed, possibly murdered. Suresh’s dad believed that “special” people were cropping up, much like in X-Men.

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And we are introduced to the “heroes”: stripper Niki (Ali Larter) harbors a secret dark side, cheerleader Claire (Hayden Panettiere) heals from any injury, Japanese Dilbert Hiro (Masi Oka) can bend time and space, Senatorial candidate Nathan (Adrian Pasdar) is able to fly, his brother Peter (Milo Ventimiglia) can copy others’ powers, a cop Matt (Greg Grunberg) can read minds, and junkie artist Isaac (Santiago Cabrera) sees the future. There are plenty of others that show up, but these start the ball rolling.

While Claire and Hiro explore the potential of their new powers, Niki and her son try to elude some hired thugs –and end up overwhelmed by her dark side, and framed. And Suresh searches for the answer to his father’s death, only to find that his genetics research is involved with the “special people,” and that a superpowered serial killer is targeting them.

Even worse, Hiro takes a trip to New York (five weeks in the future), and sees the city destroyed by a massive blast — as does Isaac, through his paintings. How to stop it? As a future Hiro tells them, “save the cheerleader, save the world.” The Heroes begin slowly coming into contact, in a haze of dreams, visions, murder, swords and death — and to stop the serial killer and save New York, more sacrifices may be made…

Unlike most shows about people with superpowers, “Heroes” isn’t really about the action or flashy battles. It’s half epic save-the-world-as-a-team story, and half exploration of how real, ordinary people would react if they suddenly found out that they had superpowers, and how this would change — or NOT change — their lives.

The storylines are incredibly intricate and complex, since there are a dozen subplots and a lot of time travel, and plenty of hints at future events. The careful painting of all these storylines even further in two episodes, one of which shows the pre-Heroic lies of the characters (and how Syler became a murderous terror), and another that shows what the future will be like if they don’t change it. It’s not a pretty picture.

These complex storylines are enhanced by lots of suspense and tightly directed action, and the makers always know how to throw in a shocking twist, such as a sword-carrying future Hiro showing up.. But there is also some poignancy, and very dark humor from time to time (Claire waking up in mid-autopsy, or twisting her broken neck around). Not to mention some great, sometimes geeky dialogue (”Where did you learn all this?” “X-men No. 143 when Kitty Pryde time travels!”).

The actors are pretty much all good — Larter gives a great double performance, Zachary Quinto is a wonderfully twisted villain, and Panettiere gives a good performance as a teen whose adolescence has a lot more than hormones in store. Masi Oka is the standout, though — his Hiro is sweet, endearing, geeky, heroic, sad, kindly, funny and thoroughly lovable. The scene where he arrives in New York is adorable.

The “Heroes” are only starting their journey, and the first season of this geeky hit is a must-see for fans of intelligent sci-fi drama. And I doubt their journey is over…

I cannot emphasize enough that this is a stellar example of the power of character driven TV that follows a continuous plotline. If you’re looking for something that you can tune into and out of then this isn’t the show for you. If, however, you’re looking for TV that is engaging, intriguing, and innovative then this is the show for you.

My preferred activity is normally reading and I don’t watch much TV because, frankly, I find most TV subpar. Imagine my delight when I tuned into this show mostly out of curiosity and ended the season a diehard fan. I never missed an episode and looked forward to each new one with great anticipation. I give most of the credit for this to where I feel the credit is due: the writing. The writers for this show did a masterful job of creating an involving story arc and in giving the viewer just enough information to keep him or her coming back for more. Answers to various questions were carefully dolled out over the course of the season so that the viewer never feels frustrated by too little story dragged out over too much time. The pacing of this season was, in a word, perfect.

The other reason to devour this show is the characters and, in particular, the endearing and wonderful Hiro. My favorite of the characters, Hiro exemplifies that childlike joy that some people possess when they discover they are particularly talented at something. He provides comic relief without being too silly and his earnestness make him very lovable. His faithful friend and sidekick Ando is certainly not to be overlooked either and these two make for a truly dynamic duo. As far as complexity goes, my vote goes to Claire who starts out struggling with typical teenager desires and grows and develops over the course of the season until she is easily the most sympathetic character.

Excellent writing and excellent characters would mean little without the acting to back them up, though, and this show has that in abundance. All of the actors imbue their characters with life and believability so that even though the bulk of them are possessed of superhuman powers they still seem like the kind of people who could be your nextdoor neighbors.

I simply can’t say enough good things about this show. I encourage everyone who enjoys really engaging, story and character driven, and thought-provoking television to watch this show.

Watch The Best of Victor Borge Act One and Two Online

January 11th, 2010 by lana4619754
Watch The Best of Victor Borge Act One and Two Online. Watch The Best of Victor Borge Act One and Two Online.

Movie Title: The Best of Victor Borge Act One and Two
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Many years ago I saw a television special starring Victor Borge. At the time, I had little knowledge of classical music and I did not really find it interesting. Nowadays, however, I listen to classical music all the time and I am able to appreciate the jokes, so I recently watched this video of Borge in concert.

First off, Victor Borge is a very funny man. Not only are his facial expressions and body language humourous, but his witty remarks and plays on words show the true, spirited nature of his character. Secondly, he is a very talented pianist. This is especially apparent during the last 15 to 20 minutes of the video where he plays a series of waltzes and lullabies. It is easy to see why he was a top-notch performer back in the 1930s — and he still is to this very day.

The live concert on this video contains many of his classic routines. Some of the musical comedies include the Salieri Opera (which I have also seen listed as A Mozart Opera — same routine), the 2nd Rhapsody by “Fliszt”, and his accompaniment to Marylyn Mulvey during an aria. Equally funny are some of his non-musical comedy routines, including Inflationary Language and Phonetic Punctuation [sput]. These acts are even funnier when viewed on video than when I first listened to them on CD. The video has enough routines to keep you in stitches for at least an hour after it’s over.

Overall, I highly recommend this video to anyone who has and has not witnessed the comedy in music of Victor Borge. You will not be disappointed by this well-performed one-man show that has delighted viewers/listeners for over four decades.

Victor Borge is as funny as ever in this 90-minute live performance. He is thoroughly engaged, very lively, and manages to deliver even his most common routines with such energy and humor that you feel as if you’re seeing them for the first time.

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That said, the recording has some flaws. The first you will notice is that the video quality, though not distracting, is nevertheless poor. It’s painfully obvious that this DVD was mde from a VHS cassette. The one that most disappointed me most, though, is that “The Best of Victor Borge Acts I and II” is just that–the best of them, not the whole thing. Seven years ago, I purchased a videocassette of this same concert. Since the tape has gotten worn to the point of being unusable, I purchased this DVD expecting to have all of Acts I and II. Sadly, several routines are fully removed, including Borge’s birthday sketches and his performance of the Moonlight Sonata. His performance of “Clear the Saloon” and several other pieces have also been cut from the recording. For this reason, although I don’t outright regret the purchase, I’m profoundly disappointed with it.

Mansfield Park Streaming

January 9th, 2010 by lana4619754
Mansfield Park Streaming. Mansfield Park Streaming.

Movie Title: Mansfield Park
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…And so we have “Mansfield Park”, “loosely” based on the Jane Austen novel of same name (although, as is mentioned in the credits, Austen’s letters and non-fiction writings are also used, particularly for dialogue). The characters keep their original names, but, for the most part, not their personalities. The heroine, Fanny Price, is changed from the quiet, deeply moral character of the book into a feisty tomboy. The story follows the basic threads of the novel, but adds several subplots and individual scenes that you are not likely to find in any Austen novel (Fanny’s uncle giving her the once over, Mary Crawford giving her the once over, etc.). So why the four stars?
Well, as an adaptaion, the film only merits two at best. But taken by itself and judged as a movie, I have to admit it’s quite entertaining. While not the Fanny of the book, as played by Frances O’Conner the Fanny of the film is extremely likable. Embeth Davidtz and the very appealing Alessandro Nivola have a lot of fun with their characters; Nivola in particular capturing the mixture of sleaziness and vulnerablity that makes the womanizing Henry Crawford ever so slightly attractive. The visuals are sumptuous, and the dialogue is laced with Austen’s unique wit, much of it not in the novel. My only real problems with the film are with the slavery subplot (icky and distracting) and Johnny Lee Miller as Fanny’s true love. Changing the chracters personalities also changes their motivations, and the actions of Edward, while making sense in the book, are not logical in the film. As a result, Miller’s Edward comes off as wimpy and indecisive and detracts from the story.
Other than these two quibbles, I quite like this little movie. You are more likely to enjoy it, I think, if you aren’t comparing it to the novel the entire time, as it really has very little to do with Austen’s story. Taken as a straight period film, though, “Mansfield Park” is an enjoyable way to spend a rainy afternoon.

This movie SEEMS to be Mansfield Park. The characters have all the right names, the action has a superficial resemblance to that of the novel, but there all similarities end!

This is a very modern Mansfield Park, regardless of the early 19th century setting. Viewers are caught up in a tale of the evils of slavery and the value of women’s scholarship. Not exactly the focus of the novel!

There are some redeeming features. The costuming is beautiful; Mr. Rushworth, Julia, and Maria are gratifyingly self-absorbed and absurd; the differences between the Price and Bertram households are well-drawn. Austen fans will enjoy quotes from Fanny’s writing: they are taken from the early stories of Austen herself.

However, the makers of this movie have made Fanny Price a very different sort of creature from the novel. Blooming and beautiful, sometimes sharp-tongued, she has little in common with the character in the novel.

The director has chosen to introduce elements not present in the novel. Sir Thomas, for example, due to a family business in trading slaves (never mentioned in the original), has gone from a dignified, rather stuffy but honorable man in the novel, to a degraded and rather disturbing man in the film. In the movie, he looks Fanny up and down as if she is a slave for sale, and arranges the famous ball of the novel as a way of “selling” her in marriage. And having brought in the anti-slavery subplot, the director simply dismisses it at the end, saying “Sir Thomas eventually gave up his interests in Antigua.”

Sharply lacking is any of the satiric eye Austen cast on society. We are given the melodrama, but little of Austen’s sharp wit. Very few of Aunt Norris’ snobby ways have made it into the movie; the great scenes involving the “improvements” at Sotherton are missing. Fanny’s brother William is missing entirely.

Why bother to even mention this is based on an Austen novel? There is little enough resemblance.

Hair Streaming

January 9th, 2010 by lana4619754
Hair Streaming. Hair Streaming.

Movie Title: Hair
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Hair is available for streaming or downloading.

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If “Hair” were only a period piece, it would still be wonderful entertainment - but it’s so much more. Previous reviewers have already spoken for me in praising this film’s astonishing energy, its fine acting (not stereotypes, but iconic characters), and its forever-fresh-as-a-summer-flower soundtrack. I can only agree with them completely, and add my positive vote to theirs. This is a highly (no pun intended) recommended film!

But I’d like to emphasize something else now. Those reviewers who complain about the film being dated are missing an important point. Love, friendship, joy, exuberance - these things are never out of date. And it raises an interesting question: why are some people so embarrassed and downright afraid of the so-called “hippie-dippy” aspect of this movie, and the years it captures so well? Possibly because it goes against the current wisdom, which claims that the uglier and nastier and more downbeat something is, the truer it is.

Well, no one is claiming that this is a perfect world - far from it! - but there is still plenty of joy and beauty and magic to be found in it! Yes, in too many ways it’s a more cynical world now … which is all the more reason to celebrate and uphold those naïve, utterly necessary values. Don’t be afraid of looking foolish, don’t worry about having to be cool and detached all the time, don’t be afraid to embrace the Universe and exult in it - let the sunshine in!

I saw “Hair” three times in two days when it first came out in the theaters, and I have watched it every chance I’ve had since then. I was 12 when the Vietnam War ended, but the anti-war passion of this film hits me anyway. Beyond that, there are great performances by Treat Williams, Beverly D’Angelo (who, as one other reviewer pointed out, is one of the great underrated actresses working today) and John Savage. And beyond THAT there is the astonishing music — “Aquarius” (sing along, now), “Hair”, “I Got Life” and “Let the Sun Shine”, which makes tears run down my face every time I see it, even if I see it for the 100th time. This is a magnificent piece of filmmaking, and I don’t care if the Broadway show was better or different or more soulful or whatever — each product stands or falls on its own. “Hair” stands proud 20 years after it was made, and I think it’s going to stand proud for a long time to come. To the reader in Israel — I hope you get to go to Woodstock!

Streaming Here’s Lucy: Season Two Online

December 16th, 2009 by lana4619754
Streaming Here's Lucy: Season Two Online. Streaming Here’s Lucy: Season Two Online.

Movie Title: Here’s Lucy: Season Two
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Here’s Lucy: Season Two is available for streaming or downloading.

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Season One of Here’s Lucy is not even out yet, and Season Two is all ready to order for it’s November 3, 2009 release! This is ample news for Lucy fans that these shows will be out snappily, and I hope the film quality is objective as grand as the snappily releases of this vast series! Season Two starts out with a family waddle out west, and after that, the colossal guest stars objective retain on coming present after reveal! The first of these guest stars is Patty Andrews, who re-enacts the well-known WWII Andrews Sisters singing act with Lucy and daughter Lucie Arnaz- they are honest expansive! There are so many broad performances by Milton Berle, Paul Winchell, Gary Morton, Johnny Carson, Ed McMahon, Jack LaLanne, Liberace, Lawrence Welk, Ann-Margret, Wally Cox, Alan Hale, Wayne Newton, Carol Burnett and many others. Even the fabulous Vivian Vance returns to guest star as Lucy’s friend Vivian Jones. Lucy’s right life 77 year primitive mother DeDe Ball (she passed away in 1977 at age 84) is seen as the woman in the audience on the Tonight Indicate with Johnny Carson. DeDe was in the viewing audience of every single expose of I Admire Lucy, The Lucy Reveal and Here’s Lucy. They say you can hear her distinctive laugh and even hear her talking (DeDe always said UH-OH when her daughter Lucy was in grief) on the background tracks in Lucy’s shows, but this is the rarest time that you actually pick up to observe Lucy’s mom on a exhibit! This second season is honest incredible with so many gargantuan stars and performances, one of the best being Desi Arnaz Jr. and Ann-Margret singing together and if Season Three comes out unbiased as lickety-split, it won’t be long before we accept to peek the highest rated demonstrate of Here’s Lucy, which is the first demonstrate of Season Three-Lucy Meets The Burton’s!

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Featuring on Here’s Lucy are:

Lucille Ball as Lucille Carter

Gale Gordon as Harrison Otis (Uncle Harry) Carter

Lucie Arnaz as Kim Carter

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Desi Arnaz Jr. as Craig Carter

Season 2 Episodes:

1. (22 Sep 69) LUCY JOINS THE AIR FORCE ACADEMY- Allotment ONE- Lucy wants to come by Craig into the Air Force Academy.

2. (29 Sep 69) LUCY JOINS THE AIR FORCE ACADEMY- Fragment TWO- Lucy gets caught in the middle of some Air Force War Games.

3. (6 Oct 69) LUCY AND THE INDIAN CHIEF- A Navajo Indian chief and Lucy tie the knot.

4. (13 Oct 69) LUCY RUNS THE RAPIDS- In Arizona, Lucy rides the rapids on her mattress.

5. (20 Oct 69) LUCY AND HARRY’S TONSILS- Uncle Harry doesn’t like his hospital discontinue until a sexy nurse takes over his care.

6. (27 Oct 69) LUCY AND THE ANDREWS SISTERS- Lucy, Kim and Patty Andrews re-create the gargantuan Andrews Sisters with Craig playing Bing Crosby. (Patty Andrews and Gary Morton guest star)

7. (3 Nov 69) LUCY’S BURGLAR ALARM- After being robbed, Lucy makes her gain home burglar dread system.

8. (10 Nov 69) LUCY AT THE DRIVE-IN MOVIE- Lucy and Harry dress up as worn hippies to view on Kim at a drive in movie.

9. (17 Nov 69) LUCY AND THE Broken-down CAR DEALER- Blissful Charlie sells Kim and Craig a lemon and Lucy and Harry must map to return it. (Milton Berle guest stars)

10. (24 Nov 69) LUCY THE CEMENT WORKER- Lucy becomes a cement worker to salvage an antique ring she lost in wet cement. (Paul Winchell guest stars)

11. (1 Dec 69) LUCY AND JOHNNY CARSON- Lucy sneaks the family into The Tonight Display, and wins Stump The Band. The prize is dinner at the Brown Derby, where by sheer co-incidence Johnny and Ed are eating. Lucy thinks the free dinner is with them and joins them. This is so reminiscent of I Appreciate Lucy’s expose at the Brown Derby with William Holden! (Johnny Carson and Ed McMahon guest star, with Lucy’s sincere life Mom DeDe Ball as the woman in the audience)

12. (8 Dec 69) LUCY AND THE GENERATION GAP- Kim and Craig build on a school play with a generation gap theme and Lucy and Harry play the parents.

13. (15 Dec 69) LUCY AND THE BOGIE AFFAIR- Kim and Craig rep a sheepdog and name it after Humphrey Bogart (Bogie), but soon obtain out Bogie is a she and must catch homes for the 9 puppies. (Jack LaLanne and Lord Nelson (the dog) guest star)

14. (22 Dec 69) LUCY PROTECTS HER JOB- Harry thinks Lucy is overworked and hires an assistant, only Lucy thinks Harry is trying to replace her.

15. (29 Dec 69) LUCY THE Great MOTHER- Kim and Craig find several jobs to pay for unusual phones, but Lucy has to gain in for them when they can’t retain up with all their obligations.

16. (5 Jan 70) LUCY AND LIBERACE- Craig borrows a candleabra from Liberace while on a scavenger hunt and when Lucy finds it she thinks it’s stolen and returns it. (Liberace and Paul Winchell guest star)

17. (12 Jan 70) LUCY THE LAUNDRESS- Lucy drives her car into a Chinese Laundry, then must work there to pay for the damages.

18. (19 Jan 70) LUCY AND LAWRENCE WELK- Lucy brags to visiting Viv that she knows Lawrence Welk, whom she has never even met. (Lawrence Welk and Vivian Vance guest star)

19. (26 Jan 70) LUCY AND VIV VISIT TIJUANA- Lucy and Viv rep Harry to drive them to Mexico, but procure Harry into distress when Customs finds diamonds in a stuffed monkey. (Vivian Vance guest stars)

20. (2 Feb 70) LUCY AND ANN-MARGRET- Craig decides he would like to be a songwriter and is asked to deny his novel song Country Magic on Ann-Margret’s television demonstrate. The duet’s performance is really grand! (Ann-Margret guest stars)

21. (9 Feb 70) LUCY AND WALLY COX- Lucy helps change Wally Manley’s image, so his father Moose Manley won’t be ashamed of his extinct son. (Wally Cox and Alan Hale (Skipper on Gilligan’s Island) guest star)

22. (16 Feb 70) LUCY AND WAYNE NEWTON- Lucy and family return a lost horse to Wayne Newton and fetch jobs on Wayne’s ranch to glean cash to study some Las Vegas shows. (Wayne Newton guest stars)

23. (23 Feb 70) LUCY TAKES OVER- Uncle Harry can’t pay a sizable sum of money he owes Lucy, Kim and Craig on an former promissory ticket, so Lucy takes over the office.

24. (2 Mar 70) LUCY AND CAROL BURNETT- Lucy and her friend Carol Krausmeyer compete against each other in the Secretary Shapely contest. (Carol Burnett guest stars)

When MPI Home Video announced early in 2009 that they would release all the seasons of “Here’s Lucy” they were not kidding. Even before “Here’s Lucy-Season 1″ has been released MPI has announced that the second season’s worth of episodes will be coming out in November. If these boxsets continue to be released in this manner (2 sets per year), it means that we fans will have the entire “Here’s Lucy” library of shows by the demolish of 2011!

The second year of “Here’s Lucy” continued Lucille Ball’s dominance in the national Nielsens. Finishing the year at #6 proved to the audience and critics that “Here’s Lucy’s” success was no fluke: audiences watched the series in droves and the demonstrate became a Monday night staple like its predecessors “I Adore Lucy” and “The Lucy Demonstrate”. Some amazing guest stars popped up in the second year including Johnny Carson, Lawrence Welk, Carol Burnett, Ann-Margret, Milton Berle, and even Liberace. Vivian Vance came support for two episodes and her chemistry with Lucy is evident.

This site features 24 good shows that are remastered from their unusual prints, is 610 minutes long, and the sound is English audio with English subtitles. Among the many bonus features in this location are the following: fresh video introductions by Lucie Arnaz and Desi Arnaz Jr., a featurette called “Here’s Lucy On Vacation”, “Let’s Talk To Lucy- a loss interview with Lucy friend Carol Burnett, Special Footage, Treasures from Lucy’s Vault: a “Here’s Lucy” slideshow, Production Files, and Current CBS and syndication promos.
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Watch A Clockwork Orange Movie Online

December 15th, 2009 by lana4619754
Watch A Clockwork Orange Movie Online. Watch A Clockwork Orange Movie Online.

Movie Title: A Clockwork Orange
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A Clockwork Orange is available for streaming or downloading.

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In 1964 director/producer Stanley Kubrick created the nuclear war comedic masterpiece “Dr. Strangelove: Or How I Learned To Terminate Worrying and Admire The Bomb”. He followed that with the science fiction masterpiece “2001: A Status Oddysee”. Stanley Kubrick would near his creative peak with his next film. An Adaption of Anothony Burgess’novel “A Clockwork Orange.” Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange is one of those films that you will either savor or loathe. The film centers around the character of Alexander DeLarge (played to perfection by Malcolm McDowell) a 15 year obsolete “droog” who with his friends Pete (Michael Tarn), Georgie (James Marcus), and Unlit (Warren Clarke) drink Milk Laced with drugs at the local “Milkbar” and then go out on the town at night, doing base things to people. During one incident Alex is captured and taken to prison. He finds out about a treatment that can salvage him of prison. He goes through with the treatment (which will build him sick when he attempts to commit an act of violence), is released from prison and thrown assist into the world, unable to defend himself. Out of all the things that get this movie immense, the number one element is the performance of Malcolm McDowell as Alex. The entire movie revolves around him so if McDowell’s performance isn’t top notch then the movie isn’t top notch. McDowell was in his slow twenties when he made this movie. In the new Alex is 15 years former. So although being worthy older then his character McDowell plays the adventureous youth wonderfully. Suprisingly McDowell was not nominated for an Academy Award. Another really strong element is the music. Never in my life have I seen a movie (non musical) where the music plays such an significant role in a film. Gioacchino Rossini’s “The Thieving Magpie” during the fight scence against the rival droogs. “The William Notify Overture” played 5 times too swiftly during the orgy scene and the exercise of Ludwig Van Beethoven’s “Symphony no. 9″ are impartial a few examples of how music plays an essential role in this film. As far as things being nefarious with the movie. The only actual thing is the lack of any sincere supporting cast. Definite there are a few standout performances. Particularily James Marcus as Georgie and in no means are the rest of the supporting cast abominable actors. There impartial isn’t a dependable supporing cast there. But McDowell’s performace makes up for it. This film get’s 5 stars because of 3 things. Number one is the performance of Malcolm McDowell. Number two is the utilize of music in such a different and novel plan and number three is the originality of it. This movie came out in 1971 and I haven’t seen any movie like it that came out before or since then. A Clockwork Orange was nominated for several Academy Awards including “best portray” and “best director” but it lost in all categories to William Friedkin’s “The French Connection”

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In which high government officials are seen as the factual equivalents of street thugs (objective better at p.r.), demonstrating that nothing has changed in 35 years.

The HD transfer is spectacular. This is how I remember the movie upon its opening in 1971. Pristine, startling, improbable.

Repeated viewings over the years of worn-out circuit prints, VHS and standard-def DVD had dimmed the movie’s capacity to astonish. Now, in HD, the lustrous brilliance, texture and color of the images are restored, and the richness of the images makes a stout inequity to the film’s impact. The sound is also pleasurable — certainly splendid to the unusual theatrical release in the days of optical soundtracks.

In addition to the beauty of the Hi-Def narrate, this is worth owning because (at last) it is a stop approximation of the current theatrical aspect ratio (conceal shape) ; the theatrical presentation being, after all, the venue for which Kubrick tranquil his shots. (Ignore those who claim he meant this film to be seen in full-frame 1.33:1, as in all the previous home video releases. He clearly created it to be seen in theaters, and in theaters he had the image matted to 1.66:1, which is very terminate to the aspect-ratio of this HD DVD.)

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Buy it; discover it on your big-screen 1080 HDTV in a murky room, uninterrupted. Dependable horrorshow!

This is a 2-disc “Special Edition,” with the same extras as the standard-def DVD in the unique (2007) boxed set: commentaries, trailer, current interviews with Wm. Friedkin, Sydney Pollack, Malcolm McDowell, Wendy Carlos, Mrs. Kubrick, others.

Then hope for a snappily HD release of “Barry Lyndon” (1975), Kubrick’s underappreciated masterpiece following “A Clockwork Orange,” which will also support greatly from High-Definition.
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Stream The Films of Kenneth Anger, Vol. 2 Movie Online

December 15th, 2009 by lana4619754
Stream The Films of Kenneth Anger, Vol. 2 Movie Online. Stream The Films of Kenneth Anger, Vol. 2 Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Films of Kenneth Anger, Vol. 2
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The Films of Kenneth Anger, Vol. 2 is available for streaming or downloading.

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Kenneth Infuriate, Volume Two gathers together Kenneth Anger’s work during his most influential period. “Scorpio Rising” is the standout, a homoerotic (brave by the standards of the day) semi-documentary (play the commentary) of joyful bikers in Coney Island which through exercise of montage and then original pop songs, some sacreligious elements (a dated religious film is spliced in) and film footage of Hollywood movies (Marlon Brando in the “Wild One”, James Dean) creates an avant masterwork, underground before the genre became tiresome. Influential on John Waters Gus Van Sant but surprisingly an admitted influence on Martin Scorcese and many other mainstream film makers (the utilize of the song “Blue Velvet” in an out of context fashion may have been lifted by a determined film maker) and the employ of pop songs in an ironic context was groundbreaking. The other films are less indispensable (”Kustom Kar Kommandos” is a film part never completed, “Invocation of My Demon Brother” is dated (Mick Jagger unsuccesfully trying out the Moog, soundtrack, the appearence of Anton Levay), “Rabbit’s Moon” is a shortened version of the far better version available on Volume I (which had a far more appropriate soundtrack) and “Lucifer Rising” has its moments and nice imagery but no more (the novel film on Aleister Crowley “The Man We Want to Hang” is an challenging bonus but no surprise) . So for overall exclaim I’d give this 4 stars but “Scorpio Rising”, plus the remastering of the films and soundtracks and the commentary occupy this up one bulky star and design this a neccessary engage for all enthusiastic in film history.

The Films of Kenneth Infuriate - Vol. 2 is another lovingly prepared DVD appreciate from San Francisco based Fantoma Films. Superior restoration from high definition masters on all 5 classic films, plus a bonus short. Commentaries by Kenneth Nettle himself are informative and express us the runt secrets that we want to know. The 48 page illustrated booklet is another well opinion out fragment. Scorpio Rising, Kustom Kar Kommandos, Invocation Of My Demon Brother, Rabbit’s Moon and the long awaited Lucifer Rising have never looked or sounded so estimable. Recall this one and like it.
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