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Scooby Doo Meets the Harlem Globetrotters
One of the most ambitious SCOOBY-DOO entries combined colonial America and 1970s basketball into one spooky mystery. From the 1972 series, THE NEW SCOOBY-DOO MOVIES, the vacationing Harlem Globetrotters meet up with the Mystery Van when Scooby, Shaggy and the gang are off to meet Shaggy`s Uncle Nathaniel. Here, they run into ghosts of Paul Revere and other Revolutionary War figures. Three episodes in all are included with the Globetrotters, who contrary to the memory of many children of the 1970s are not actually involved with the production. The Globetrotter voices are provided by actors such as Robert DoQui, Stu Gilliam, and Scatman Crothers, who had worked on many other Hanna-Barbera animation projects.
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Retail: $5.93
Sale:
$5.93 at overstock
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John Q Training Day Fallen
N/A
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Retail: $19.41
Sale:
$19.41 at overstock
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John Q Training Day Fallen
N/A
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Retail: $19.41
Sale:
$19.41 at overstock
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Collateral
Jamie Foxx plays Max, a Los Angeles cab driver who has a pretty wild night in this thriller from Michael Mann (HEAT, THE INSIDER). First, Max picks up, flirts with, and gets the number of Annie (Jada Pinkett Smith), an attractive District attorney. Next, Vincent (Tom Cruise) climbs into his cab. He is a professional hit man who reserves Max for the night with a whole shopping list of victims he needs to visit. As the night moves forward and the body count rises, Max must wrestle with the question of how to do the right thing while staying alive. Gradually the two men bond in unlikely ways, as each learns survival mechanisms from the other, and it all doubles as a metaphor for morality vs. capitalism. Mark Ruffalo and Peter Berg play cops who eventually get on Max and Vincent`s trail, leading to a spectacular action set piece inside a night club. Irma P. Hall (2004`s THE LADYKILLERS) gets laughs as Max`s hospitalized momma, and Javier Bardem (BEFORE NIGHT FALLS) is a sinister drug lord. With a capable director like Mann at the wheel, this remains a smooth, enjoyable ride while also being fast, bumpy, and full of twists and turns. The streets of urban, nighttime Los Angeles--captured via a specially modified digital camera--never looked so beautiful or desolate. As typical of the director, the film is both artistic and action-packed; operatically over-the-top while never skimping on the little details.
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Retail: $19.99
Sale:
$19.99 at overstock
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Collateral
Jamie Foxx plays Max, a Los Angeles cab driver who has a pretty wild night in this thriller from Michael Mann (HEAT, THE INSIDER). First, Max picks up, flirts with, and gets the number of Annie (Jada Pinkett Smith), an attractive District attorney. Next, Vincent (Tom Cruise) climbs into his cab. He is a professional hit man who reserves Max for the night with a whole shopping list of victims he needs to visit. As the night moves forward and the body count rises, Max must wrestle with the question of how to do the right thing while staying alive. Gradually the two men bond in unlikely ways, as each learns survival mechanisms from the other, and it all doubles as a metaphor for morality vs. capitalism. Mark Ruffalo and Peter Berg play cops who eventually get on Max and Vincent`s trail, leading to a spectacular action set piece inside a night club. Irma P. Hall (2004`s THE LADYKILLERS) gets laughs as Max`s hospitalized momma, and Javier Bardem (BEFORE NIGHT FALLS) is a sinister drug lord. With a capable director like Mann at the wheel, this remains a smooth, enjoyable ride while also being fast, bumpy, and full of twists and turns. The streets of urban, nighttime Los Angeles--captured via a specially modified digital camera--never looked so beautiful or desolate. As typical of the director, the film is both artistic and action-packed; operatically over-the-top while never skimping on the little details.
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Retail: $19.99
Sale:
$19.99 at overstock
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Beatrix Potter A Private World
Winner of American Film Festival Blue Ribbon Award. Enter the private world of a cherished storyteller, creator of such masterpieces as Peter Rabbit, Squirrel Nutkin, and Tom Kitten. 42 min.
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Retail: $9.95
Sale:
$9.95 at overstock
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Collateral
Jamie Foxx plays Max, a Los Angeles cab driver who has a pretty wild night in this thriller from Michael Mann (HEAT, THE INSIDER). First, Max picks up, flirts with, and gets the number of Annie (Jada Pinkett Smith), an attractive District attorney. Next, Vincent (Tom Cruise) climbs into his cab. He is a professional hit man who reserves Max for the night with a whole shopping list of victims he needs to visit. As the night moves forward and the body count rises, Max must wrestle with the question of how to do the right thing while staying alive. Gradually the two men bond in unlikely ways, as each learns survival mechanisms from the other, and it all doubles as a metaphor for morality vs. capitalism. Mark Ruffalo and Peter Berg play cops who eventually get on Max and Vincent`s trail, leading to a spectacular action set piece inside a night club. Irma P. Hall (2004`s THE LADYKILLERS) gets laughs as Max`s hospitalized momma, and Javier Bardem (BEFORE NIGHT FALLS) is a sinister drug lord. With a capable director like Mann at the wheel, this remains a smooth, enjoyable ride while also being fast, bumpy, and full of twists and turns. The streets of urban, nighttime Los Angeles--captured via a specially modified digital camera--never looked so beautiful or desolate. As typical of the director, the film is both artistic and action-packed; operatically over-the-top while never skimping on the little details.
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Retail: $19.99
Sale:
$19.99 at overstock
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