Friday, April 9, 2010

$*$ Almost Famous Extended Edition Blu ray 2000



Good if you're into lightweight fluff. I'm not. I've seen worse. It (more accurately, Kate Hudson, damn!) kept my interest to the end, but way too campy for my taste.
(552 customers reviews)
Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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    #*# The Day After Tomorrow Blu ray



    This movie is a fun movie to watch. That's all it is. If you're looking for a movie with awesome special effects, than it's worth the watch. I could watch this movie all the time just to see Hollywood be hit by a series of tornadoes.



    This movie fails in nearly all other areas. A good portion is scientifically inaccurate, the characters/plot lack substance, dialogue is predictable, etc.



    Approach this movie with that in mind, and just sit back and enjoy the special effects.
    (742 customers reviews)
    Customers Rating=3.5 / 5.0

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    • ISBN13: 0024543466727
    • Condition: NEW
    • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

    #$ The Hunt for Red October Blu ray



    Very nice video quality. There are still some grainy scenes in the BR version but nothing to complain about (The remaster of Blade Runner has me spoiled). I'd buy this again.
    (257 customers reviews)
    Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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    • ISBN13: 0097361376288
    • Condition: NEW
    • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

    @# An American in Paris Blu ray



    An American in Paris [Blu-ray]I forgot to order this when Gigi came available at the same time on Blu Ray and just now caught up with it. I am more than happy with the restoration and have nothing to complain about. And the price is just right, too!! A nice night's entertainment. At one time there was a lot of outtake audio of Gene Kelly on a laserbox set and I was hoping some, at least, would appear here. Maybe when they release Singin' in the Rain(1952)it might have some. I believe that one is in the works now.
    (115 customers reviews)
    Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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    • ISBN13: 0883929112364
    • Condition: NEW
    • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

    @# Kevin Smith Box Set Clerks Chasing Amy Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back Blu ray



    we really love all of his movies, so we already had the DVD's but we just got a blueray player so I thought I would surprise my husband with the Blue ray versions. I have only watched the Jay and silent bob strikes back, but I swear, the quality seems WORSE than the regular DVD version. The colors seem off, and it is more pixelated, or blurry. Anyway, disappointed in the quality. Granted, you are probably not going to watch these movies for the picture quality anyway, so save money and buy regular dvd versions.
    (6 customers reviews)
    Customers Rating=4.0 / 5.0

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      ++ The Longest Day Blu ray



      very excellent movie with historical data ref the turn of WWII in the European Theatre.
      (233 customers reviews)
      Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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        @# Gran Torino BD Live Blu ray



        Take a classic action hero years removed from his action days, a cast of people who have never acted in a movie before, an experienced director and a cleverly plotted and written picture and you get a classic.



        Gran Torino works on every level. Eastwood absolutely shines as a old vet and autoworker who has two great pleasures in his life, his wife whose funeral begins the movie and his Gran Torino. As Detroit changes and falls apart and the neighbors are increasingly Hmong he refuses to move despite all the prompts from his family.



        Even better than Eastwood's performance is Ahney Her playing Sue Lor the girl next door whose brother becomes both the foe, then the friend of old man Kowalski. Christopher Carley in his supporting role as the young parish priest also shines.



        Unlike Across the Universe you get an actual sense of the cost of violence and war and what it can do to an individual and a community. It's a movie that actually has meaning.



        Eastwood's direction isn't pretentious, it doesn't overshadow the message of the film or the purpose of the characters. It works with the audience instead of preaching to them. That's why one of the reasons why with a budget 12 million less than Across the Universe it managed to make 300 million more.



        It's certainly worth $20 more.






        (413 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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        • A disgruntled Korean War vet, Walt Kowalski (Eastwood), sets out to reform his neighbor, a young Hmong teenager, who tried to steal Kowalski's prized possession: his 1972 Gran Torino. Format: BLU-RAY DISC Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE Rating: R Age: 883929033249 UPC: 883929033249 Manufacturer No: 1000041196

        @# Claim Blu Ray



        Let's face it. We bought this particular ski movie becuase it's one of the few Blu-ray ski movies. Just like most "HD" content, it is watered down or not HD at all. I would have to say that at the very most, 30% of this movie was actually shot with HD cameras. By HD, I mean 1080i/p. Most of the actual HD shots are interview style shots. Very few actual HD action shots, but the ones that are are very sharp. When it's HD, you can just tell because it really POPS.



        It's just like cable and dish. They just cannot or will not deliver REAL HD content for whatever practical, logistical, or financial reason. HD Theater and History HD really pop, but most of the commercials are very noticably shot in standard definition. You can display it in HD, but if it's not recorded/shot in HD, why bother?



        Real HD content is sparse. When I got my HDTV, I found myself watching things I would never watch just because they were in HD. Now I just watch what I find entertaining, and most of it is not HD. I'm still waiting for the justification for my HDTV purchase.
        (5 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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        • SKIING:CLAIM (BLU-RAY DISC)

        !$ Supernatural The Complete Fourth Season Blu ray



        I'll be the first to admit my addiction to the show. It is so bad I have actually been able to recruit additional addicts. Great show. The plot changes but not so drastically you get frustrated. Actually very intriguing. Keeps you wondering what is next....
        (175 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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        • Resurrection. After enduring unspeakable torture, Dean escapes from Hell, rescued by an all-powerful creature he s never seen before an Angel a warrior of God who recruits Sam and Dean into Heaven s battle against Hell. And there are whispers that a certain fallen angel will soon be freed from his prison deep in Hell: Lucifer. If Sam and Dean can t stop it if Lucifer walks free he ll bring on the

        @# The Original Faces of Death 30th Anniversary Edition Blu ray



        This video was a big deal and very taboo back when I was in High School(the 80's). I was able to see it before "they" made it disappear. I bought it to show the next generation what we 80's weirdos liked. It made for an interesting evening!
        (15 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=3.5 / 5.0

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        • The Original Shockumentary Is Back With a 30th Anniversary Edition Blu-Ray Disc It began as a graphic exploration of the one destiny we cannot escape. It would soon become the most controversial, critically reviled and fastest selling documentary in home video history. Parents tried to stop it. Video stores had to hide it. Yet across the nation, millions found ways to secretly watch it if they

        #$ The Matrix 10th Anniversary Edition Blu ray



        This movie is a timeless classic that can and should be viewed over and over. It communicates many profound and thought-provoking truths regarding the world we live in and the "matrix" of deception that we have been subjected to by satan rather than AI. Get ready to "free your mind"!
        (2986 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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        • MATRIX, THE: 10TH ANNIVERSARY BLU-RAY (BLU-RAY DISC)

        -- High School Musical 2 Extended Edition Blu ray



        I'm a 21 year old male, but I have come to really like HSM. All of them. I'm sick of the crap on tv that's all about sex, sex, sex, and the HSM franchise has kept out of that. It's lovably cheesy, actually has character, very funny, and, what I love most, it's innocent.
        (154 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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        • ISBN13: 0786936745856
        • Condition: NEW
        • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

        #$ The Polar Express Blu ray



        My three year old son loves this movie so much. We have watched this movie so much he and I know the movie by heart. It is a wonderful story about the magic of Christmas.
        (726 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=4.0 / 5.0

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        • When a doubting young boy takes an extraordinary train ride to the North Pole, he embarks on a journey of self-discovery that shows him that the wonder of life never fades for those who believe.Running Time: 100 min. Format: BLU-RAY DISC Genre: CHILDREN Rating: G Age: 085391157038 UPC: 085391157038 Manufacturer No: 1000009563

        #$ The Prisoner The Complete Series Blu ray



        This was a a favorite of mine. Patrick McGoohan really made the series work.



        The Blu-ray version looks great!
        (51 customers reviews)
        Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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          ++ Imagine That Blu ray



          Received this item in 3 days. Was delievered fast and in just as described condition. I recommend using these guys.
          (17 customers reviews)
          Customers Rating=4.0 / 5.0

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          • ISBN13: 0097360718447
          • Condition: NEW
          • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

          #@: Grizzly Man Blu ray



          You should not judge a man's life until you have walked his path. It astounds me how many people have judged Timmy incorrectly. I actually liked the movie, but I didn't interpret Timmy's behaviour as most people did. Everyone says he was a nutcase, a crazy fool with a death wish. In fact, Herzog seems to imply this. Well, Timmy wasn't a nutcase at all. We all need something in our lives to make us feel important. For some people it's a job, for others a relationship. For Timmy, it was bears. Yes, Timmy did something dangerous. But people do dangerous things all the time. Do we think racecar drivers are nutcases? No. How about people who climb Everest, where every 1 of 10 climbers gets killed? What about an astronaut, blasting off into space, knowing that two space shuttles have exploded in the past? These people are seen as normal, as courageous, even as heros. There is NO difference between what Timmy did and what these poeple do, except that what he did was not socially acceptable. But besides all of that, you need to realize how many hours Timmy spent with the bears. Something between 30,000 and 40,000 hours over 13 summers. How long is that? Well, if a work week is 40 hours, then Timmy spent the equivalent of 17 years full of 5 day work weeks with the bears without incident. Now, imagine YOU do something, Monday to Friday, 8 hours a day, for 17 years, and nothing happens to you. Wouldn't you, at the very least, feel some sense of personal safety? Of course you would. Timmy wasn't crazy for feeling safe around bears. They didn't so much as scratch him for the equivalent of years and years! Finally, Timmy didn't take stupid risks. He knew that all bears weren't safe. Sorry to all you people who think that bears are just man-eating monsters, but they're NOT. In most cases a bear will do everything to avoid a human being and to avoid trouble. But they do have personalities. Think of your pet dog if you need an example. Some bears were agressive, dominant males in particular. Most bears were not. But Timmy (and rightly so) knew which bears posed a threat and which didn't. And he was very, very careful around those bears that were dangerous. Timmy had a gift; he understood bear behaviour better than many bear biologists with dozens of years of experience. And he was right about their behaviour, he knew what he was talking about. He knew how to read them, and he was always correct. Is it any surprise then that he felt safe around bears? Then there is the topic of Timmy's seemingly crazy-sounding "confessionals" on tape. I didn't see anything crazy about this. People get emotional and angry all the time. I've seen people get a lot angrier than Timmy, and not alone in front of a camera, but in real life among other people or even in public. And I'm sure he never really meant to have the angry, emotional footage showcased. He was human, give him a break. Some complain that Timmy talked to bears. So what? Have you seen how peole talk to their dogs? Even huge dogs are often talked to in the same way Timmy talked to the bears. Nothing crazy there. Timmy came from a difficult background. It's true that he had a troubled past. It's true that he wanted to be famous. It's true that he wanted to be the main character in his movie. But this made him feel important, a basic human need. We all look for things that make us feel important, because it gives us purpose. We all want to be the main character in our lives. Timmy just went about it with bears and a camera. Crazy? Well, not if you look at the amount of reality TV shows out there. How many of those people wanted to be famous? And how many people watch those shows? There's nothing crazy about that. Timmy wasn't a bad man. So many of the people who knew him, liked him. He was a nice guy. He was troubled, yes, but a good person. He certainly didn't "deserve" to be killed by a bear, no more than someone who takes a car to work (which by the way, is statistically riskier than living in bear country) deserves to die in a car accident, or a racecar driver deserves to burn to death. I think he should have carried bear spray, just in case. But I know why he didn't. If nothing bad happens to you for years and years you begin to believe in a certain margin of safety. I don't agree with Timmy on that point, but he was more of a risk taker than I am. Finally, the "bears" didn't kill Timmy. It was one, specific, particular bear who did. The bear was old and cranky, and probably hungry and desperate to feed before the end of the season. What this bear did is extremely rare. The bear appears in the film in the scene where Herzog says Amie filmed because the shot was hand held. He was big, he was red. His lower lip stuck out, possibly due to a past injury. Could it be that the injury made it difficult for the bear to find food, therefore making him more desperate? We'll never know. We should be so lucky to know a person like Timmy. Timmy was caring, sensitive and had a good heart. Was he a little strange? Yes. But if you look closely enough - so is everyone.
          (402 customers reviews)
          Customers Rating=3.5 / 5.0

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            $ Marvel Blu ray 3 Pack Fantastic Four Fantastic Four Rise of the Silver Surfer Daredevil



            the pix a sound r AMAZING!!!!!

            Great Collection for Comic Fans who were Raised Reading these comics!!!!

            some people i Know (my friend =p) complains about the movie (Mainly about the actors & actresses) but he for-Got that when we were young & collecting these Great Comic Books, that we were Dying to See These charters on the Big Screen!

            THANKS STAN LEE^-^!!!!!
            (13 customers reviews)
            Customers Rating=4.0 / 5.0

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              #$ Vanishing Point Blu ray



              EXISTENTIAL CRITICISM AND THE MOVIE "VANISHING

              POINT"

              by Geoff Ward

              There is, of course, no reason why Colin Wilson's existential criticism should not be applied to performance texts, such as those of cinema and theatre, taken as sub-divisions of literature, as well as to written ones, despite the fact that unlike a novel or a poem, they are not the products of a single author's mind but the creations of a large number of individuals, from directors, writers and actors through a whole range of technicians and other contributors.

              I doubt if existential criticism has been applied to a movie before, but Richard Sarafian's Vanishing Point (1971), because of its notable existential temper, lends itself rewardingly to an application - and an illumination - of Wilson's philosophical approach.

              Vanishing Point tells the story of Kowalski, a car delivery driver who, high on benzedrine, and at the wheel of a supercharged Dodge Challenger, leads police on a chase across four western US states. He's made a bet that he can make the trip from Denver to San Francisco in 15 hours. Catching Kowalski turns into a massive police operation that attracts the gaze of the national media. Through a series of flashbacks, it is revealed that Kowalski is a Vietnam war veteran with a Medal of Honor for bravery, but that his girlfriend drowned, and that his subsequent careers as a twice-promoted police officer, a motorcycle speedway rider and a stock car driver all ended in failure. After that, he was reduced to being a demolition derby driver and even an "auto clown". The movie ends with Kowalski's death as he appears to deliberately ram a roadblock.

              On one level the film can be seen as a straightforward thriller (with plenty of exciting stunts and a fine contemporary music soundtrack), but on a deeper level as depicting the existential odyssey of the protagonist, whose ultimate gesture of defiance is typical of the Romantic outsider - a gesture which few indeed would be prepared to give, but one against which there can be no recourse. It is reminiscent of the Poet in Thomas Gray's The Bard who hurls himself into the abyss after cursing the royal line of Edward I. Kowalski is an anti-hero, a misfit, a solitary, defiant in the true Romantic sense that he is prepared to die rather than give in to the establishment. A laconic loner, he rejects the "norms" of both culture and counter-culture.

              As an example of popular cinema, although having gained "cult" status over the years, Vanishing Point presents itself as particularly accessible to the existential critic whose first consideration is to know exactly what a book, poem or movie is saying; being "true to life", artistically satisfying technically, or telling a story convincingly are secondary matters. Vanishing Point is also a good example of how Romanticism remains unique among artistic forces in that it retains perennial vigour and youthfulness, as well as audience appeal.

              But most importantly, Vanishing Point examines how profound loss of meaning leads to a radical questioning of existence, and in so doing emphasises the corollary, that profound perception of meaning, as in the "peak experience", validates existence, and anticipates the evolutionary direction. The movie shows

              what happens when the natural peak experience - achieved by Kowalski in motor racing - is lost, and an attempt is made to recapture the feeling artificially through the use of drugs and fast driving on the highway: both kinds of "speed".

              It is speed that gives Kowalski a sense of release from a world he seems to see as largely meaningless, and in the latter part of the film, the blind DJ Supersoul announces that his radio station is to be re-named "KOWalski", "in honor of the last American hero, to whom speed means freedom of the soul". Supersoul, incidentally, seems able to tap into those latent powers of the mind that Wilson describes as "Faculty X" , to use "intuition raised to a higher level" - Wilson's own definition of Faculty X - in his (Supersoul's) apparent telepathic contact with Kowalski on at least two occasions. Ultimately, of course, Kowalski's release is shatteringly final. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, his peak experiences having forsaken him, turned to opium in greater compensatory quantities. The tragedy at the heart of Vanishing Point is that, similarly, Kowalski is unable to regain that naturally optimistic state which can lead to the peak experience.

              Wilson, in The Books in my Life, during a discussion of what he describes as the "bird's eye view" of existence, as opposed to the normal "worm's eye view", says that in the former state it is as if "our minds cease to plod along on the level of material reality, and seem to soar up into the air. The result is an odd sense of becoming what we really are". Describing how he thinks Wordsworth and Van Gogh achieved this state, he then adds, suitably for this essay: "A racing driver probably achieves it driving at 100mph."

              At the moment in Vanishing Point when the media seize on Kowalski's story, there comes a telling exchange between a television reporter and Sandy, the man in charge at Argo's Car Delivery, for whom Kowalski works:

              TV reporter: But as a professional driver, he never really made the grade, did he?

              Sandy: Well, you know why? He never really wanted to. So far as I'm concerned, he was number one then, and he's number one now.

              That Kowalski "never really wanted" to make the grade seems particularly significant. It implies a certain element of defeatism , reminding us of Wilson's concept of "the age of defeat", set out in his book of that title which is part of his Outsider cycle. Indeed, Wilson's original introduction to The Age of Defeat is entitled "The Vanishing Hero", and in the introduction to the 2001 edition, after mentioning Shelley, Goethe and Hoffman, Wilson says: ". . . all these romantics were overwhelmed with a sense of the authenticity of their `bird's eye views', even when they had to admit defeat in translating them back into terms of everyday life. This was the cause of that romantic despair that led to so many premature deaths." And: "The vanishing hero is not simply an intellectual or literary problem. For better or worse, it is one of the consequences of this Western society . . ."

              Heroism, in its purest definition, says Wilson, is an appetite for freedom, a desire to live more intensely. Kowalski possesses both these traits. But the realisation of heroism "depends upon the liveliness of the potential hero's imagination, upon how far he can understand his own latent needs, and devise an outlet for them". And Kowalski seems to be one of those romantics who cannot translate his "bird's eye views" back into everyday life - hence his

              penchant for fast driving on the public highway and his use of amphetamines.

              As a fictional character, Kowalski at first glance may seem to represent Wilson's "vanishing hero", reflecting the negative and defeatist world in which his creators live. It is tempting even to see in the title Vanishing Point the eventual and complete cultural exit of the "vanishing hero" after a long process of literary attrition. But in actuality, in his own way, Kowalski rebels against the unheroic premise, the "hypothesis of insignificance", by setting his individuality against the system, whether it be the prevailing culture, or the counter-culture, of the time. It is supremely ironic that, ultimately, he decides to pay for this stance with his life.

              But as Wilson points out, the authors of 19th and 20th century literature had no qualms about loading the dice against their heroes and heroines. In a sense, the character of Kowalski is related to this literary "tradition", yet his moral perception indicates that he is in no way merely defeatist, but that, true to romantic type, he is unwilling to play by the established rules, to perform what (any) society expects of him. For example, he stands out against police corruption, to his own personal cost; he checks to ensure that drivers he outruns are not injured in various road accidents, risking capture as he does so; he takes only the amount of "bennies" he needs, despite being offered more; he resists the offer of casual sex from the girl on the motorcycle.

              The questioning of existence which pervades the theme of Vanishing Point is symbolised during an aerial shot in which we see Kowalski's car tracks create a giant "X" in the desert sand of Death Valley. Primarily, "X" indicates the Unknown. It is the ultimate "sliding signifier", equating anything with nothing, and it is under the shadow of "X" that Kowalski moves, all the way from "point zero" to "vanishing point". The narrative of the movie is all about crossings - X-ings - literally, as Kowalski crosses the central reservation, the railroad line, the state lines, No Name Creek; figuratively, as he "crosses the line" between what the authorities/establishment will and will not tolerate, especially as he "crosses" the police, appropriately driving a Dodge Challenger, dodging the cops and challenging the system. Kowalski also crosses the line between optimism of the past and pessimism of the present, and ultimately, the point of no return at Cisco, where he becomes resigned to his doom, his own personal "vanishing point".

              All this is underpinned by an ironic sub-text, comprising some 40 captions including road and other signs, ads, graffiti and newspaper headlines, which runs throughout the movie. A telling contrast of focalisation is created between this sub-text and the main narrative which is shifted, in a balance of opposites, towards placing emphasis on terms not normally given precedence in Western culture, destabilising or subverting the traditional hierarchy, thus: law-breaking over law-enforcement; defiance over compliance; non-conformity over conformity; speed over caution. Much of the sub-text attempts to weight the balance the other way in a contrapuntal sequence which continually warns of the precariousness and danger of what Kowalski is doing. For example, the road sign "Stop" appears prominently no less than ten times; "End speed zone" suggests an anti-drugs message as well as giving a wry commentary on a police chase. Ironical comment is a key function of the sub-text; for example, a police roadblock is shown clustered around a sign saying "Welcome to California".

              Yet the sub-text also indicates the synchronic values which Kowalski appears to be rejecting in American society by force of his own individuality, repressive aspects of society which the Romantic seeks to shake off , eg, "Coca Cola", "Mobil" (big business, materialism), police insignia (the establishment, authority), "Jesus Saves" (religion, dogma), "Love" (the counter-culture). The juxtaposition of these static images against those of the fast-moving action demands the active interpretative engagement of the viewer who is called upon to make the imaginative connections. Meanwhile, Kowalski himself seems to evade the signifying system. Argo's Car Delivery alludes to the myth of Jason and the Argonauts, the crew of the ship Argo who sailed in search of the Golden Fleece, and who had various adventures along the way, and obstacles to overcome, just as Kowalski does. But if the Dodge is Kowalski's Argo, en route (via the "Drug Center") to the Golden State, he finds no equivalent of the Golden Fleece, only X-the-Unknown, and oblivion, beyond his crossing point between life and death.

              The movie's title is, of course, crucial, and functions on a number of different levels simultaneously:

              1. The point where the sides of a highway converge at the horizon through the action of perspective - the point towards which Kowalski is always and inevitably heading; where the sightlines converge, itself an illusion.

              2. The point at which Kowalski ceases to be a person and becomes a symbol - hero or villain, depending upon viewpoint - created by the DJ Supersoul.

              3. The "vanishing point" of any stable or ultimate meaning.

              4. The point at which Kowalski "deconstructs" himself in a deliberate act of self-immolation - the suicide crash; the point at which he vanishes from the world.

              At the beginning of the movie, in a kind of "flash-forward", after we see Kowalski drive out of the symbolic "graveyard" of rusting hulks of old vehicles and head back towards Cisco on the Sunday morning, the Challenger and a black Chrysler pass each other on a stretch of road; the scene freezes and the Dodge disappears. This may represent Kowalski's point of no return, his own last ride and "vanishing point". As the action then proceeds analeptically from the Friday night, Kowalski is shown delivering the black car in Denver.

              So, then, how does Vanishing Point score with Wilson's existential critic? The answer is, I think, quite highly. The movie does attempt to get beyond the values and limits of the "natural standpoint", and to investigate the question of existence itself - what human existence is for - through the character of Kowalski whose actions, past and present, seek an intensity or fullness of experience, but which are acutely contrasted with the content of the sub-text, representing the restrictive forces operating against him. In this way, one may assert that the film is successful in revealing existence as potentiality.

              At the same time, however, it raises the spectre of what Thomas Hardy called the "Immanent Will" (what today, less grandly, we would call "Murphy's Law"), that impersonal and unconscious purpose which works itself out through history and is indifferent to the welfare of humanity in its thwarting of aspiration, revealing the disparity between the possible (the desired) and the actual (what the Immanent Will wills) - bringing in the inevitable element of pessimism, or defeatism, one of the "consequences of Western society", which

              Wilsonian criticism detects as endemic in the literature of the 19th and 20th centuries. That an evolutionary expansion of consciousness should be able to "inform" the Immanent Will, so to speak, and thereby gradually overthrow the defeatist attitude, the "fallacy of insignificance", is implicit in Wilson's philosophy of the new existentialism.

              At the end of the movie, the chorus of the gospel-influenced Kim Carnes song Nobody knows is repeated several times as the camera tracks away from the crash site to a panorama of desert and sky. It seems to be saying that it takes death to make us see the actual potential of life, of existence - as does the Dr Johnson quotation to which Wilson is fond of referring: "When a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight it concentrates his mind wonderfully." But we always slip back into everyday consciousness (which Wilson, in a famous phrase, maintains is a liar) and let the "robot" take over so many aspects of our lives, drawing a veil over that potential.

              Kowalski, who decides that he will not return to the "robotic" life, takes an escape route which his pursuers cannot follow and, in the words of Nobody knows, his "soul goes free", suggesting a kind of metaphysical victory over the world. This, of course, cannot be valorised in existential terms, but it is nevertheless the impression created by combining the film's concluding images with this particular song. As a whole, however, the movie depicts graphically how the realisation of human potential, and the validation of human purpose, are frustrated not only by the very institutions which we create, but also by the very way we think, as the American psychologist George Pransky, much lauded by Wilson recently, has pointed out. One could say that Kowalski sacrifices himself in order to bring this powerfully to our attention.

              * Regrettably, the 1997 made-for-TV remake of Vanishing Point is devoid of existential quality and the context of "outsiderism". Displaying the lamentably inevitable 1990s political correctness, this version has Kowalski's long-distance delivery of a vintage Dodge Challenger (identical to the one in the original film) go haywire when his expectant wife is suddenly hospitalised in danger of losing their unborn child. Mistakenly vilified, a desperate Kowalski eludes the FBI and police of four states as he races to cover 1,200 miles separating him from his family).


              (236 customers reviews)
              Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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                ++ Friday the 13th Uncut Blu ray



                In 1957, at Camp Crystal Lake, a young boy named Jason Voorhees drowned. In 1958, two camp counselors were murdered. In 1962, fires and bad water thwarted the camp's reopening. Now, in 1979, Steve Christy finally reopens Camp Crystal Lake with the help of a few new counselors. Ignoring the warnings from a local wacko, the murders start once again while a mysterious stalker prowls the area. This movie has everything appealing about the 80's horror genre and wraps it up neatly into this fantastic horror package. A classic in it's genre.


                (55 customers reviews)
                Customers Rating=3.5 / 5.0

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                  -- Hulk Vs. Blu ray



                  Two great short stories in one pack; great value for the money. Each story is different and separate; Fred Tatasciore as the Hulk is very good, as he was in each of the Avengers movies. The violence is much more graphic than your standard saturday-morning cartoon fare, especially Wolverine's. I would not recommend that one for anyone under 13, but the Thor story is ok down to 10 year-olds. I was especially impressed witht the rendition of Thor and the Asgardians; good voice acting all around, and the drama was even to the point of being epic; it really had a good level of intensity.
                  (47 customers reviews)
                  Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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                    $*$ Ghost in the Shell 2.0 Blu ray



                    I am reviewing the DVD release, so I won't comment on Blu-Ray picture quality. As noted by others, the changes to the original film are not earth-shattering, and they aren't all improvements.



                    New computer generated 3D animation is substituted for some of the old cell animation. But the transitions are jarring. The change is hard to justify. The old animation was good, and the style was more or less consistent.



                    I personally think the English dubbing should have been re-done. Just something about the Major's voice has always been a little too deadpan. But basically the same old voice tracks are used.



                    The color of the whole film is shifted toward sepia. Everything is more washed-out and more brown than before. It doesn't look good to me.



                    I bought the 12" laserdisc of GITS when it came out. The first DVD release of GITS was quite good. Maybe you will prefer 2.0, but for me it is change for change's sake. The film is worth multiple viewings, but I'll stick with 1.0, thank you.
                    (37 customers reviews)
                    Customers Rating=4.0 / 5.0

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                    • GHOST IN THE SHELL 2.0 BLU-RAY (BLU-RAY DISC)

                    $ Friday Night Lights Blu ray



                    i could give this 5 stars. i will admit that it takes alittle time to get things going in the movie. i watched this movie AFTER i watched... THE GREATEST FOOTBALL MOVIE IN THE ENTIRE WORLD....any givin sunday. this movie just blew that piece of crap outta the water. i liked the acting of that country singer...he seemed real natural. worth watching...nice ending...all the way.
                    (186 customers reviews)
                    Customers Rating=4.0 / 5.0

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                      $*$ Rest Stop Don t Look Back Blu ray



                      I saw parts of first Rest Stop but this one is ok also. They go further in the back story of who the driver and family in the winnebago really are and how they came to be. The people in this movie go looking for the people from the first film. There are some good moments and it's not that boring. Hopefully though they won't make another rest stop movie.
                      (21 customers reviews)
                      Customers Rating=2.5 / 5.0

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                      • No rest for the wicked! One year ago, the mysterious Rest Stop killer drilled, ripped and splattered young road trippers Jesse and Nicole. Now three more unsuspecting travelers come looking for the missing duo. And that means the killer gets to sharpen his horrific torture skills all over again only bloodier and scarier than before. Hes not alone, either. The Winnebago full of creepy living corpse

                      !$ Super Speedway Blu ray



                      It's a excelent movie, and now in blu ray you can view it at 1080p
                      (91 customers reviews)
                      Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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                      • Fasten your seatbelt and get ready for the ride of your life! Super Speedway puts you in the driver's seat of an Indy-type race car tearing up asphalt at speeds of over 230 miles per hour. Follow the excitement and drama of championship auto racing with narrator and celebrated actor Paul Newman, and join racing star Michael Andretti and his legendary father, Mario, as they craft a state-of-the

                      !$ Talento de Barrio Blu ray



                      I am rating this movie a four because I enjoyed watching the movie and I thought of the performance of Daddy Yankee was good. The sound effects during the action scenes were marginal, but the music in the club scenes were excellent. It is definitely refreshing to see new actors as well as a different location (Puerto Rico) than what the public is used to seeing. And definitely a movie for reggaeton fans.
                      (11 customers reviews)
                      Customers Rating=3.5 / 5.0

                      More Detail For Talento de Barrio Blu ray


                      • Daddy Yankee, aka Raymond Ayala, is Edgar Dinero, a charismatic young man from the slums of Puerto Rico tangled in the thug life of his neighborhood. Falling in love with an uptown girl, Dinero must conceal his ties with the violent underworld. Edgar may run, but can t hide from the corrupt cops and the war for power among his men. Will he live as the Boss of the Underworld or as the King of Regga