Learn To Play Guitar Course

Click For More On Learn To Play Guitar Course!

Friday, September 4, 2009

An Array Of Short Cinematic Film Write Ups

By Patrick Macias

Until recently, if you wanted to watch a movie, a trip to a video store like blockbuster was your only option. You can now save a trip to the video store and download movies right off the internet. Below is a sample of some of the movies you can find using movie download sites.

Red Scorpion: Base-of-the-keg action movie with Lundgren a Soviet officer sent to Africa to slay a insurgent leader. Cast includes Dolph Lundgren, Emmet Walsh, Al White, T.P. McKenna, Carmen Argenziano, and Brion James. (102 minutes, 1989)

Hoot: Well meaning although stringently formulaic family comedy in which Lerman, the new kid in junior high school, deals with everything from a local bully to the vandalizing of a construction site that is home to jeopardized owls. Preteens might disregard structure gaps and be entertained by the harmless lowbrow humor. Cast includes Logan Lerman, Brie Larson, Cody Linley, Luke Wilson, Tim Blake Nelson, Jessica Cauffiel, Jimmy Buffett, Neil Aynn, Eric Phillips, Clark Gregg, and Robert Wagner. (93 minutes, 2006)

Hannibal: Cardboard costume legend follows Hannibal and his elephants across the Mountains and into Rome however you might not last that long. Cast includes Champ Mature, Rita Gam, Gabriele Ferzetti, and Milly Vitale. (103 minutes, 1960)

The Source: Pop-fashion documentary on the Beat movement, drawing on archival footage of Jack Kerouac plus crisp material on William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg. Spectators-amiable instead of scholarly, this vigorous film serves as a phenomenal primer on this seminal movement in American lifestyle. Key poems by Kerouac, Burroughs, and Ginsberg are worked on-camcorder by a well-selected Johnny Depp, Dennis Basket, and John Turturro, respectively. (88 minutes, 1999)

The Indian In The Cupboard: On his 9th birthday, Omni receive an old wooden Indian as one of his birthday gifts. He locks it into his cupboard, and the next morning, to his surprise, the small Indian figure has become alive. When his friend Patrick puts a plastic cowboy in the cupboard for the night, he also comes to life. Just where will this eventually lead?

The Great Profile: Barrymore on downslide grants some snickers in self-mimicking story of aging, arrogant performer. Cast includes John Barrymore, Mary Beth Hughes, Gregory Ratoff, John Payne, Anne Baxter, Lionel Atwill, and Edward Brophy. (82 minutes, 1940)

The Home Of Usher: Yet a new relating of the Edgar Allan Poe myth is one large yawn, with Reed as Roderick Guide, and Windsor as his prey-the lady who might bear him a child and carry on the family name. The movie was filmed in South Africa. Cast includes Oliver Reed, Donald Pleasence, Romy Windsor, Rufus Swart, Norman Coombes, and Anne Stradi. (90 minutes, 1988)

The Border: Boundary watcher Nicholson, incited on by money-thirsty significant other Perrine, starts taking payoffs from unlawful Mexican foreigners he's assumed to be arresting, ultimately gets to be spiritually engaged with youthful mom Carrillo. Cast and tale line ask for Sam Peckinpah in his prime; softly fascinating, although on no account seriously takes off. Cast includes Jack Nicholson, Harvey Keitel, Valerie Perrine, Warren Oates, and Elpidia Carrillo. (107 minutes, 1982)

Bulletproof: L.A. cop Busey, who keeps the 39 bullets his body has taken in a washroom mason jar, kamikazes across the Mexican boundary to save abducted army work staff ex-love Fiona contained from Silva's Soviet stooge. Preposterous, however you have to cherish Silva for having kept the identical act going for numerous years. Cast includes Gary Busey, Darlanne Fluegel, Henry Silva, L.Q. Jones, R.G. Armstrong, Juan Fernandez, and Rene Enriquez. (94 minutes, 1988)

For file downloads use a phrase like "Films To Download". If that phrase gets you nowhere, try another phrase. You should punch in "Rental Movies" for another set of results. - 18424

About the Author:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home