Archive for the ‘Sem categoria’ Category

download new release Mulan movies

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Download Mulan

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Mulan

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Mulan (Video Preview).avi16.28 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Mulan” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

Hi, I wanted to let you know that in one of the Princess Stories
(secret of Mulan) There is a little bug singing and it says some foul
language…my daughter watch the movie and started walking around
saying it….I am very very upset about this…I got her the movies for
her birthday and we just watched it and I heard the Foul Language, I
went back to where it says it made my daughter go to a different
room…went up to the speaker and it says what I thought it did…I
want something done about this…I don't appreciate getting a cute
little movie for my daughter and than hearing what we heard. Please let
me know what I can do about this because I am very mad about wasting
money on a movie that had foul language in it, that my daughter heard
and started to repeat.

watch Mulan full movie
watch movie
watch full movie online
divx movie trailer
Mulan full movies online
Mulan avi movies
Mulan full movies

watch english Proximity movies online

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Download Proximity

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Proximity

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Proximity (Video Preview).avi12.75 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Proximity” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

Torn from the headlines! Well, not really. I guess I’ve just been subjected to too many hours of Law And Order on A&E. Proximity, in every other conceivable way a by-the-numbers direct-to-video action flick, does confront the frustration a significant number of Americans have with the current legal system. Many families crave vengeance against those who have murdered their loved ones, only to have painful memories dredged up continually during countless years of appeals, various proceedings, and parole hearings. There are, I’m sure, quite a few victims who would leap at the opportunity to step outside the confines of the law for some “eye for an eye” style retribution. Proximity takes place in a world where one organization, for the right price, offers that sort of vengeance.

Rob Lowe stars as William Conroy, a former professor imprisoned for vehicular manslaughter after his mistress, who was also once his student, is killed in an alcohol-fueled accident. A chatty friend mentions that an exceedingly large number of inmates have died over the past couple of years, and that very night, Conroy hears his final gasps in a nearby cell. The powers-that-be fear that Conroy may know too much. After a botched attempt on his life, Conroy makes his escape and tries to make sense of the available clues with the help of his lawyer. He is, of course, pursued relentlessly, and Conroy’s family inevitably becomes embroiled in the conflict as well.

Aside from the moderately interesting idea of the dual intentions of the “Justice For The Victim’s Family” group, Proximity doesn’t diverge from the traditional action formula. Unsuccessful chase, exposition, unsuccessful chase, emotional moments with loved ones, unsuccessful chase, predictable plot revelation, unsuccessful chase…if you’ve ever watched TBS on a Sunday afternoon, you may not have sat through Proximity, but you’ve seen something awfully close. The presence of a pretty good cast — Lowe, of course, ubiquitous character actor Jonathan Banks (who will to me forever be Guy from Fired Up), and legendary second-tier action hero James Coburn — livens things up, as does the direction by newcomer Scott Ziehl (whose remake of Earth Vs. The Spider is slated to hit DVD next month).

Proximity is hopelessly clich?d and seems disinterested in bringing anything that may approximate originality to the genre. Taken for what it is, this is still an enjoyable, if unmemorable, way to kill an hour and a half.

Video: Proximity is presented at an aspect ratio of 1.85:1 and is enhanced for widescreen televisions. This is a recent enough production, despite the extensive amount of time that has passed between the DVD’s release and this review, that no print damage or noticeable speckling are present. The image is generally crisp and, when called for, boasts bold, vibrant colors. Shadow detail and black levels are both more than adequate, though nothing exceptional. There is some fine film grain present for much of Proximity, but nothing that seems in any way unnatural or out of place.

Audio: Proximity sports a Dolby Digital 5.1 track that’s surprisingly aggressive for a direct-to-video production. The subwoofer gets quite a workout from the handful of shoot-outs as well as the techno-lite score by Stephen Cullo (Belly), but the most memorable low-end activity is present in Conroy’s flashbacks to the fatal car accident. There’s a phenomenal amount of bass, and if readers really want to piss off their neighbors for whatever reason, these fairly brief moments of LFE rumbling certainly ought to do the trick. The surround channels also get some nice use, particularly during more action-driven scenes. Dialogue remains clear and discernable throughout, and, as is to be expected from such a recent release, the track is free of any hiss, pops, or crackling.

Proximity can also be viewed in English stereo surround or Spanish, and there are subtitles in both languages as well.

Supplements: There are lengthy biographies for director Scott Ziehl, Rob Lowe, James Coburn, Kelly Rowan (misspelled ‘Kelley’ in the menu), and Jonathan Banks, along with a full-frame trailer for Proximity and previews for Animal Factory, New Blood, A Better Way To Die, and Made Men.

Conclusion: Proximity is standard direct-to-video fare. I’m not really the sort of guy who keeps an eye out at Blockbuster every week for the latest shoot-’em-ups, but those that better fit that description may want to nuke a bag of popcorn and pick Proximity up as a rental. I wouldn’t recommend it as a purchase, though, particularly at its hefty list price of $29.95.
video download
avi movies
download movies
watch Proximity divx movie
Proximity movie to watch
download Proximity dvd movies
download Proximity movies

Enemy of the State dvd download

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Download Enemy of the State

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Enemy of the State

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Enemy of the State (Video Preview).avi10.50 MBDOWNLOAD

Enemy of the State **1/2 (out of 5) (1998)

Cast: Will Smith, Gene Hackman, Jon Voight, Lisa Bonet, Regina King

Directed by Tony Scott

  DC lawyer Robert Clayton Dean is the unwitting recipient of a tape recording of a murder. Not just any murder, but of an assassination made by none other than the senior advisor to the National Security Agency. With a privacy bill about to be passed affording almost unquestioned sanction for the NSA to do what it pleases, they are out to get this tape at any costs. Dean heads out on the run, but after they attempt to discredit him with his family, friends, workers and public he has nowhere to turn, especially since they have bugged all his clothes, tap all his phones and follow him everywhere he goes.

A truly wretched movie almost saved by the two leads…almost. The charms of Will Smith and credibility of Gene Hackman are the only thing that keep this misfire together, with an unbelievably overblown screenplay and the “all-star” supporting cast of washed-up actors and annoying young next-gen wannabes. Tony Scott gives the film his usual slick and dark look, which works finre for the paranoia film that it is, but does every shot have to look cool? Does every computer screen and graphic have to look more state-of-the-art than current technology allows? The film is so slick that it virtually destroys any ounce of crediility it holds early on. Heackman doesn’t even appear until halfway through the movie, and while things do improve once he arrives, it’s a case of too little, too late. Think of this as a cross between NORTH BY NORTHWEST and THE CONVERSATION (which Hackman is a paranoia film about tapping also starring Hackman, to which there are at least four homages to in ENEMY), but in the hands of morons. Somehow the comic mugging of the leads keeps the film watchable, but you’d virtually have to have a full-on mental meltdown to buy a plot this idiotic and situations this incredible.

Back to Qwipster’s Movie Reviews

 

 

 


Enemy of the State videos for download
watch divx movie
Enemy of the State movies buy
watch Enemy of the State full movies online
full length Enemy of the State video
Enemy of the State full movies online
divx Enemy of the State movie downloads

divx full Romeo Must Die movie download

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Download Romeo Must Die

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Romeo Must Die

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Romeo Must Die (Video Preview).avi12.28 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Romeo Must Die” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

Romeo Must Die *** (out of 5) (2000)

Cast: Jet Li, Aaliyah, Delroy Lindo, Isaiah Washington, Russell Wong, DMX

Directed by Andrzej Bartkowiak

War erupts between Oakland’s rival African-American and Asian-American crime families when the son of an Asian kingpin is found dead after crashing a Black club. Han Sing, brother of the deceased, escapes from his Hong Kong prison and travels to America to find his killer, and finds himself fighting for survival between power-hungry high-rollers. Gaining assistance from the daughter of a Black gangster, he sets his sights on getting to the bottom of things if he can survive long enough.

This is Jet Li’s first starring vehicle in a US production, and it shows off his formidable fighting talents and innocent charm far better than in his American debut, LETHAL WEAPON 4. The plot and title stem from some similarities to the fameous Shakespeare play, ROMEO AND JULIET, but outside of the novelty of two opposite sex protagonists from warring families the similarities end right there. Polish cinematographer Andrzej Bartkowiak, who also worked with Li on LETHAL WEAPON 4, makes an impressive debut as a director. The movie as a whole suffers from too much “been there, done that” storyline and from being about a half hour too long. Despite these relatively minor flaws, ROMEO MUST DIE does feature some very impressive acting, including terrific debut performances by R&B singer Aaliyah and rapper DMX. The action is less spectacular than Li’s Hong Kong films, but should be enough to please his fans, and production is solid all-around. Despite not being fresh enough to rave madly over, this is still worthy of a viewing for action fans and should provide a new fanbase for Li here in the States.

Back to Qwipster’s Movie Reviews

 

 

 


Romeo Must Die videos downloads
full length Romeo Must Die vids
watch full length Romeo Must Die movies
watch Romeo Must Die videos
Romeo Must Die videos for download
watch videos
watch full length movies

watch english Hitcher, The movies online

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Download Hitcher, The

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Hitcher, The

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Hitcher (Video Preview).avi8.83 MBDOWNLOAD

Hitcher, The

Jim Halsey (Knighton, The Prince & Me) and Grace Andrews (Bush, John Tucker Must Die) are a college-age couple on their way to enjoy spring break, traveling through the desert highways of rural New Mexico.  Their car starts showing trouble when Jim must swerve at the last second to avoid a hitchhiker (Bean, Flightplan) standing in the middle of the road.  Jim wants to offer him a ride, but Grace is afraid, and encourages Jim to move on.  At the next gas station, the hitchhiker re-emerges, securing a ride with the couple to a nearby motel, only to reveal, once on the road, that he is, in fact, a crazed killer.  Jim and Grace manage to kick him out of the vehicle in the nick of time, but the hitcher is unrelenting in his pursuit, killing everyone who gets in his way, leaving clues that point to the young couple as the culprits.

It’s a bizarre choice to remake the 1986 cult classic.  Though the original film is over 20 years old, unlike many other films to come out in the mid-1980s, it’s not particularly dated.  There isn’t anything trendy about the fashions of lingo, and the violence within the film is still quite strong by today’s standards.  It’s nothing fancy, little more than an existential cat-and-mouse game between two men on the open road, and while not a perfect movie by any means, the reasons why the film worked are difficult to imagine recreating. 

Primarily, the film worked due to Rutger Hauer’s menacing persona; he embodied mystery, darkness, menace, and an underlying envy for his prey, with a nuanced performance that ran far deeper than the few lines of dialogue he delivered.  Costar C. Thomas Howell has been interviewed many times, always stating that Hauer frightened him, both on and off camera, and this fear showed in every tense, sickening frame.

2007’s version of The Hitcher is pretty much a remake in almost every respect, even if it gives Jim a girlfriend to talk to for the entirety of his journey. The reasons why this remake fails are not due to the story, which was a liability, even in the original version.  It has everything to do with creation of tension from a directorial standpoint, and the quality of the actors.  The original had a deliberate escalation of pacing and a nightmarish envisioning of the lonely highway that imbued each scene with a sick-to-your-stomach queasiness that kept viewers unsettled and nervous from beginning to end. 

Instead of Howell, whose performances in films always seem to be underrated, we have two underwear models with passable acting abilities in Knighton and Bush.  Viewers will probably spend more time trying to check out Bush’s miniskirt and Knighton’s shirtless physique rather than see them as living, breathing human beings with past lives and future dreams.  Sean Bean, a better actor, doesn’t have Hauer’s threatening swagger or even his darkly comic edge.  You never have much doubt as to the hitcher’s intentions to cause havoc and murder throughout. 

Much of the blame should be laid on longtime music director Dave Meyers, who would rather shoot fights and car crashes to look cool rather to set an atmosphere that suggests there is a surreal, existential nature to the dilemma of Jim and Grace.  Basically, he’d rather shock you than keep you in suspense.  Though they don’t give him a past or a rationale, we never have that suspicion that the hitcher could be the embodiment of Jim’s inner fears, or even his alter ego and protector.  He is just a scary killing machine that wants to kill and keep killing until he can find someone who shares in his sickening passion, perhaps so that he can finally die himself.

At only 83 minutes, The Hitcher is bad, but not unwatchable, but the lack of tension, intrigue, and evocative suspense makes it a waste of time for any who’ve ever seen the original.  Actually, it’s also  a waste for those who haven’t, as the original is better in every possible way, to the point where this remake is already rendered obsolete, instead of the other way around.  The last line of the film, in what should have been the capper of a gut-wrenching finale, is, "I don’t feel a thing".  If the characters don’t feel anything about what’s going on, why should we?

Qwipster’s rating:
movie downloads
Hitcher, The avi movie
full length movie
Hitcher, The full divx movie
full length movie online
full movies online
movies buy

While You Were Sleeping video downloads

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Download While You Were Sleeping

DOWNLOAD MOVIE While You Were Sleeping

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
While You Were Sleeping (Video Preview).avi16.00 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “While You Were Sleeping” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

While You Were Sleeping *** (out of 5)   (1995)

Cast: Sandra Bullock, Bill Pullman, Peter Gallagher, Jack Warden, Peter Boyle

Directed By Jon Turteltaub

Director Jon Turteltaub has had a nice career for himself making sweet-natured films with heart, and WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING is a prime example.  Of course, it’s hard to go wrong with Sandra Bullock in a romantic comedy, and this marks her first among many such films to come.  Like most romantic comedies, it’s not hard to figure out what’s going to happen, but the joys come in how it gets to its inevitable destination.  As such, it’s a mostly successful crowd-pleaser that only the crankiest of movie-goers would probably dislike.

Bullock stars as Lucy, a ticket-seller for the Chicago subway system who is working during the holidays, and one of her daily pleasures is selling a ticket to a handsome and rich man, Peter (Gallagher.)  Her dreams of becoming part of his life become a reality when Lucy sees Peter getting mugged and falling onto the tracks unconscious, whereupon she saves him from certain death by moving him out of harm’s way just in the nick of time.  Through a misunderstanding at the hospital, Lucy is introduced as the now comatose Peter’s fianc?e, which causes the family to readily adopt Lucy into part of their group.  Lucy doesn’t find an easy way to tell them the truth, so she goes along with it, but keeping the secret proves more and more difficult with Peter’s recovery and the fact that she is beginning to have feeling’s for Peter’s brother, Jack (Pullman.)

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING breezes by with ease, and while it isn’t the funniest film you may have seen, it is amiable and sweet enough to watch for a pleasant diversion.  Bullock supplies all of the charm and likeability that the role requires, so this is a must watch for her fans.  Although Bill Pullman seems an unlikely choice to play as a romantic lead, somehow he manages to fit into the part just fine.  Turteltaub’s direction is about as good as it can be, given the rather conventional screenplay.  Good casting of the supporting roles as well.

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING is recommended for fans of romantic comedies, and for those seeking mild holiday entertainment during the Winter season.

Back to Qwipster’s Movie Reviews            

window.open=NS_ActualOpen;
download While You Were Sleeping movies full length
divx movi
watch While You Were Sleeping movies on internet
watch divx movies online
full movie downloads
While You Were Sleeping full movie downloads
full movies

U.S. Marshals full movies

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Download U.S. Marshals

DOWNLOAD MOVIE U.S. Marshals

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
U.S. Marshals (Video Preview).avi13.32 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “U.S. Marshals” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

U.S. Marshals
This is a film made by the National Park Service about the influence of
Judge Issac C. Parker (the hanging judge) and the United States
Marshalls that operated out of his court. Although his court was the
United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, most
of his case load of over 13,000 cases from 1875 to 1896 actually dealt
with crimes that occurred in Indian Territory, i.e. Oklahoma. More
Marshalls died in the line of duty out of this court than any other in
US History. This film, approximately 20 minutes long, tells a few
stories about some of them such as Addison Beck. A number of the voices
are by current law officers (Major Jeff Barrows and Chief Randy Reed,
of the Fort Smith Police Department). Park Rangers Tom Wing, Eric
Lenord and Julie Galonska helped write this film.

dvd downloads
download divx U.S. Marshals movies
U.S. Marshals dvd downloads
U.S. Marshals avi movie
good U.S. Marshals movies to watch
watch U.S. Marshals full movies online
full length video

download Haunting, The dvd movies

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Download Haunting, The

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Haunting, The

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Haunting (Video Preview).avi11.56 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Haunting, The” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

Haunting, The (1999) Reviewed By Rob Gonsalves Posted 01/10/07 09:18:21

"Goose-brained remake; bad beyond human comprehension." (Total Crap)

Some of my brothers and sisters in the movie-reviewer community were perhaps a bit hasty when they crowned ‘Wild Wild West’ summer ’99’s worst film. Obviously they had not yet seen ‘The Haunting,’ a needless remake of a solid (if a bit stiff) chiller from 1963.Both films are derived from an acknowledged classic of horror fiction — Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House — yet the remake deviates so sharply, and so stupidly, from Jackson’s simple and elegant story that the end credit mentioning her book is the final insult to her memory. The premise is butchered right from the start. Liam Neeson, playing a psychologist rechristened "Dr. Peter Marrow," lures three insomniacs to the ornate old Hill House for alleged "sleep research." In fact, he’s conducting an experiment in fear on his unsuspecting subjects. In the book and 1963 film, the doctor is actually a ghostbuster who brought three people to live in the reportedly haunted Hill House with him, to see if anything would happen; there was no hidden agenda, and everyone knew pretty much what they might be in for. (Part of the wit of Jackson’s story was that none of the visitors took the Hill House legend all that seriously, until supernatural events proved otherwise.) In the remake, the good doctor seems to pick Hill House because it’s remote and spooky-looking — and thus a good laboratory in which to mess with his insomniacs’ suggestible minds — but apparently has no idea that it really is haunted. One wonders, then, what Dr. Marrow had hoped to do to provoke fear in his subjects. Rattle some chains? Put on a sheet and go "Boo"? The subjects are Eleanor (Lili Taylor), a quietly frazzled young woman who took care of her ailing mother for years and now can’t function in the real world; Theo (Catherine Zeta-Jones), a bisexual fashion plate who swoops around Hill House in new boots from Prada; and Luke (Owen Wilson), whose character was the inheritor of Hill House in earlier incarnations of this story but now has little reason to be there except to wander the halls nervously. Then again, nobody else in the movie has much reason to be there, either. They all seem stupid for falling for the sleep-research cover story, anyway — Dr. Marrow doesn’t even bother to bring computers with which to pretend to monitor their sleep patterns. (What do they think he’s going to do — stand over their beds watching them toss and turn?) Marrow also brings two assistants, new to this remake, who exist only so that the movie can have an expendable character who gets supernaturally wounded; the assistants are gone almost as soon as they arrive. The best treatment of this material is still Shirley Jackson’s dreamy, precise prose, told almost entirely from Eleanor’s fraying viewpoint. (Put Sylvia Plath in the spooky halls of the Overlook and you’ll have an idea.) Robert Wise’s 1963 version was slightly starchy but still admirable in its refusal to show anything, its faith in the idea that a movie that leaves terror to your imagination is far scarier than anything a Hollywood special-effects team can cook up. Jan De Bont, the former cinematographer turned director who showed promise just a few years ago (Speed, Twister), has chosen the polar opposite approach, drowning The Haunting in rivers of cheesy-looking computer-generated phantoms. The spirits of dead children writhe and curl behind bedsheets and curtains, looking like Casper the friendly ghost. They also look very much like CG effects. $80 million didn’t even buy a convincing Hill House, whose exterior shots all look like models, and whose interiors also, whaddaya know, look very much like CG effects. The house is so vast, so aggressively set-designed, that it’s never credible as an actual house occupying actual space. De Bont’s lowest-common-denominator method is nothing compared to that of the new screenwriter, David Self, who feels compelled to give Hill House a banal backstory about a vicious tyrant who built it using child laborers. Self compounds this error by linking Eleanor to the tyrant, invalidating the idea of the real haunting — Eleanor’s guilt over her dead mother — and rendering the movie pointless. We get many laughable scenes of bug-eyed cherub sculptures coming to life, and evil spirits roaring towards the camera. There is also, near the end, the most unintentionally hilarious shot I’ve seen since the idiotic Grandma waded through an acidic lake going "Ooh, ahh" in Dante’s Peak. Hint: When something lethal happens in the big fireplace, watch for Liam Neeson’s reaction shot. Everyone else is screaming in shock, and he’s just standing there like "Boy, that’s gotta hurt." When you’re not yawning at the digital ghosts, you’re watching a cast of fine actors dogpaddling in clich?s and terrible dialogue; Lili Taylor, in particular, works overtime to make her nonsensical character credible, but even this great young actress has her limits, and if you saw her for the first time here you’d assume she was pretty bad. And since Jan De Bont fills the soundtrack with thundering bass noises meant to terrify us, we can’t even enjoy the movie as a retro, cheeseball haunted-house flick — the tone is too heavy. The difference between the minimalist scares of the 1963 film (well-timed thumps in the night that didn’t assault us in Dolby Surround Sound) and the new remake, with its theme-park demons that produce mostly snickers, is further testament to how far Hollywood has fallen.Anyone with enough money can employ state-of-the-art visual and sound effects; it takes genuine artistry not to need them. The much-buzzed-about ‘Blair Witch Project,’ for all its fumbling and flaws, comes closer to the spirit of the original ‘Haunting’ than this overproduced, overblown remake.
Haunting, The full length movie
watch Haunting, The full movies
Haunting, The dvd download
divx video
Haunting, The divx movi
watch movies on computer
Haunting, The movie to watch

Few Good Men, A full movies

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Download Few Good Men, A

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Few Good Men, A

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Few Good Men, A (Video Preview).avi14.04 MBDOWNLOAD

Few Good Men, A
This is one of the movies, I have watched many many times. First few
times, Tom Cruise seemed to be giving an ordinary performance; probably
my shortcoming that I was not able to understand his character. But,
then I realized that he was playing exactly the character he was
supposed to portray and he did it in a impeccable manner - wow!!!! He
was just second to Jack Nicholson.

I could not imagine if anyone else could have replaced Jack Nicholson -
his stellar performance (as always) and the intensity and ferocity with
which he delivered his dialogues - man, even his facial expressions at
times were worth a watch.

Story line and plot don’t seem to be so strong and there will be many
people who would not agree with its end and even with the message of
the movie, which is although not so clear but definitely points towards
some of the not so best practices being followed in any country’s army
(over discipline in the name of straightening the people and getting
things in order or even avoiding any further chaos or things being run
by certain people just to settle their personal scores and run in a way
they think is the best, even disregarding other people’s reasonable
opinions). However, the other things apart, movie was a treat to watch.
Director Rob Reiner and writer Aaron Sorkin didn’t leave any stone
unturned when it came to dialogues in the movie - in fact, the
dialogues delivered by each and every character (not only Jack
Nicholson) have been simply stunning.

full movies
divx Few Good Men, A movies
download divx Few Good Men, A movies
watch full length movies online
internet movie
watch Few Good Men, A divx movie
movie download

full length Good Boy! videos

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Download Good Boy!

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Good Boy!

Just $2.99 for a complete movie! No additional software or browser plug-ins required! You can play them for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA etc.

DIVX ($2.99)DVD($4.99)IPOD ($1.99)
Video Previews (divx):
File NameSize:Video preview
Good Boy! (Video Preview).avi18.41 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Good Boy!” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

If a boy who really wants a dog doesn’t get one before he turns 13, his parents are never going to get him one. I have no data, government-sponsored or otherwise, that backs me on this. It just seems to work out that way. The kids stop wanting dogs after age 12. The movies (among other things) tell me so. And they’re never wrong. They’re just sappy, sometimes. Like “Good Boy!,” a sweet, starchy kiddie flick about a 12-year-old named Owen (Liam Aiken) who wants a dog more than anything in the whole wide world. A lot of kids say this, of course, but you can sort of see the how and why of Owen’s yearnings because he doesn’t seem to be able to make friends with anyone except dogs and their owners. It’s not his fault, either. His parents (”Saturday Night Live” alumni Molly Shannon and Kevin Nealon) seem to stay in a house just long enough to restore it, sell it and move on. ADVERTISEMENT Nevertheless, they’re willing to give Owen a dog of his own. And it turns out to be a dead ringer for 1970s pop-dog-cult hero Benji that he promptly names Hubble. The dog’s real name, it turns out, is 3942 and he’s on a reconnaissance mission from — wait for it — the Dog Star Sirius to check out whether canines have fulfilled their millennia-old mission to dominate the Earth. Owen finds out about this because 3942 tells him so with Matthew Broderick’s voice. How? Why? Can’t help you there, because the movie isn’t that clear about it either. Does it have to be? No. But somehow, you wish “Good Boy!” aspired to a less formulaic cleverness and sentimentality than shown here. The dogs move their mouths in convincing ways and they say funny enough things. But all they do is remind you of the “Babe” movies. And as long as you keep thinking of “Babe,” you can’t help thinking that there’s no excuse for movies like “Good Boy!” to merely push the usual buttons, deploy the usual poop jokes and carry out the usual sight gags. Good Boy! MPAA rating: PG for some mild crude humor. Times guidelines: The potty humor is mild and mercifully minimal. Liam Aiken … Owen Baker Molly Shannon … Mrs. Baker Kevin Nealon … Mr. Baker Matthew Broderick … Hubble Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures presents a Jim Henson Pictures production, released by MGM. Director John Hoffman. Producers Lisa Henson, Christine Belson. Executive producer Stephanie Allain. Screenplay by John Hoffman, story by Zeke Richardson and Hoffman based on “Dogs From Outer Space” by Richardson. Cinematographer James Glennon. Editor Craig P. Herring. Costume designer Antonia Bardon. Music Mark Mothersbaugh. Production designer Jerry Wanek. Art director John Marcynuk. Set decorator Penny Chalmers. Running time: 1 hour, 28 minutes. In general release.
download divx movies
full length downloadable Good Boy! movies
watch Good Boy! divx movies online
watch videos
Good Boy! avi movie
watch full movies online
Good Boy! internet movie