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Posted by GPR79 on 10/26/39 11:28
Payment via bank transfer preferred!
Take these 14 titles (18 films!) for £15 total, will send without amaray
cases to save on postage.
Antitrust R2
Archer's Adventure (Nicole Kidman) & Fearless Tiger (Bolo Yeung) R2
Double Bill
Ballad Of A Gunfighter (Martin Sheen, FF Coppola) R2
Cybertracker (Don The Dragon Wilson) R2
Death Ring & The Gladiator R2 Double Bill
Hired To Kill (Oliver Reed) R2
Hustler Squad & Indian Paint R2 Double Bill
Invisible Temptation & The Man Next Door R2 Double Bill
Muhammad Ali King Of The World R2
Mutant R2
Original Intent (Martin Sheen) R2
Ripper (Kelly Brook) R2
Terror, The (Boris Karloff, Jack Nicholson) R2
Warhead R2
**THE REST**
One Tree Hill: The Complete First Season R1 £26.00
Cover: http://www.boomspeed.com/gpr79/treehillS1.jpg
"One Tree Hill: The Complete First Season marks the beginning of a
genuinely engrossing series that maintains, for a long while, an unusual
focus on a single, powerful conflict defining the destinies of two
characters. Adolescent half-brothers Lucas (Chad Michael Murray) and
Nathan (James Lafferty) Scott have lived parallel lives in One Tree,
North Carolina. They share a common father, Dan Scott (Paul Johansson),
who has disregarded the existence of Lucas, his son by a one-time flame,
Karen (Moira Kelly), whom he dumped years before to accept a basketball
scholarship to college. While neglecting Lucas, Dan--whose hoop dreams
never materialized--has spent his time almost perversely micro-managing
every one of Nathan's moves on and off the court at his old high school,
where the lad is currently an arrogant superstar under gruff-but-wise
coach Whitey Durham (Barry Corbin). Nathan (whose mother is separated
from Dan) is a child of privilege and has been raised to disregard
teamwork, compromise, or the feelings of others. He regards Lucas, a
basketball sensation on neighborhood playgrounds, as trash, and his own
girlfriend, Peyton (Hilarie Burton), as a pretty bauble he can abuse and
dismiss at will. Still, he's sympathetic; one can see glimpses of the
human being struggling to emerge from under Dan's control.
Meanwhile, Lucas helps Karen run her café, hangs out with platonic best
friend Haley (Bethany Joy Lenz), and pines for Peyton (herself a punky
misfit at heart). He also turns to surrogate dad Keith Scott (Craig
Sheffer)--actually his uncle and Dan's older brother--for support, and
sees himself as a perpetual and doomed outsider in One Tree. All that
changes when Whitey invites Lucas to join the b-ball team that Nathan
dominates, a move that challenges the status quo of multiple
relationships in a small community. For about a third of its episodes,
this series from creator Mark Schwahn (who wrote the hit film Coach
Carter) stays true to the suspense surrounding Lucas's and Nathan's
changes in fortune. Then a bit of padding follows to the end of the
season; there are 22 episodes to fill out, after all. But even as
various distractions (a kidnapping subplot, a car accident and coma for
a major character) and random events creep in (Dan, rather incredibly,
takes over the team from Whitey at one point, thus coaching both his
sons), One Tree Hill remains highly watchable. The writing is shaped
well and organic, while performances are consistently excellent. (It's
especially good to see Sheffer, perhaps best known for A River Runs
Through It, again.) "
Special Features:
Available subtitles: English, Spanish, French
Available Audio Tracks: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround)
All 22 episodes from the 2003-04 season
Over 48 minutes of unaired scenes with introductions
Exclusive Gavin DeGraw unaired music performance with introduction
"Diaries from the Set"
"The Making of One Tree Hill: Building A Winning Team"
Four audio commentaries on three episodes by cast and crew
Number of discs: 6
&
My Boss My Hero - R3 Korea 2-Disc DTS SE £7.00
Cover: http://www.boomspeed.com/gpr79/bosscover.jpg
Excellent gangster/comedy/action/high school flick like they can only
make in Korea folks!
"Kye Doo-sik (Jung Jun-ho) has recently acquired the territory of a
rival gang whom he defeated. Promotion for him is imminent but there is
one thing holding him back. It would seem that many recent additions to
his gang have themselves high school diplomas and college educations,
something that Doo-Sik does not have himself. Whilst his boss (Kim
Sang-joong) is very pleased with his work, the ultimate humiliation
facing Doo-Sik forces him to make a decision. Doo-Sik must go back to
high school and graduate with a diploma, thus earning him a higher
position in his gang. However, Doo-Sik is about to learn that life at
school is much tougher than he thinks...
Doo-Sik, along With the help of his best men Kim Sang-do (Jung Woong-in)
and Dae Ka-ri (Jung Wun-taek) enrols at a private high school. His day
does not start off well as he finds himself being bullied and robbed and
even beaten by one of the teachers. He soon learns that the heads
running the school are corrupt, gladly taking parent's bribes to secure
their children a better education, the principal sexually harasses his
female employees and a tough local gang protect him. As Doo-Sik
befriends some students he finds that the stress of trying to achieve
results in order to graduate is taking its toll on several students, one
in particular Lee Yun-Ju (Oh Seung-eun) who even goes so far as to
prostitute herself to pay for her fees. Doo-Sik decides that enough is
enough, whilst trying to maintain his cover he sets out to make things
right. "
&
Weather Woman Collection R1 2-Disc Boxset £10.00
Cover: http://www.boomspeed.com/gpr79/weatherw.jpg
John Waters meets Russ Meyer; Japanese style!
"This [Weather Woman] is a good, fun movie about a weather report woman
who becomes an overnight sensation and boosts the station's ratings
through the roof when, as a one-night substitute "o-tenki o-neesan"
(weather woman) she flashes her panties at the end of the report. She
becomes the usual weather woman, each night flashing her panties and
raising ratings around the nation. The previous woman tries through
devious means to get her job back, but is relegated instead to host
"Hentai-san, konnichiwa!" (Hello, Perverts), and after an unfortunate
enema experience, becomes the weather woman's personal maid. The station
owner's daughter returns from (as she keeps reminding us) Paris, replete
with an ever-present loaf of French bread, and turns the tables,
becoming the new weather woman, leading to a climactic showdown. This
movie has probably the finest songs and choreography ever done for a
Japanese movie on the theme of meteorology. Add to that copious panty
shots, female 'onani', and a welcomely gratuitous maid's soap-tongue
bath, and you have a winner. Highly fun, amusing, satirical, and sexy,
this is worth a watch. It is subtitled, which is as it should be. There
is also an anime version, not quite the equal of this. "
&
A Better Tomorrow Trilogy OOP DTS Boxset £23.00
Cover: http://www.boomspeed.com/gpr79/better_trio.jpg
The best releases of these John Woo classics on any region!
"A Better Tomorrow is the John Woo gangster classic that started it all,
a romantic, violent, swirlingly stylish melodrama about dueling
brothers--with a mesmerizing lead performance by Hong Kong's favorite
actor, Chow Yun-Fat. In repose, Chow's sleepy magnetism recalls the
glory days of Robert Mitchum, Steve McQueen, and Takakura Ken; when he's
stepping high, Chow has a unique, ebullient star presence, a man who
embraces life so unselfconsciously that he becomes vulnerable to all
kinds of suffering and heartache (he endures masochistic megadoses of
violence here). The sequence in which Chow's Mark avenges his betrayed
best friend---by blasting his way into, and then out of, a Chinese
restaurant, twin .45s blazing---is a swashbuckling standout. Woo's film
technique may have been more polished in later efforts, but Tomorrow has
a direct emotional power that is still unique. Kung fu star of the
1970s, Ti Lung is also terrific here as the 40ish established mobster,
relied upon by all, who allows conflicting loyalties toward Mark and
toward his younger brother, now a cop, to undermine the stability of his
position.
"I won't give you nothing, man; I give you ****," sneers charismatic
superstar Chow Yun Fat, in his role as a New York restaurateur who won't
knuckle under to the (Italian) mob in A Better Tomorrow II. Chow plays
the twin brother of the character he played in the original. The bond
between the natural siblings played by Ti Lung (as a reformed mobster)
and Leslie Cheung (as a hot shot cop) still resonate tellingly. As a
good-guy ex-thug driven batty by the slaying of his only daughter,
real-life Cinema City studio chief Dean Shek gets to play a garishly
extended "mad scene," foaming at the mouth, chewing on soup bones. A
later episode in which a dying man crawls to a phone booth to call his
wife (and newborn daughter) in the hospital must also be some kind of
lurid first in the soap sweepstakes. The final 15 minutes could be the
bloodiest single shoot-out sequence ever committed to celluloid. The
story line hasn't been shaped to any particular purpose here, but the
images have a golden Godfather-like glow, and this faintly
anachronistic, all-stops-out wish-fulfillment approach to moviemaking
still has a lot of power.
A Better Tomorrow III is prequel, set in Saigon during the fall, and the
weakest link in the trilogy, unacceptably restrained in both action and
emotion. Chow Yun-fat plays a younger version of Mark, his original
character, a hesitant young man digging for his roots in Vietnam, which
was also Tsui's birthplace, and we get to watch him assemble his totemic
trappings: the duster overcoat, the French shades, the twin .45s. The
surprise is that he gets most of them from a torchy dame played by Anita
Mui (the seductive singing ghost from Rouge), who's a more-than-worthy
high-noir love object. She can perforate miscreants with the best of
them. (John Woo wrote the original script, only to be supplanted as
director by his boss and supposed pal, Mr. Tsui; much of Woo's original
material ended up in his later magnum opus Bullet in the Head.) "
Special Features:
Available Audio: Cantonese DTS 5.1, Cantonese Dolby Digital 5.1,
Mandarin Dolby Digital 5.1 & Original Cantonese Dolby Digital 2.0 Dual
Mono
Available Subtitles: Chinese (Traditional), Chinese (Simplified) and
English
Picture format: 1.85:1 Anamorphic
Codes of Bullets: Parts 1, 2 & 3 (Optional Chinese (Traditional),
Chinese (Simplified) and English Subtitles) - Featurette (9:09)
Movie Stills Photo Album
Movie Photo Slideshow
Original Movie Trailer
New Edited Movie Trailer
Bonus trailers: "A Better Tomorrow 2", "A Better Tomorrow 3", "Bullet In
The Head" and "The Killer"
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