Wednesday, August 31, 2011

10 Minute Solution: Blast Off Belly Fat

10 Minute Solution: Blast Off Belly Fat Review



10 Minute Solution: Blast Off Belly Fat Feature

  • Condition: New
  • Format: DVD
  • Closed-captioned; Color; DVD; NTSC
NO TIME TO EXERCISE? We have the solution for you the 10 Minute Solution Everyone can find at least ten minutes in their day and we ve developed 5 dynamic workouts that are just 10 minutes each. The workouts were specifically designed to attack your midsection from every angle for optimum results. These compact, ultra-efficient workouts fit into even the busiest of schedules. Split them into 5 separate workouts or do them all together for one amazing, belly-fat-blasting workout!

FLAT BELLY FAST Get a flat belly that will turn-heads. This core- focused segment zeros in on the deepest abdominal muscles with a singular goal: to flatten your belly fast.

PILATES PERFECT ABS Pilates is famous for delivering a sexy midsection without traditional crunches or sit-ups. This program delivers those Pilates Perfect Abs.

BELLY FAT BLASTER Toned, firm ab muscles can be hidden from view by a layer of fat. This standing segment will burn mega calories and bring you that much closer to revealing your chiseled ab muscles.

AB RIPPER Instructor Suzanne Bowen picked her favorite, most effective exercises and put them together into this powerful, 10-minute, all-out attack on belly fat.

SIX PACK ABS If you won t be satisfied until you have washboard abs, let s hit the floor and crunch it out with this jam-packed workout that will leave you well on your way to six pack abs.


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Film Noir Classic Collection, Vol. 4 (Act of Violence / Mystery Street / Crime Wave / Decoy / Illegal / The Big Steal / They Live By Night / Side Street / Where Danger Lives / Tension)

Film Noir Classic Collection, Vol. 4 (Act of Violence / Mystery Street / Crime Wave / Decoy / Illegal / The Big Steal / They Live By Night / Side Street / Where Danger Lives / Tension) Review



Film Noir Classic Collection, Vol. 4 (Act of Violence / Mystery Street / Crime Wave / Decoy / Illegal / The Big Steal / They Live By Night / Side Street / Where Danger Lives / Tension) Feature

  • Ex-World War II pilot Frank Enley (Van Heflin) is a respected contractor and family man. Then his troubled, gimp-legged bombardier (Robert Ryan) shows up with a gun and a score to settle. Perhaps neither man is what he seems to be as director Fred Zinnemann (The Day of the Jackal) guides a searing Act of Violence, "the first postwar noir to take a challenging look at the ethics of men in combat" (
The fourth volume of Warner Video's Film Noir Classic Collection boasts ten titles on five double-feature discs--appropriate packaging for films that mostly run less than an hour-and-a-half and would have shared the marquee with another picture upon original release. It's a welcome set, with entries by top noir directors Anthony Mann and Nicholas Ray, several unheralded gems, and solid entertainment value in nearly every instance. But somebody (and it looks as if that's us) ought to mention that Warners is getting a mite cavalier with the label "film noir." You can have a '40s or '50s movie that's in black and white, involves criminal activity, and features stars like Robert Mitchum or Edward G. Robinson, and still not tap into the pungent atmosphere, perverse psychology, implacable fatalism, and jagged/voluptuous style that are the hallmarks of noir. Indeed, there are several such movies in this set--and in their non-noir ways, they're not bad.

Act of Violence (1948) is the real McCoy, albeit so meticulously directed by Fred Zinnemann in postwar-European style that it's virtually an art-film noir. Van Heflin plays a model small-town citizen suddenly confronted with a guilty WWII past, in the dark, limping, permanently trenchcoated figure of Robert Ryan. The film systematically dismantles the domestic security of Heflin's life till he's forced to flee his own home, which has become a trap, and escape into the nightworld of the big city. Mary Astor is superb as one of its few sympathetic denizens. Co-featured with Act of Violence is Mystery Street (1950), a hard-edged movie about a B-girl's murder and some of the proto-CSI techniques the police use to solve the crime. Directed by John Sturges, from a script by Richard Brooks and Sydney Boehm, the picture is enhanced by atmospheric Boston and Cape Cod settings and camerawork by Mr. Film Noir himself, John Alton.

For case-hardened noiristes, the disc holding Decoy and Crime Wave is the collection's prime catch. Decoy (1946), like Dillinger in Volume 2, is an ultra-low-budget offering from Monogram Pictures and a fascinatingly mixed bag of Poverty Row production values and flashes of directorial ambition (one night scene in a woods strongly suggests director Jack Bernhard had seen Sunrise). Its main attraction is a cold-hearted heroine who could pledge the same sorority as the dames from Double Indemnity, Gun Crazy, and The Lady from Shanghai. (Alas, British-born actress Jean Gillie appeared in only one subsequent film, dying at the age of 34.) Andre De Toth's Crime Wave (1954) places us in the awkward position of being grateful for the chance to see an exciting movie and obliged to disqualify it from the set: it's closer to the '50s police procedural (Dragnet et al.) than to film noir. Shot almost entirely on location, the picture virtually reeks of seedy L.A. nightlife and satisfyingly unreels without benefit of music score. Ted De Corsia, Nedrick Young, and Charles Buchinsky-soon-to-be-Bronson supply juicy villainy, with a characteristically unclean contribution late in the film from Timothy Carey. Gene Nelson plays an ex-con, resolved to go straight yet being forced to abet his newly escaped old cellmates, and the world-weary cop keeping tabs on all of them is Sterling Hayden.

The set's two stellar noir directors share a disc and costars, Farley Granger and the ethereal Cathy O'Donnell. They Live by Night (1948) was Nicholas Ray's maiden effort, and kinetically and emotionally the director found natural rapport with the spooked-animal vulnerability of his hero and heroine. This was the first film version of Edward Anderson's Depression-era novel Thieves Like Us (adapted again a quarter-century later by Robert Altman), and its tale of a young rural misfit drawn into more violent crime by older, harder fellow escapees from a prison farm anticipates the spirit of Ray's '50s teen classic Rebel Without a Cause. Side Street (1949) is fascinating as a bridge between Anthony Mann's great series of noirs shot by John Alton and the Western genre Mann would soon master. Working this time with a conventional MGM cameraman (Joseph Ruttenberg), the director demonstrates that the terrific "eye" that gave us T-Men, Border Incident, et al. was at least as much Mann's as Alton's, and he visualizes Manhattan as a collection of jagged skylines and deep, shadowed canyons. The script (by Sydney Boehm) involves a mail carrier (Granger) who, worried about taking proper care of his pregnant wife (O'Donnell), impulsively swipes an envelope full of money. Hard upon that "one false step," the family man finds himself caught up in a dark scheme involving blackmail and, several times over, murder.

Despite a screenplay by Hitchcock collaborator Charles Bennett and direction by John Farrow (The Big Clock), Where Danger Lives (1950) is easily the weakest entry in Vol. 4. Robert Mitchum plays a doctor who saves a would-be suicide, then falls for her without noticing she's crazy as a loon, and homicidal to boot. Soon they're on the run, sought by the law and at the mercy of every larcenous character between them and the Mexican border. Despite yeoman work by Mitchum and RKO shadowmaster Nicholas Musuraca, and the too-brief participation of Claude Rains, the film founders on the femme-fatale casting of Howard Hughes discovery Faith Domergue. A more memorably dodgy female complicates everybody's life in Tension (1950), the next-to-last Hollywood film for director John Berry before his blacklisting. This one's played by Audrey Totter--never a major star, but a delicious and definitive late-'40s dame (who also supplies sharp commentary on the auxiliary audio track). Her milquetoast husband, pharmacist Richard Basehart, sets up a second identity for himself under which to seek revenge for her numerous infidelities--till the new man he has become makes the acquaintance of neighbor Cyd Charisse. (No, Charisse does not dance, but those awesome legs are nevertheless put to creative use.) Eventually someone is dead, and cops Barry Sullivan and William Conrad enter the picture, contributing their own shades of gray to the noir palette. Another satisfying, little-known film that collections like this one lead us to discover.

There's also satisfaction to be had from our final pairing, Illegal and The Big Steal--even if both these titles have to be turned back at the noir border. Illegal (1955) is the third version of The Mouthpiece, a '30s play and film about an esteemed district attorney who falls from grace but rebounds as a spellbinding defense attorney much-sought-after by the criminal class. It was probably the best part Edward G. Robinson had in the '50s, and he's all the reason we need for watching. But the role and the story predated noir (the previous renditions came out in 1932 and 1940), and this movie, for all intents and purposes, postdates noir. In addition, sad to say, it's an artifact from that era when Warner Bros.' movies had started looking like the studio's TV shows. By contrast, The Big Steal (1949) springs from the heart of the classic noir era, was produced for perhaps the most noir-friendly of studios, RKO, and even boasts the costars and screenwriter of the sublime Out of the Past--which is to say, Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, and Daniel Mainwaring (a.k.a. "Geoffrey Homes"). The whirlwind first reel plops us right in the middle of several chases, with as many switcheroos of allegiance and direction, in pursuit of an "it" that won't be specified till some time later. All nimbly managed by director Don Siegel, on location in Mexico yet, and briskly over with in 72 minutes. But it's a comedy-adventure, not a film noir. Not even close.

Most of the films come accompanied by authoritative voiceover commentaries, including contributions by L.A. crime novelist James Ellroy (on Crime Wave) and surviving cast members Nina Foch (Illegal) and Audrey Totter (Tension). However, for a sporadic series of primers on noir style, which feature absurdly florid lighting of the talking heads and lesson-plan intertitles that belong on a blackboard, somebody at Warner Home Video should be taken for a ride. --Richard T. Jameson Ex-World War II pilot Frank Enley (Van Heflin) is a respected contractor and family man. Then his troubled, gimp-legged bombardier (Robert Ryan) shows up with a gun and a score to settle. Perhaps neither man is what he seems to be as director Fred Zinnemann (The Day of the Jackal) guides a searing Act of Violence, "the first postwar noir to take a challenging look at the ethics of men in combat" (Eddie Muller, Dark City: The Lost World of Film Noir). Murder lives on Mystery Street. John Sturges (The Great Escape) directs a revealing-for-the-era procedural about a Boston cop (Ricardo Montalban) solving a whodunit with the help of a Harvard forsensic expert (Bruce Bennett). Welcome to CSI Noir.


Monday, August 29, 2011

Garfield Gets Real

Garfield Gets Real Review



  • Audio: English & Spanish Mono
  • Language: Dubbed & Subtitled: English & Spanish
  • Theatrical Aspect Ratio: Full Screen 1.33:1
  • Pencils, Paws and Ink: Creating the Garfield Comic Strip
  • The Making of Garfield Gets Real
  • The Voices of Garfield Gets Real
  • Story Boards with narration by Jim Davis
  • Odie Kick Game
  • Whack−A−Chihuahua Game


Sunday, August 28, 2011

Starsky & Hutch/The Big Bounce

Starsky & Hutch/The Big Bounce Review



They're the Man! Here comes the fuzz as Ben Stiller takes the wheel and Owen Wilson rides shotgun in Starsky & Hutch (Side A), the police-action comedy based on the 70's TV series. The buddy cops have been stripped of their badges, conned by a crime kingpin (Vince Vaughn) and totally ripped off in a disco contest. So, yeah, they've got some scores to settle. In The Big Bounce (Side B), Oahu surfer-dude Wilson has a cinch of a plan to walk into a house poor and come out rich, and that sets in motion an unexpected string of scheming, deceiving and double-crossing. From the novel by Get Shorty author Elmore Leonard comes this wild tale about getting it all. With Morgan Freeman, Gary Sinise, Charlie Sheen and more.


Friday, August 26, 2011

Ultimate Bullriding

Ultimate Bullriding Review



Ultimate Bullriding Feature

  • Ultimate Bullriding delivers over 40 years of the greatest adrenaline-fueled moments in the history of professional bullriding. Watch these fearless cowboys, including Tuff Hedeman, Terry Don West and Ty Muffay, riding the superstar bulls like Bodacious. Atop raging 2,000-pound bulls, this is an ultimate heart-pounding, edge-of-your seat action DVD. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: SPORTS/GAMES
Ultimate Bullriding delivers over 40 years of the greatest adrenaline-fueled moments in the history of professional bullriding. Watch these fearless cowboys, including Tuff Hedeman, Terry Don West and Ty Muffay, riding the superstar bulls like Bodacious. Atop raging 2,000-pound bulls, this is an ultimate heart-pounding, edge-of-your seat action DVD.


Thursday, August 25, 2011

Ranma 1/2 - Random Rhapsody - Who Do? Voodoo! (Vol .1)

Ranma 1/2 - Random Rhapsody - Who Do? Voodoo! (Vol .1) Review



Ranma 1/2 - Random Rhapsody - Who Do? Voodoo! (Vol .1) Feature

  • This new Ranma series, RANDOM RHAPSODY, promises the same unique humor that permeates every other edition of Rumiko Takahashi's celebrated show about the father and son duo who turn into a panda and woman, respectively, when they get wet. Here, Ranma begins a battle with Sotatsu, a master of Martial Arts Calligraphy. Also, Ranma finds out that Kuno and Kodachi's father is his offbeat Hawai
Everything's normal at Furinkan High School--which means everything's chaotic by any reasonable standard. The principal of Furinkan, who sounds like a pidgin English version of a surfer dude, tries to play traditional father to his long-lost progeny, Kuno and Kodochi, in "Dear Daddy." The results are predictably disastrous. Gosunkugi's a new student, so he doesn't understand why Ranma won't let him accept the lunch Akane offers. The indignant Gosunkugi tries to work voodoo on Ranma but only wreaks havoc on Kuno--and himself. Ranma's outraged when a martial artist won't accept his challenge: the newcomer practices Martial Arts Calligraphy--and Ranma's handwriting is atrocious. American viewers may not recognize the ink stones and sticks used in traditional Japanese calligraphy, but they know what happens when Ranma and Happosai get mixed up in anything. Despite the general chaos, these three episodes rank among the tamest in the series, with no gender transformations. Still, Sasuke sums up the whole series when he comments at the end of "Dear Daddy," "After all that, nothing's changed. The family's just as strange as before." Not rated; suitable for ages 12 and up. --Charles Solomon In these three episodes, see Ranma Battle with Sotatsu, master of Martial Arts Calligraphy! Witness upperclassman Kuno and his sister, Kodachi, contend with their father, Ranma's kooky Hawaiian high school principal! And thrill to the strange new kid with a crush on Akane and a creepy affection for voodoo dolls!


Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Lo Mejor del Chapulin Colorado, Vol. 5 - 6

Lo Mejor del Chapulin Colorado, Vol. 5 - 6 Review



CHAPULIN COLORADO LO MEJOR VOL 5 & 6 - DVD Movie


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Yoga Journal's Beginning Yoga Step by Step: Session One - Three

Yoga Journal's Beginning Yoga Step by Step: Session One - Three Review



Specially-priced 3-DVD set!

SESSION 1 - Foundation Poses for Strength & Stamina

Learn the standing poses that form the foundation of a complete yoga practice. Get expert instruction on Sun Salutation, a flowing sequence of poses with forward bends and gentle backbends that take you through a full range of motion. And understand how breathwork can help you balance your effort with a calm and quiet mind. Featuring acclaimed yoga teacher Natasha Rizopoulos.

SESSION 2 - Bending and Twisting Poses for Flexibility

Enhance your flexibility, lift your spirit, and brighten your mood with this series of bends and twists. Backbends bring energy to the body, while forward bends and twists calm the nervous system. As the poses help you become more flexible on your mat, so too will they help you become more flexible in facing your daily life.

SESSION 3 - Balancing Poses for Focus & Energy

Develop focus and energy through a sequence of inversions and arm balances. Although these poses can be challenging, Natasha shows you how to attain positions that you might not currently think are possible -- and she shows you how to do so safely. When you are upside-down, you'll not only receive the health benefits of reversing the flow of gravity, you'll see the world in a whole new way.

ALL THREE DVDS FEATURE

35-minute active instructional session

PLUS 20-minute flowing workout

Poses suitable for beginners and advanced beginners

Follow along with Natasha Rizopoulis or her assistant Jason, who demonstrates modified poses for less flexible people.

Understand the benefits of each yoga pose with commentary by Yoga Journal's medical editor, Timothy McCall, M.D.

Learn alignment principles and correct common mistakes with Yoga Chalk Talk, our exclusive live drawing board.


Sunday, August 21, 2011

Disney Princess Sing Along Songs, Vol. 1 - Once Upon A Dream

Disney Princess Sing Along Songs, Vol. 1 - Once Upon A Dream Review



Disney Princess Sing Along Songs, Vol. 1 - Once Upon A Dream Feature

  • Sound the trumpets and prepare for the ultimate celebration of magic, music, and dreams come true! Introduce your little princess to the one special collection that features all of her favorite Disney Princesses performing their most cherished songs from Disney's award-winningics. Your child's imagination will soar as she sings, dances, and pretends along with Cinderella, Belle, Ariel, and
Sound the trumpets and prepare for the ultimate celebration of magic, music, and dreams come true! Introduce your little princess to the one special collection that features all of her favorite Disney Princesses performing their most cherished songs from Disney's award-winning classics. Your child's imagination will soar as she sings, dances, and pretends along with Cinderella, Belle, Ariel, and all the Disney Princesses. And, for the first time ever, all the princesses join together to sing an all-new song, "If You Can Dream." So help your little girl get her crown, put on her gown, and get ready for a musical adventure overflowing with charm and delight that's perfect for any little princess and her royal family.


Saturday, August 20, 2011

Rambo: Two Pack (First Blood II / Rambo III) [Blu-ray]

Rambo: Two Pack (First Blood II / Rambo III) [Blu-ray] Review



Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 11/23/2010


Friday, August 19, 2011

The Brak Show, Vol. 2

The Brak Show, Vol. 2 Review



The Brak Show, Vol. 2 Feature

  • What happens when two adults get together and have children? And what if those children grow up and go to school? That's the just-crazy-enough-to-work premise behind "The Brak Show." Also, Brak is in it.Running Time: 154 min. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: TELEVISION Rating: NR Age: 053939768022 UPC: 053939768022 Manufacturer No: 1000004762
The Brak Show Volume 2 compiles the final 14 episodes of this truly offbeat Cartoon Network series (2000-2004), which spun the dim-witted space pirate Brak from Cartoon Planet and Space Ghost: Coast to Coast into a very skewed sort of family sitcom, albeit one with aliens, killer robots, dissolute magicians, and an insectoid best friend who wants nothing more than to kill the star of the show. As in the first volume of The Brak Show, our hero (voiced by Andy Merrill) lives with his mom (Joanna Daniel, who replaced Marsha Crenshaw) and miniature dad (George Lowe) in a picture-perfect suburban town somewhere in deep space; this time around, Brak's adventures include entering a rap contest to win a trip to a spa resort ("Brak Street," with guest star Cee-Lo of Danger Mouse), discovering exactly what Dad does with his time ("We Ski in Peace"), and winning his own TV show in Japan ("Sexy New Brak Show Go"). It goes without saying that The Brak Show is an acquired taste for those that aren't already fanatical about Adult Swim titles, but for those that can roll with the surreal stories and humor, there are a lot of quirky laughs to be found here, especially from Merrill's performance as the slow-witted but eager Brak. Note to fans: the two-disc Volume 2 set includes no supplemental features (unlike the previous set), and also excludes the second-to-last episode, "New Year's Eve Party at Brak's House," which not only explained the future of the show's characters, but included guest appearances by the casts of Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law, and Sealab 2021. --Paul Gaita What happens when two adults get together and have children? And what if those children grow up and go to school? That's the just-crazy-enough-to-work premise behind "The Brak Show." Also, Brak is in it.


Thursday, August 18, 2011

Saxon - Rock Has Landed - It's Alive

Saxon - Rock Has Landed - It's Alive Review



DVD Features: Region 1 Keep Case Full Frame - 1.33 Audio: Dolby Digital Stereo - English Tracks: 1. Power and the Glory 2. Rock and Roll Gypsies 3. Strong Arm of the Law 4. Past The Point 5. Dallas 1pm 6. 747 (Strangers in the Night) 7. Bitch of a Place to Be 8. One More For The Road 9. Motorcycle Man 10. Wheels of Steel Digital Process: Digitally Processed


Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Escandalo de Estrellas

Escandalo de Estrellas Review



Escandalo de Estrellas Feature

  • Pedro Infante is one of the most famous actors from the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema. Helmed by Ismael Rodr?guez, this comic tale stars Pedro Infante as Ricardo del Valle, whose career choice lands him in trouble after he disregards the wishes of his father (Juan Jos? Mart?nez Casado) -- who wants his son to become a lawyer. Without telling his family, aspiring actor Ricardo accepts a part in a mo
COLECCION PEDRO INFANTE:ESCANDALO DE - DVD Movie


Monday, August 15, 2011

Farscape: The Complete Season 4

Farscape: The Complete Season 4 Review



Farscape: The Complete Season 4 Feature

  • FARSCAPE: THE COMPLETE SEASON 4 (DVD MOVIE)
The offbeat but frequently brilliant science-fiction series Farscape came to an abrupt close with its fourth season, and in typical fashion, the show ended with a bang--not your ordinary bang, mind you, but then again, nothing on Farscape was ever ordinary. The season picks up months after the crew of the living spaceship Moya are separated, and it spends most of the first five episodes bringing them together from the farthest corners of the universe; once together again, starlost human Crichton (Ben Browder) and his alien compatriots get down to the business of sewing up a vast number of story lines before the final episode. Among them: Crichton's new-found ability to suss out wormholes; an attack by bounty hunters ("I Shrink, Therefore I Am"); two trips to Earth, one to the past ("Kansas") and the other--one of the show's best episodes--to the present, where Moya's alien crew become the first extraterrestrials to meet humankind ("Terra Firma"); and a last-ditch attempt to stop a war between the show's main antagonists--the reptilian Scarrans and the humanoid Peacekeepers--via the threat of galaxy-wide destruction (the three-part "We're So Screwed"). There's also the growing relationship between Crichton and female lead Aeryn Sun (Claudia Black), which reaches a peak in the final series episode, "Bad Timing"--but ah, there's that big bang in the end.

If that feels like a lot of ground to cover in 22 episodes (all of which are included on the Complete Season Four's six-disc set), it is, and the leisurely pace that marked the preceding three seasons is occasionally missed here. But the show's strengths--its clever scripting and solid performances--are still intact, and if the show's conclusion is gasp-inducing, fear not: series co-producer Brian Henson wrapped up the show in a four-part miniseries shortly after this season aired. The season 4 set contains three commentaries (Ben Browder and Claudia Black on "John Quixote"; they're joined by executive producer David Kemper on "Kansas" and "Bad Timing") and a wealth of featurettes that cover everything from the show's villains and effects to the outpouring of support by its fans that helped revive Farscape for its miniseries conclusion. A speech by Kemper to the cast and crew on the final day of shooting is a lovely and moving bit of video. --Paul Gaita

Months after the cliffhanger finale of Season 3, which left Crichton stranded alone and low on fuel after Moya was unexpectedly sucked into a wormhole, FARSCAPE SEASON 4 begins with Crichton studying wormholes aboard an aged and dying Leviathan, foreshadowing the danger that wormhole science will soon pose to his first home, Earth.

A series of thrilling, surreal, and nearly lethal adventures follow for the crew, including battles against heat delirium, space madness, bounty hunters, a deadly video game, and the relentless pursuit of Peacekeeper Commandant Grayza.

Season 4 closes with the aptly named episode “Bad Timing.” With the Scarrans heading for the wormhole to Earth, Crichton must make the ultimate sacrifice to protect his home, and Farscape draws to a close with one of the most controversial series finales in television history.

DISC 1: Crichton Kicks / What Was Lost Part I : Sacrifice / What Was Lost Part II : Resurrection / Lava's a Many Splendored Thing
DISC 2: Promises / Natural Election / John Quixote / I Shrink Therefore I Am
DISC 3: A Prefect Murder / Coup By Clam / Unrealized Reality / Kansas
DISC 4: Terra Firma / Twice Shy / Mental as Anything / Bringing Home The Beacon
DISC 5: A Constellation of Doubt / Prayer / Bonus Features
DISC 6: We're So Screwed Part I: Fetal Attraction / We're So Screwed Part II: Hot To Katratzi / We're So Screwed Part III: La Bomba / Bad Timing


Saturday, August 13, 2011

Friday, August 12, 2011

U2 Go Home: Live from Slane Castle (Jewel Case)

U2 Go Home: Live from Slane Castle (Jewel Case) Review



U2 GO HOME:LIVE FROM SLANE CASTLE - DVD Movie


Thursday, August 11, 2011

Planes, Trains and Automobiles / Summer Rental / Foul Play (Triple Feature)

Planes, Trains and Automobiles / Summer Rental / Foul Play (Triple Feature) Review



PLAINS, TRAINS, & AUTOMOBILES: Neal Page is an advertising executive who just wants to fly home to Chicago to spend Thanksgiving with his family. But all Neal Page gets is misery. Misery named Del Griffith - a loud mouthed, but nevertheless loveable, salesman who leads Neal on a cross-country, wild goose chase that keeps Neal from tasting his turkey. Steve Martin (Neal) and John Candy (Del) are absolutely wonderful as two guys with a knack for making the worst of a bad situation. If it's painful, funny, or just plain crazy, it happens to Neal and Del in Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Every traveler's nightmare in a comedy-come-true! SUMMER RENTAL: This routine comedy is about a series of misadventures during a family vacation at the beach and stars John Candy (who died of a heart attack while filming in Mexico in 1994) as John Chester and Karen Austin as his long-suffering wife Sandy. When the family leave for what turns out to be a pretty decrepit shack on a public beach, Jack eventually locks horns with the owner of this dubious piece of real estate, and their conflict terminates in a boat race in which Jack and his motley crew are at first glance, and even second, no match for the others in the race. In the meantime, there are plenty of skits with Jack dressed as anything from an ample, unintentional likeness of a geisha to the normal tourist dude in a Hawaiian shirt. His wife and daughter tackle their own problems, related to sex in one way or another, mostly another. FOUL PLAY: "Beware of the Dwarf," whispers the hitchhiker to the beautiful librarian (Goldie Hawn) as he dies midway through a screening of This Gun Is Mine. Suddenly, Hawn is propelled into a world of wild chases, bizarre attempts on her life, and deadly encounters with an assortment of weird underworld characters. Academy Award winner Hawn teams with Chevy Chase (in his first starring motion picture assignment) - and with hilarious results. Chase plays the handsome San Francisco detective who becomes personally and professionally involved with all the off things happening to Hawn. Costarring a pre-Arthur Dudley Moore in one of his most delightful comic turns.