watch english 300 movies

Download 300

DOWNLOAD MOVIE 300

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
300 (Video Preview).avi15.09 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “300″ movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

300
I saw this movie when it first came out in 1962, I believe, when I was
just
a kid and it is still one of my favorite movies of all
time.
As I got older there were a few mistakes in it that I noticed.
One was, someone in the movie said that the Spartans fight like
Machines.
I don’t think that the word machines or machines in general were invented
then. I could be wrong though. A few other flaws but in my judgement it is
one the finest army action fighting movies.Reading history books about the
Persian wars it seems quite accurate.

watch videos on line
300 divx trailers
divx 300 movie
video downloads
download movie trailers
full length films
watch english 300 movies

15 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

download full length Dead Man movies

Download Dead Man

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Dead Man

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
Dead Man (Video Preview).avi16.91 MBDOWNLOAD

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

The Movie:
Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl was an unexpected hit when it was released in 2003. A rousing swashbuckling adventure highlighted by Johnny Depp’s surprising performance as Captain Jack Sparrow, the film was one of the biggest box office hits of the year and immediately attained a massive fan base. So it was no surprise when Disney announced two more movies to follow. 2006 saw the release of Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest, the first of a two-part pair of sequels. With a majority of the main cast back, as well as stunning effects work from ILM, the film busted box office records, making over $135 million in one weekend (a feat that was recently topped by Spider-Man 3). And now, with the release of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End looming, Disney has seen fit to release the first two films in high definition on Blu-ray disc.

Pirates if the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest opens with a tragedy: Will Turner’s (Orlando Bloom) marriage to Elizabeth Swann (Keira Knightley) has been interrupted by Lord Beckett (Tom Hollander). Beckett has both Elizabeth and Will arrested for helping Captan Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp) escape the noose at the end of the last picture. Beckett does offer Will a chance to save their skins, though. All he has to do is find Jack and return the compass that does not point North to Beckett. Jack, meanwhile, has his own problems. One night, while on board his ship The Black Pearl, Jack is visited by Bootstrap Bill (Stellan Skarsgard), Will’s father. Bootstrap has sworn service to Davy Jones (the incomparable Bill Nighy), the frightful master of the sea. He sails upon Jones’ ship, The Flying Dutchman, slowly becoming one with the sea. Bootstrap appears before Jack to warn him that Davy Jones is hot on his trail, looking for payment. It turns out that Jack made a deal with Davy Jones. In exchange for dredging The Black Pearl from the sea’s depths, Jack has sworn to serve on The Flying Dutchman after 13 years, and his time is up. Now it’s a mad rush as Jack tries to save himself from the inescapable grasp of Davy Jones and his mindless leviathan, The Kraken.

Director Gore Verbinski had a lot to live up to with this second Pirates outing. The first film was a practically pitch-perfect action movie, combining humor, drama, and excitement in equal measures. The script was unusually smart, and every scene moved the plot forward. Dead Man’s Chest is not as entirely well balanced. The most obvious flaw is the “cannibal island” section, where Will follows Jack’s trail, only to find him about to be sacrificed by cannibals on a tropical island. The entire sequence has nothing to do with the plot in any way, shape or form. The ensuing escape is not well done from an action standpoint, which begs the question, why is it in the film at all? It takes up at least 20 minutes of movie’s 150 total running time, meaning that the entire project could have been around a respectable 2 hours and still contain everything the audience would need to know. Even more annoying, the tropical island locale is repeated at the end of the film, making the cannibal island portion seem not just useless, but an active detractor from the quality of the movie.

However, once we’re squarely in Davy Jones territory, the film quickly picks up. Bill Nighy is a marvel as Davy Jones, both as an actor and as a special effect. ILM reached new heights with their work on Dead Man’s Chest. Jones and his crew are walking, talking sea creatures, with barnacles, algae, and other sea life living right on their skin. Jones himself has a giant octopus for a head, and his tentacles are constantly writhing. It’s a real tour-de-force, and to date the high watermark of cinematic effects work. Nighy himself is the man behind the mask, creating a nightmarish character the effects all the more effective.

And, of course, there’s Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow. By now, he’s got Sparrow down to a science. It’s sheer joy watching him in this movie. He has, without any doubt, created one of the most truly memorable film characters of the past 20 years. The rest of the cast live up to the performances they gave in Curse of the Black Pearl, with the exception of Keira Knightley, who is significantly funnier, sexier, and all around more interesting in this sequel than she was last time.

Even with its flaws, Dead Man’s Chest is still a Pirates movie, with all of the fun that entails. The action is impeccably directed, and Davy Jones and his cohorts make for a far more interesting assortment of villains than undead pirates. It’s not quite as strong as its predecessor, but it’s certainly not bad, and it sets up high expectations for At World’s End. So pull out the rum, raise the sails, and get ready for another adventure with Captain Jack Sparrow!

The Blu-ray Disc:

The Image:
I’ve been reviewing these high definition formats for a while now, and have been watching HD programs even longer. And it isn’t a lie, nor hyperbole, when I say that Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest’s 2.35:1 AVC transfer has the best image quality of any HD content I have seen to date. The transfer was taken from the original digital sources, and color corrected for home video color space without any adjustments to the image. The opening scenes alone are so rich with vivid detail and bold colors that it looks as if you’re simply watching the scene unfold outside your window. I know that such a description has been used for HD before, but this one really gets everything right. You can see stubble on Will’s face, engravings on straps, the fine gold filigree in the sword commissioned for Commodore Norrington. Even better, the transfer lets you soak in all the hard work that went into the creature effects. Normally CGI effects look glaringly out of place in HD, but Davy Jones and his crew at times actually look like they were really there on the set looking exactly as they do in the shot. And the Kraken has to be seen to be believed. I could detect no forms of edge enhancement, polarization, or other artifacts. This is, simply put, a perfect transfer. It’s the best of the best, and the disc is worth a purchase for the image alone.

The Audio:
The uncompressed 48kHz/24-bit PCM 5.1 track matches the image transfer blow for blow. Fine aural details are clearly discernible, even amongst the biggest explosions (which are powerful enough to shake a house), and the channel separation is spectacular. Dialogue is easier to understand than in the theater, and the whole mix has a level of clarity that envelopes you. You could close your eyes, lean back, and still have a sense of what was going on and where. Also included is a still strong, although clearly not as impressive Dolby Digital 5.1 track.

The Supplements:
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest is a two-disc set. The first disc contains only a few extras. The second disc ports over all of the extras from the DVD, sans the DVD-ROM materials. Disc two is a 25GB Blu-ray disc, not a dual layer DVD. Despite this, none of the extras on disc two are in high definition.

Commentary with screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio: These two writers have some impressive films on their resumes, including the last Pirates release. They’ve worked together just about their entire careers, and it shows. In this relaxed commentary, they talk about working on the series, creating the characters, their motivations, the plot, etc. They comment on the final product, too, of course, and the way the actors made the character their own. Thoroughly enjoyable.

Liar’s Dice: An interactive game made possible through BD-Java, Liar’s Dice is a form of the game played on Davy Jones’ ship in the film. You play against Pintel (Lee Arenberg) in a game of chance and deception. Each portion of the game is shown through pre-recorded video clips, played in response to how well or badly you are doing. There’s about forty five minutes of interactive video available, although you won’t see every clip in every game. In all, it’s a good start for BD-J features on Blu-ray, and a fun game besides.

Movie Showcase: Disney’s standard bookmarks for scenes they think shows off the benefits of HD especially well.

Blu-ray trailers: Trailers for several currently available and upcoming Disney titles on Blu-ray. Also available is a full 1080p trailer of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, which looks truly magnificent in high definition.

Disc two extras:

Charting the Return: A half hour look at the pre-production for the movie, this featurette immediately sets the stage for the rest of the supplements on the disc. It’s clear that the documentary crew had unlimited access to every aspect of the production, as the majority of the stuff is not interview-based, but fly on the wall material. In fact, a majority of this piece is about just how difficult it was to get the movie going. Screenwriters Ted Elliot and Terry Rossio were constantly behind schedule, and things got so bad that the entire two-movie project was almost canceled. You have to appreciate just how candid this extra is.

According to Plan: This hour-long documentary chronicles the 200-day shooting period. It starts in Los Angeles, with a lot of buoyancy and optimism. Then, as the crew moves to various islands, enthusiasm wanes as fatigue sets in. Unforeseen problems also dampen spirits. However, the entire group perseveres and there are gobs of high quality interviews interspersed throughout. One of the best recent making-of documentaries I’ve seen.

Captain Jack: From Head to Toe: A collection of short clips that focuses on a single item from Jack’s wardrobe. And when they say “from head to toe,” they mean it. Everything from the stuff tied in to Jack’s hair down to his boots is described here by Penny Rose, the costume designer, or property manager Kristopher E. Peck. All the clips together come out to about 25 minutes worth of material.

Mastering the Blade: Clips of Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley, and Jack Davenport (Norrington) training for all the swordplay. Interviews with the actors and their trainers are laid against footage of the training and then short clips from the actual shooting of the scenes.

Meet Davy Jones: Anatomy of a Legend: A 12 and a half minute look at the creation of Davy Jones, from Bill Nighy’s performance to the hard work done by ILM. The thing I ultimately took away from it was just how creative and inventive and physical Bill Nighy is as an actor. As a longtime Nighy fan, it was great to see him getting such praise.

Creating the Kraken: A ten-minute look on the Kraken. Humorously, Lee Arenberg identifies the monster as the same giant squid that appears in 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea. Also, you get to see Johnny Depp getting pummeled repeatedly by the gunk the Kraken spits out. In an interview in the feature, Johnny Depp says “When you come right down to it, it’s absolutely disgusting. Good fun.”

Dead Men Tell New Tales: Re-Imagineering the Attraction: To help promote the Pirates films, Disneyland and Disney World added Jack Sparrow, Davy Jones, and Captain Barbossa to their Pirates of the Caribbean rides. This extra shows how they changed it and the final results, culminating in Johnny Depp going on the ride himself. It’s quick but entertaining, and makes me want to go back to Disneyland and ride the ride again.

Fly on the Set: The Bone Cage A 3 minute clip of some blue screen work being done on the Bone Cage.

Pirates on Location: Cannibal Island and Tortuga: These pieces feel a little more like fluff than the majority of the discs, but they’re short looks at the scenes taking place on Cannibal Island and Tortuga. Some of the interviews are repeats from other extras, but some, such as interviews with the actors who plays cannibals, are new.

Inside Dead Man’s Chest: Clearly a promotional piece, this has a few quick interviews with Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Ted Elliot and Terry Rossio and others, but mostly it’s clips from the movie.

Jerry Bruckheimer: A Producer’s Photo Diary: 4 minutes of photos taken by Bruckheimer during the mammoth shooting of the two films intercut with footage of Bruckheimer taking pictures and interviews where he discusses his love of photography.

Pirates on Main Street: Dead Man’s Chest premiered at Disneyland, and we get to see some of the line for it here.

Bloopers of the Caribbean: 3 minutes of bloopers. Funny stuff.

Stills From The Set: Just what it sounds like.

Theatrical Trailers: Trailers and teasers from around the world, unfortunately all in 1080p.

The Conclusion:
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest continues the story of Captain Jack Sparrow in high style. While there are flaws, they are not bad enough to stop the best parts of the movie from being a hell of a lot of fun. This 2-disc Blu-ray edition is worth purchasing just for the image and sound quality alone. Also, with Disney porting over all the extras from the DVD version and adding new interactive features, what you get is the definitive edition of Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest on home video. DVD Talk Collector Series.
download full movies
watch video online
watch divx movies online
Dead Man divx movi
full movies
Dead Man full length movie
watch Dead Man movie

14 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

full length Knock Off videos

Download Knock Off

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Knock Off

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
Knock Off (Video Preview).avi34.13 MBDOWNLOAD

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

Knock Off Reviewed By Ryan Arthur Posted 09/09/98 23:17:11

"Steven E. De Souza, I’m callin’ you out." (Total Crap)

Another stinkbomb from the Belgian Waffle.It boggles the mind as to why a stylish Hong Kong director like Tsui Hark would make not one but two movies (in a row!) with Jean-Claude Van Damme. Admittedly, Knock Off looks slick, and it’s got the definite Hong Kong look to it (not in terms of location, but how it’s shot and other technical aspects, such as the generous use of slo-mo), but it’s a dog of a movie, thanks in no small part to the star.Van Damme’s popularity is on the wane and has been for some time. This movie should only continue him on the downward spiral. He’s not completely lifeless (like in 1997’s Double Team) but his acting just plain sucks. When he’s in his action sequences, he looks like a martial artist going through (fast-paced) motions. When he’s forced to act, he’s almost too earnest. He overplays the part to the hilt, where it’s past comical and more into a feeling of pity for him. It doesn’t help that the film is an uneven blend of action and semi-comedy. The blame for that lies where it has often lied before: in the lap of writer Steven E. De Souza.If you’re not familiar with De Souza, you’re no doubt familiar with his work: he wrote Die Hard (and Die Hard 2), and 48 Hours. What’s wrong with that, you say? I like those movies, you say? Well, nothing’s wrong with those, exactly. But he also wrote Judge Dredd, Beverly Hills Cop 3, Ricochet, and Hudson Hawk, not to mention wrote AND directed Street Fighter. He’s probably the most directely responsible for five of the most horrible action movies of the 1990’s, complete with mind-numbing action and scripts loaded with one-line quips rather than an actual story or plot. The guy’s a hack.It’s that aforementioned blend of action and comedy that causes Knock Off to stumble and ultimately not be able to right itself. Van Damme and partner Rob Schnieder have scenes where they’re absolutely giddy in front of police and Lela Rochon (although, who wouldn’t be giddy in front of Lela Rochon), making wisecracks and jokes that aren’t the least bit funny. Normally pasable action seqeunces and stuntwork are overshadowed by a too-cute script that constantly tries to beat you over the head with its one-liners and then winks at you after you’ve been clubbed. Oh, and every line in this movie has been dubbed. Badly. It makes the dub work in Jackie Chan’s Mr. Nice Guy seem spectacular by comparison.Van Damme is practically comatose and Schnieder is doing the same role he did in Judge Dredd, just as badly. Only Rochon escapes the idiocy unscathed, looking quite yummy as always.It ain’t no Double Team. Take that however you want to.
download movies full length
watch videos on line
divx Knock Off movies
download Knock Off avi movies
watch a video
watch movies on the internet
watch divx movies online

13 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

download divx Vampires: Los Muertos movies

Los Muertos

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Vampires: Los Muertos

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
Vampires: Los Muertos (Video Preview).avi17.62 MBDOWNLOAD

Derek Bliss (Jon Bon Jovi) is a hunter for hire, but you won’t find him listed in the Yellow Pages. He’s a vampire hunter, equipped with a veritable arsenal of wooden weapons designed to put the undead permanently at rest. Normally he works alone, but when a big contract comes up, he is forced to look afield for a team to take on the challenge of a truly dangerous master vampire who is afoot south of the border.

Written and directed by Tommy Lee Wallace, Vampires: Los Muertos follows up on John Carpenter’s Vampires, itself nothing out of this world but at least possessed of some originality. In the sequel, we get a fairly run-of-the-mill adventure set in the same world as the first film; it runs over the same narrative territory and even including some of the same plot elements, and certainly doesn’t offer anything new in either the vampire mythos or the overall storyline. But all the same, despite recognizing that most of it was unoriginal, I still found it to be a reasonably entertaining piece, and I don’t regret having seen it.

The main distinction between Vampires: Los Muertos and its predecessor appears to be that the second film is set almost entirely in Mexico. Considering that vampires have traditionally been seen as a European monster, it’s a welcome change of perspective. Of course, this perspective isn’t developed at all in terms of the storyline, but at least it offers a different visual setting. We get a sense of a land of small villages and monasteries scattered around in the great openness of dry, sun-baked plains, with the adobe architecture of the modern buildings contrasting with the stone of the pre-Columbian ruins underneath and around them. In one nice touch, the final showdown takes place on “el día de los muertos,” the Mexican “day of the dead,” which celebrates both death and life.

Vampires: Los Muertos doesn’t have any outstanding merits, but neither does it have any outstanding flaws, which means that it ends up being a reasonably entertaining hour and a half. Though the plot at times doesn’t bear too close an examination, the film is decently acted, with Bon Jovi believable as the protagonist and the remainder of the cast turning in acceptable performances in their assorted variations on the “hero’s sidekick” role. In short, Vampires: Los Muertos is the kind of movie that’s fun to watch if you’re willing to kick back and let the primal reptile part of your brain enjoy the show without letting the analytic neo-cortex analyze it.

Video

Vampires: Los Muertos has been treated handsomely in its DVD transfer. The anamorphic widescreen image is presented in its original 2.35:1 aspect ratio, and it looks great. The print is very clean, with no noise and minimal edge enhancement. Colors are well-saturated and attractive, with many pleasing variations on gold and red tones of sunlight, fire, and the dusty Mexican landscape. For a movie about vampires, there are actually fairly few scenes that take place in the dark, but those that do, show good contrast as well.

Audio

The Dolby 5.1 soundtrack provides an immersive audio experience from the very beginning, with both music and environmental effects being supplied to the rear as well as the front channels when appropriate. All the dialogue is clear, and the various elements of the soundtrack are properly balanced to create a harmonious whole.

Extras

The main special feature on the disc is an audio commentary from director Tommy Lee Wallace. The disc also includes trailers for Vampires: Los Muertos, John Carpenter’s Ghosts of Mars, and Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Last (but also least), there’s a pan-and-scan version of the film included.

Final thoughts

I wouldn’t recommend it as a blind buy, but Vampires: Los Muertos would make for a reasonably entertaining rental if you’re in the mood for a fun, not too demanding action/horror movie. The excellent video and audio quality of the DVD means that viewers who already know that they enjoy the film shouldn’t hesitate to pick up a copy.
download full movies
watch Vampires: Los Muertos full movie online
video download
Vampires: Los Muertos video downloads
Vampires: Los Muertos full movies online
Vampires: Los Muertos ipod video download
watch Vampires: Los Muertos divx movies online

12 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

Last Emperor, The avi movie

Download Last Emperor, The

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Last Emperor, 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
Last Emperor (Video Preview).avi14.49 MBDOWNLOAD

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

Last Emperor, The
I saw this movie at the cinema when I was 17 years old. I was completely
overwhelmed by the movie (I already had a fascination for China) that I
decided to visit china in 1992 just to see the forbidden palace (and the
rest of China of course).

The music in the movie is brilliant, the cinematography outstanding, the
story very moving (the end of the movie broke my heart).

Don´t expect an action-packed or high paced movie and be ready to sit
through 3+ hours. If you´re all that, it might be worth a look for you as
wel :)

Last Emperor, The legal movie downloads
download Last Emperor, The movie trailers
watch Last Emperor, The divx movie
full length Last Emperor, The mpeg movies
download movies
Last Emperor, The legal movie downloads
divx Last Emperor, The movie downloads

11 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

Save the Last Dance 2 divx movi

Download Save the Last Dance 2

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Save the Last Dance 2

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
Save the Last Dance 2 (Video Preview).avi12.58 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Save the Last Dance 2″ movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

THE MOVIE

Save the Last Dance 2” is a sequel to “Save the Last Dance” in that both films feature blond ballet dancers named Sara Johnson. They have little else in common. I don’t even think it’s the same Sara Johnson. The Sara Johnson in this movie is giggly, cocky, self-assured, and has a vague Polish accent, whereas the Sara Johnson in the first movie was Julia Stiles.

As direct-to-video sequels go, “Save the Last Dance 2” isn’t as apocalyptically bad as, say, “Bambi II,” but that’s faint praise. It’s a given that DTV sequels are awful; the only question is how awful they’ll be, and this one is harmlessly stupid as opposed to aggressively irritating.

It’s set the year after the 2001 film, with Sara (now played by Izabella Miko) now a freshman at Juilliard, where she hopes to become a prima ballerina. Her roommate, Zoe (Aubrey Dollar), is a wacky drama student. Her ballet instructor, Monique Delacroix (Jacqueline Bisset — wait a minute, JACQUELINE BISSET?!), is a rigorous taskmaster.

But you will recall from “Save the Last Dance” that Sara’s destiny is to be caught between the stiff, formal world of ballet and the loose, urban world of hip-hop. It is also her destiny, apparently, to only date black men, because she is soon hanging out with Miles (Columbus Short), a guest lecturer in her “Introduction to Hip-Hop” class who gets her movin’ at a club one night and is amazed at how well this white girl can shake her moneymaker, or whatever the kids are calling it these days.

Sara adores Miles and has fun choreographing a hip-hop number for a project he’s working on, but her ballet classes are so demanding that she hardly has time for both. Something’s gotta give.

Something finally does give, though I’m not sure what it is. I know Sara is dismayed to learn a hilariously implausible fact about Miles (yes, even more implausible than Juilliard having an “Intro to Hip-Hop” course), and she is angry with him for “lying” to her. The thing is, he didn’t lie about anything, at least not that I noticed. And I’m not sure why Zoe the roommate gets mad at her, either. In fact, I didn’t even know she WAS mad until all of a sudden there was a scene where they reconciled. Did I somehow hit “chapter skip” on the remote control? Or have crappy DTV sequels become so efficient they now skip the conflicts altogether and head straight for the resolutions?

Here are a few of the subplots that the film introduces and then quickly abandons:

- A hip-hop dancer named Candy (Tracey “Tre” Armstrong), a friend of Miles’, displays random, unprovoked hostility toward Sara, after which the character is hardly seen again.

- A ballet dancer (Maria Brooks) is jealous of Sara’s success in the class, but also gives her advice and mentors her.

- Sara takes pills to help her stamina and strength, a fact which Delacroix discovers by peering into a wastebasket into which Sara has just vomited. (Yeah. I couldn’t make that up.) The pills were only mentioned once before, and after this they are never mentioned again.

- Zoe the roommate is going to be in a play.

I get the feeling “Save the Last Dance 2” was hoping to be something like “Fame,” but it’s not even “Center Stage.” Izabella Miko brings an unexpected shallowness to the role of Sara, though she does do all her own dancing. The only time the story is unpredictable is when it does things that don’t make any sense; when it sticks to logical occurrences only, it’s as by-the-numbers as they get, right down to the big dance number at the end that — yes! — combines ballet AND hip-hop.

As a side note, the Zoe character makes me laugh with her bugged-out randomness. “How tall are you?” she asks a guy she’s just met, out of the blue. After hearing his answer, she says, “Do you want to wrestle?” WTF indeed.

If you’re in it for the dancing, you should know that there is one major ballet scene and two major hip-hop scenes (the second of which is the aforementioned ballet/hip-hop fusion, but it’s mostly hip-hop). These scenes are nicely choreographed and adequately performed, but I doubt you’d want to buy the film just for them. On the other hand, if you like cheesy, absurd stories about vain but passionate dancers, then I heartily recommend it.

THE DVD

There are optional English subtitles, including on the bonus materials. There are no alternate language tracks.

VIDEO: The anamorphic widescreen (1.85:1) transfer is decent but not particularly good. It’s certainly not as pristine as you’d expect a BRAND-NEW film to be, with noticeable grain and some murky colors.

AUDIO: This is the disc’s one good point. The sound is available two ways, in Dolby Digital 5.1 and Dolby Digital 2.0. Both are remarkably clear, well-balanced and superbly mixed — a definite bonus, given how much music there is in the movie.

EXTRAS: The only real extra is “On Their Toes: The Cast & Crew of ‘Save the Last Dance 2‘ (13:22), a making-of featurette that is strictly average and uninformative.

The film’s trailer as well as the trailer for the original “Save the Last Dance” are also included.

IN SUMMARY

No. You don’t need to see this movie. If you liked “Save the Last Dance,” this frothy, lame sequel will only make you sad. If you didn’t like the first movie, or never saw it, then there’s even less reason to subject yourself to this load.
watch a video
divx Save the Last Dance 2 movie
download Save the Last Dance 2 dvd online
Save the Last Dance 2 videos for download
watch full length Save the Last Dance 2 movies
full length video
Save the Last Dance 2 movie download

10 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

watch english Holiday, The movies

Download Holiday, The

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Holiday, 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
Holiday (Video Preview).avi16.56 MBDOWNLOAD

Perfect Holiday, The Reviewed By William Goss Posted 12/13/07 06:01:01

"Not Much Underneath This Christmas Twee" (Pretty Bad)

The slapsticky holiday-set rom-com ‘The Perfect Holiday’ is lame, not strictly in the sense of being exceedingly pathetic – which it is – but more so in the sense that the whole thing could stand to be amputated, for the greater good. It’s not terribly romantic, it’s not terribly funny, and it’s not terribly Christmas-centric, as much as it purports to be all of these things; more often than not, it’s just terribly… terrible.Okay, stay with me here: Gabrielle Union simply wants a genuine compliment from a nice man. Her daughter subsequently asks mall Santa and struggling songwriter Morris Chestnut to grant her wish, which he soon does. The two pine for each other and flirt when they finally meet; however, Chestnut’s concerned for the ethical quandaries of being both a part-time Santa and an inadvertent business associate of her ex, rapper Charlie Murphy. Oh, and all the while, Terrence Howard and Queen Latifah repeatedly appear as a pair of seasonal sprites; he’s naughty, she’s nice.The whole farce kicks off with a fairly chintzy sequence of opening credits in which the animated incarnations of said sprites run amok, and it’s the very first indicator of the very worst to follow. While the perpetually cheerful Latifah acts as producer and finds herself re-collaborating with writer-director Lance Rivera of 2004’s The Cookout, the usually capable Howard has precious little excuse for embarrassing himself so very much in the sourpuss role. (My theory? Whatever pictures Rivera had of him must not have been very hygienic.)Everything else plays out pretty predictably: one of Chestnut’s friends – the big and brash Faizon Love – gets with one of Union’s pals, one of her kids doesn’t care for Chestnut one bit, and all of her children find themselves greeted by Murphy only when the cameras are on him. For some reason, the reliably funny Katt Williams is relegated to the role of straight man to Murphy’s hammy music mogul (whose holiday album lyrics inevitably factor in ho-ho-ho’s), but Chestnut and Union hit it off well enough that the prospect of the film achieving levels of mere toleration becomes an oft-feasible one, only for Latifah and Howard to pop back up and induce a cringe or two as Rivera continues to mistake moronic moments for cute ones. Coincidences and confrontations pile up, with the rote assurance that all frowns will somehow, some way, be turned upside down before the credits roll.It should be bad enough that ‘Holiday’ is somehow hitting screens silver instead of small, but knowing that the much more enjoyable ‘This Christmas’ is likely still playing right down the hall puts it on the losing end of a no-duh decision. However, had it premiered on BET, one could tune in just to witness Howard utter the funniest line in the movie – two simple words delivered so perfectly that the moment alone deserves to be transplanted into a better film, or maybe even a short – and then continue to flip through the channels, allowing every other scene in it to simply slip off into the ether instead down, down, down the box office charts.
download Holiday, The avi movies
download dvd online
watch full movie
download Holiday, The avi movies
full length Holiday, The episodes
download full dvd
Holiday, The full length movies

9 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

watch LD 50 Lethal Dose movies on the internet

Download LD 50 Lethal Dose

DOWNLOAD MOVIE LD 50 Lethal Dose

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
LD 50 Lethal Dose (Video Preview).avi12.70 MBDOWNLOAD

LD 50 Lethal Dose Reviewed By Brian McKay Posted 03/23/04 13:24:29

"Lethal Dose 50 percent? Wish they’d given me the full 100" (Pretty Bad)

As a critic, I find that picking films I want to see for a film festival is a crap shoot. Since most of the stuff has never been seen before, all you have to go by is the title, the promotional picture, and a very brief plot synopsis. What grabbed my attention about LD 50 (LETHAL DOSE) was the catchy (if slightly redundant) title, and the synopsis, which sounded a bit like a hybrid of 28 DAYS LATER and CUBE.Alas, this film was nowhere near as good as either of those, and the title, which is the only real catchy aspect of the film, really has nothing to do with the story itself. The thing about low-budge UK horror flicks is that they are usually either outstanding, or recycled drivel. Could LD 50 have been salvaged? Yes, and without having to spend more money - except, perhaps, to hire better writers.We are introduced to an animal rights activist (or terrorist) group calling themselves LD 50, which stands for the fifty percent of a lethal dose that researchers use in experiments on lab rabbits - or something like that. They’re a rather generic group of Brits (the geeky computer guy, the smart Black chick, the overly-idealistic leader who won’t hesitate to leave one of his guys behind for "the good of the group" (or rather, his own skin), etc. Then there’s also the token Yanks, which include the obnoxious stoner whose catch phrases are about ten years out of date, and the ditzy blonde who later harnesses the powers of yoga to extricate herself from danger - in rather laughable ways, I might add.After a raid on an animal testing lab goes awry, and one of their members gets stuck in a bear trap (don’t ask), The rest leave him behind as the wail of sirens approaches. A year later, the group receives a coded message from their fallen comrade, which contains map coordinates and a plea for rescue. After picking up their latest recruit, an ex-marine with all of the stereotypical PTSD issues, they put on their fatigues, blow up their rubber raft, and make their raid across the river on the facility where their friend is being kept. Once inside, however, they find that the place has been abandoned - for several months, apparently. After taking an elevator ride to the lower levels, they suddenly find themselves trapped in a sprawling underground lab complex with the doors sealed shut behind them. Let the carnage begin . . . sort of.Now, the film hadn’t exactly been gripping up to that point. The characters were paper-thin, the dialogue insultingly cliched, and the premise mildly interesting at best. But once they get stuck underground, you the viewer can expect another 45 minutes of claustrophobic tedium that feels like 95. It’s not scary. It’s not intense. And only occasionally does it do something you think might be interesting, only for it to flounder back into the doldrums of sub par storytelling. This thing is so bland and cliched, I felt like was having an extended flashback to that one time I was bored and channel surfing, and caught an episode of the British teeny-bopper show S Club 7 when they tried to do a Blair Witch Project parody (and failed only slightly worse than LD 50). To top it off, the characters repeatedly make boneheaded choices. Five minutes after they get locked into the underground lab, what do they decide to do? Send their friend off to scout ahead (in other words, be the first to die), while they sit down and smoke a big, fat blunt. Now, I have nothing against getting high, but there is such a thing as a wrong time and wrong place. How about saving the celebratory spliff for AFTER you get out of the dark scary basement?Dull and derivative, the saddest thing about LD 50 is that it could have worked with a bit more of a creative story and some much snappier dialogue. As it stands, it’s just another bottom-feeder in an ocean of genre mediocrity.
LD 50 Lethal Dose full movie download
divx full LD 50 Lethal Dose movie download

download new release movies
download full length LD 50 Lethal Dose movies
watch LD 50 Lethal Dose divx movie
LD 50 Lethal Dose avi movie

8 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

divx Son of the Mask video

Download Son of the Mask

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Son of the Mask

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
Son of the Mask (Video Preview).avi12.39 MBDOWNLOAD

The most interesting Screenshots for the “Son of the Mask” movie:
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies
screenshot for moviesscreenshot for moviesscreenshot for movies

Son of the Mask (2005) / Comedy-Action

MPAA Rated: PG for crude humor and violence (I’d definitely rate this PG-13) Running Time: 86 min. Cast: Jamie Kennedy, Alan Cumming, Ryan Falconer, Liam Falconer, Traylor Howard, Bob Hoskins, Steven Wright, Ben Stein, Kal Penn Director: Lawrence Guterman Screenplay: Lance Kazei

 

$100,000,000

The figure you see above is what New Line Cinema reportedly paid to make this horrendously inept piece of garbage posing as family entertainment.  Some sources have that figure at about $75 million, but the fact remains, if they only spent a dollar to do research on the public’s interest in this, they’d never spend another penny. 

It’s also downright insulting, not only to the audience that pays to see this, but also to every struggling screenwriter or director with a dream to make a movie that fails.  To think that studio upon studio regularly turns down scripts that are a thousand times greater than this, and which would probably cost only a fraction of the cost to make, while this gets greenlighted — well, it’s enough to make you lose faith altogether. 

Just to show you how stupefying it is for a movie company to throw this kind of coinage at such a superfluous sequel — the original film, The Mask, only grossed $120 million domestically.  That film had a red-hot Jim Carrey.  This film has Jamie Kennedy.  That film cost only $18 million to make.  This film will be lucky to make even that.

Jamie Kennedy (Malibu’s Most Wanted, Bug) stars as struggling cartoonist Tim Avery, whose dog finds the Mask of Loki and which Tim ends up sporting at a company function.  The Mask makes the wearer become a live-action cartoon character, which is perfect for inspiring the cartoonist, who soon sees a promotion come his way for the spectacle he performs in front of his bosses.  Meanwhile, Tim’s doting wife (Traylor Howard, "Bram & Alice") pressures him into a baby, which just happens to have been conceived while the mask was in full swing, giving the young child all of the powers of the mask.  All the while, Loki (Cumming, X2), the god of mischief himself, is in search of his long-lost mask, going from baby to baby, trying to find the owner so that he might recover it. 

I came into Son of the Mask with about the lowest expectations one could have for a movie, and needless to say, I came out of it still flabbergasted at just how dismal an experience it truly is.  Astonishing is perhaps the only way I can describe it, as I sat in amazement, mouth agape, witnessing one of the most grandiose wastes of time, money and energy to ever get a wide theatrical release.

There is almost no story to the movie at all.  It seems that the only game plan behind any of it was to throw as many special effects at the audience as possible, hoping we will be dazzled enough to ignore the fact that there is no tangible plot or story cohesion.  Wave after wave of special effects fill the screen, but even this move backfires, as they are some of the most repugnantly rendered, childishly conceived, and abominably executed visuals you may actually see this year.  Yes, I do realize it is supposed to be an emulation of a cartoon, but watching talking and dancing babies borders on the grotesque, with a level of bad taste that will have you retching.

In one final insult, the MPAA has blessed this travesty with a PG rating, almost ensuring that families looking to take their children to a film for everyone will flock to it.  How much of the $100 million went to pay off the ratings board?  This movie’s only attempts at humor are of the bodily function variety.  Watch a young boy piss in his father’s face.  Watch the same young boy spew vomit all over the inside windshield.  Listen to the sounds of Jamie Kennedy overwhelm Alan Cumming with kung fu flatulence.  More sweet sounds are heard when baby makes poop in his diapers — quite loudly.  A woman’s head is converted into a large nose, and she sneezes mucus out on someone.  Watch the people in the audience around you vomit all over the theater floor simultaneously.

Son of the Mask is a tedious and utterly revolting way to spend 86 minutes, and even if they paid you $7.50 to see it, instead of the other way around, it wouldn’t be worth it.  Using your money as toilet paper would be putting it to better use (well, maybe not the 50 cent part, but you know what I mean), and would save you from wasting quite a bit of cumulative time for you and your family.  Take them to the park — it’s free, and will leave you in far better spirits — and use what you save to buy or rent the original film instead.  This film doesn’t deserve a penny of your money, it deserves a vasectomy, if only to be sure no chances of having any more offspring to pollute theaters with again.
download this video
Son of the Mask divx movi
watch english Son of the Mask movies online
full length Son of the Mask videos
watch full length movies online
divx movie downloads
Son of the Mask full divx movie

7 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

divx Perfect Storm, The dvd movie

Download Perfect Storm, The

DOWNLOAD MOVIE Perfect Storm, 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
Perfect Storm (Video Preview).avi10.58 MBDOWNLOAD

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

Perfect Storm, The

The Perfect Storm *** (out of 5) (2000)

Cast: George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, John C. Reilly, Diane Lane, William Fichtner

Directed by Wolfgang Petersen

Based on real events that happened back in 1991, and chronicled in Sebastian Junger’s bestseller, this is a mostly speculative account of what happened on board a fishing vessel in the North Atlantic which past through one of the nastiest storms ever. It’s a struggle for survival as the crew quickly find themselves slowly losing control of every aspect of the ship.

THE PERFECT STORM is what happens when something that should have been made for TV gets big budget Hollywood treatment. The special effects are what’s most impressive about the film, which is astonishing since most people watching won’t realize almost all of the storm is computer generated. Wolfgang Petersen, director of the taut thriller AIR FORCE ONE and the classic submarine film DAS BOOT, does the best he can with the material given to him, and a competent cast of character actors breathe life into simplistic, underwritten roles. A more realistic portrayal of these events would have made for a much more compelling film, but too much romanticism and whoop-de-do before what’s just a mere fishing expedition leads to a schmaltzy and ineffectual ending. Credit Petersen and the cast for making this watchable, but it really isn’t a film that needed to be made.

Back to Qwipster’s Movie Reviews

 

 

 


divx trailers
watch divx movies online
watch Perfect Storm, The divx movie
Perfect Storm, The full movies
download videos
download full Perfect Storm, The movies
divx movies

6 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »