Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Flag Football Drills

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

initiate Area:

launch station is a flag football drill for quarterbacks and wide receivers. The purpose of the drill is for a wide receiver to acquire an begin position on the field in order to net a pass. Like many other offensive flag football drills, this drill illustrates how quarterbacks and wide receivers communicate. The defense should focus on the hips of the ball carrier rather than the shoulders because that is where the flag is.

Setting Up the start set Drill:

imprint an plot that is ten yards by ten yards, and then divide the players into groups of six, with five players on offense and one player on defense. Next, plot four players in the four corners of the set and state a lone receiver and lone defender in the inside of the spot. This drill can be worn by the whole team by dividing the players into groups of six and performing the drill in separate areas. Each group needs one football.

Outline of the initiate dwelling Drill:

The object of the originate state drill is for the quarterback to pass the football around the state until he is able to salvage an opportunity to develop a pass to the wide receiver. The length of the drill is thirty seconds, with six points being awarded for each successful reception, and three points awarded for each interception. Alternating the positions of the players enables the defender and receiver to catch some rest and experience the other elements of the drill.

Progression of the launch location Drill:

As the launch spot drill progresses you will want to lower the drill time to twenty seconds in length. Then try adding a second defensive aid to the plot. If the football is intercepted, try putting the quarterback who threw the interception on defense.

Quarterback Toss Drill:

The purpose of the quarterback toss drill is to practice tossing the ball to the running support and to manufacture valid tosses or pitch techniques. note an state twenty yards by twenty yards, and divide teams into even groups. Then line up players opposite one another about five yards apart. One team is the quarterbacks and the other is running backs, and the teams will be alternating.

Outline of the Quarterback Toss Drill:

The quarterbacks will have their backs to the running backs, and the coach will bellow out, “situation GO!” Each quarterback then holds the ball in front of them with knees twisted and feet apart, as the running aid moves true to engage the pitch from the quarterback at a distance of three to six yards. Alternate running left and upright. It’s a friendly conception to have players depart in tiresome motion the first time you do these flag football drills so they have a positive plan of the conception.

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Coaching Middle School Football – Use These 4 Handy Tips

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

It is a great idea to practice angle tackles with your defense because not all tackles are made with the opponent right in front of you. Set up a simple drill with two players, on as the offense with the ball running in a straight line, the other as the defender running towards him at some angle. As the defender he will need to adjust his body to cover the shortest distance towards the ball carrier, and make the stop by placing his foot squarely in front, and remembers for safety to put his head in front of the ball carrier. The defender follows through with the tackle by straightening his knees in a lunging type motion, wrapping his arms around the ball carrier to pull him down to the ground or push him off sides.

The importance of learning the Playbook

Practicing the plays is fun, and also very important. When you master your part of the play it will strengthen your team and yourself. Because football plays can be intricate, it is important that you understand and follow the coach’s instructions. As you start to practice the play make sure to slow it down, there is no sense in practicing errors. As always, when learning a new play don’t hesitate to ask for individual help to master the techniques needed. After practice is over visualize the play in your mind. Go over it again and again, and you will find that your mind will help you learn the plays even when you sleep.

Learning the Basics of Catching a Low Football Pass

This means that quarterbacks, running backs, receivers, etc have gone through the motions several times and know how to react to situations on the field. One situation that most offensive players will face is the low catch. One not so perfect scenario is a low passed catch. First keep the pinkies together down low to make a shovel. This ensures that the ball will not slip through your fingers. Second, keep low to the ground as a reference your knees should be level with your elbows, and if this means that you are down on all fours better a complete and no extra yards than an incomplete pass. Once you have the football in your hands scoop it up and tuck it away. Use your hands and not your body. Keep your eyes right on the ball. Catch it first and then worry about running it.

Prevent fumbles with strong techniques

One of the fundamental aspects of running with a football is ball security. Nothing is worse for your offensive team then turning it over carelessly to the other team in a fumble. Basic ball security can be broken down into four steps. First grab the football with your carrying hand with the tips of the football being covered with your fingers. The second point is your forearm wrapped around the ball and shielding it from the defense. The third point is securing the other point of the football with your bicep making sure that it is right up against it. Fourth, pull the football up and tight against your ribcage closing the gap on the football from all four sides. Run a couple of drills were the ball carrier runs through a pack of defenders to practice. As your ball carrying continues to improve you will insure less turnovers and greater success on the field.

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Ohio residence Buckeyes 2008 College Football Team Preview

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Junior running attend Chris “Beanie” Wells is coming off a season in which he ran for over 1,600 yards and 15 touchdowns. Included in that yardage total is a 222-yard performance against rival Michigan. It stands as the best rushing performance ever for a Buckeye against Michigan. Wells also tallied 146 yards in the BCS National Championship Game against LSU.

Quarterback Todd Boeckman returns for his senior season. With Wells in the backfield and a dilapidated offensive line protecting him, Boeckman should have slight anxiety getting the ball to his accepted targets, wide receivers Brian Robiskie and Brian Hartline. Robiskie led the team last season with 55 catches for 935 yards and 11 touchdowns. Hartline wasn’t too far slow Robiskie with 52 receptions of his enjoy. Robiskie and Hartline must cease healthy because Ohio set has no certain third receiving threat at this time.

Defensively, the Buckeyes were nearly invincible last season. Ohio set ranked first nationally in points allowed per game (12.8), passing yards allowed per game (150.2) and total yards per game (233) . They were also third nationally in rushing yards allowed per game (82.9) .

Ohio spot plays a 4-3 defense that gets regular pressure on passing downs and reroutes running plays to the middle where linebacker James Laurinaitis resides. Laurinaitis, a Butkus Award winner, has size, hurry and all the intangibles. Outside linebacker Marcus Freeman has been second on the team in tackles (slow Laurinaitis) each of the last two seasons and I can easily glimpse that happening again this season.

Ohio station is deep along the defensive line, which will allow them to support unique bodies on the field at all times. The secondary is also very talented with all four starters returning, including Thorpe Award candidate Malcolm Jenkins. Jenkins, a senior cornerback, will be joined in the secondary by fellow cornerback Donald Washington and safeties Kurt Coleman and Anderson Russell.

Ohio space should survey improvement in their kick return coverage this season with the return of Aaron Pettrey, who was injured for a majority of last season. Punter A.J. Trapasso also returns. Trapasso is very skilled at placing kicks inside the opponent’s 20-yard line. Ryan Pretorius, an true kicker, is also serve for his senior season.

I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised to gape this team succor in the national title game for the third straight year. They have nine starters returning on both sides of the ball, including some All-American candidates. They also have head coach Jim Tressel, who has already won a Division I-A national title.

The defense should be fierce once again, even without Vernon Gholston. If the offense can maintain drives and limit turnovers (Boeckman threw 14 interceptions last season and Wells has a history of fumbling), then I can seek Ohio location good aid in the national title game in January 2009.

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Love Actually Movie Review

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

Love Actually Movie Review

Love Actually Movie Review

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“Love Actually” is just the right mix of romantic comedy and drama to leave you with that warm, fuzzy feeling as you leave the theatre. It’s an ideal Christmas movie for moms and dads who want to see something else while the kids venture into more PG films.

Writer/director Richard Curtis enlists a plethora of some of the finest British actors (and a few noteworthy Americans) to tell several different love stories. While it seems that there may be a few too many characters at first, the overall flow of the film allows the viewer to keep track quite easily. The cast is led by the ever-so-charming Hugh Grant as the British Prime Minister. While some critics have called this casting unbelievable, Grant actually pulls it off by portraying a more human, but yet stronger PM that we would all love to have leading us. His dance to the Pointer Sisters’ “Jump for My Love” borders a bit on ridiculous, but it is nevertheless fun to watch. In the film, the PM is caught between leading his country with a clear head, or giving in to his feelings of attraction to his tea server Natalie (played by musical actress Martine McCutcheon).

And then there’s Emma Thompson, who plays Karen, sister to Grant’s PM and a long-married devoted mother. She suspects that her husband Harry (Alan Rickman) may be cheating with a sexy co-worker. Her performance, simply put, is a revelation. The scene where she is in her bedroom is an example of phenominal acting. Hollywood Foreign Press and Academy members: please take notice!

Another strong performance award goes to Bill Nighy, who provides most of the film’s comic relief as aging rock star Billy Mack. He puts out a cheesy Christmas record and then publicly bashes it. But in classic Hollywood ending style, he does have an epiphany and realizes his wild musician life has been missing true affection.

Liam Neeson shines as widower Daniel who tries to help his young stepson win the heart of a popular school crush. Equally sweet is Colin Firth as Jamie, a man recovering from a broken relationship in France who falls for his monolingual Portuguese maid. You know what? This film is such an abundance of great performances that I will run out of space discussing them all! Everybody shines! My only cast complaint is that Rowan Atkinson should have been given more screen time.

What I also love about “Love Actually” is that Curtis doesn’t, if you’ll pardon the pun, wrap up each story in a happy little Christmas package. There are a few sad, realistic moments, particularly in the Karen/Harry subplot and in Laura Linney’s turn as Sarah, an assistant who has waited so long to be with the man she loves. She realizes, in some of the film’s key dramatic instances, that family matters are getting in the way.

All in all, Curtis has struck gold again, in tradition of movies like “Four Weddings and a Funeral” and “Bridget Jones’ Diary.” Yeah, some of the love stories may be a little far-fetched, but aren’t they all in fantasy movie world? What matters is that they are sweet and not without their share of obstacles. This film is a nice departure from some of the more disturbing violent films as of late. But be warned: it is a little more adult than most other comedies in theatres. The innuendos, language, and nudity earn the R-rating. So see it without the young kids, but do enjoy.

My rating is based on my enjoyment of this film. It has both major strengths and serious weaknesses, and as other reviews indicate has fostered very strong reactions, both positive and negative. Its format is somewhat disconcerting if you are not prepared for the methodology of the director. It contains nudity, profanity, sexual situations, and several situations that are very suggestive and some moviegoers may consider to border on the obscene. However, the situations that some people may consider offensive actually serve a purpose in developing the overall theme of the film.

Love, in all its manifestations – wonder, joy, pain, happiness, passion, grief… is the theme of the film. A very talented ensemble cast is utilized to tell several somewhat interrelated stories concerning the emotional lives of the various characters. The cast includes Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Colin Firth, Emma Thompson, Laura Linney, Kiera Knightley and Alan Rickman. There are also telling cameos by Billy Bob Thornton and Rowan Atkinson. There is one other essential element of the story, it begins five weeks from Christmas and there are several aspects of the various vignettes where the seasonal aspect is a crucial element.

One of the more interesting and complex stories involves Liam Neeson and his young stepson preparing for the funeral of his wife, which has been moving scripted by her prior to her death. As he subsequently tries to deal with his grief, he is worried about the fact that the boy is isolating himself in his room. He is surprised to discover that while his son is disconsolate at the loss of his mother, more importantly he is heartsick over his unrequited love for a girl with whom he attends school. As they concentrate on his son’s dilemma and develop a plan to attract her attention, the dialog ranges from comic to quite profound. And, as the movie progresses to the time of the school Christmas pageant their story gradually becomes interwoven with several of the others. Some of the most hilarious segments are in another thread of the movie involving Bill Nighy as a washed up pop singer trying to recycle one of his old love songs as a Christmas record. He effectively caricatures the dissolute rockers who abused their bodies for too long with drugs, booze and sex. Yet in the end, the alternate humor and pathos of his situation are resolved in a very effective and quite emotional scene. In yet another thread, a scene with Emma Thompson listening to a Joni Mitchell recording and thinking about the “both sides” of her life and love is a real tearjerker.

So this is a roller coaster of laughs and cheap humor combined with real insights about love and the pain that it can cause. If you aren’t living in a bubble, you will probably relate to the experiences of at least one of the characters to some degree and knowingly nod in recognition of the similarities of others to people that you know. It is arguable whether the message of the film would be better conveyed with a fewer number of stories examined in somewhat more depth, but I think the result is quite powerful. Lives which seem only tangentially connected turn out to have a profound influence on others, and we really feel that we have come to understand the characters that we have been watching.

My first difficulty with the movie is that the complexity of developing so many stories means that it is well over two hours long (with the previews and unconscionable ads we were in the theater for well over two hours). Second, the audience is introduced to a very large number of characters during a very short period of time, since all the stories are interspersed sequentially as the movie proceeds toward Christmas Day. Very few individual segments until the finale are more than three or four minutes in length. However, the disorientation that I felt at first from the constant scene shifts was offset by the fact that this technique was successful in keeping the audience very interested; the film actually seemed shorter than it was because of the constant action. So, it was fun while actually conveying a message at the same time. I also want to see it again, since this is the type of movie that I often enjoy more during subsequent viewings. I find that once I know the basic story line and the relationship of the various characters, I can then pay attention to a lot of the details that went were difficult to appreciate because there was so much constantly happening during the film. (In fact, as I was thinking about the film prior to writing this review a few such instances came to mind.) So, go see this film when you have time to relax and want to laugh and contemplate life for a few hours.

Tucker Andersen

If there is a film out this year that is destined to make your heart smile and eyes tear, it’s this film. It’s Christmas time again in London as unexpected (almost magical) things happen in very simple, heartening ways to the most unlikely people. With love lost and love found, courage found and courage lost, this movie is all about the love we have in our daily lives. The love we receive from those unknown people to us (sometimes form those who show slight animosity toward us.)

The characters will capture your heart (Emma Thompson is phenomenal.) For me, the scene that really did capture me was that of Emma Thompson in her bedroom listening to Joni Mitchell’s perennial Both Sides Now. That scene made me cry.

This is the sweetest movie I have seen this year. I highly recommend seeing it during the Holidays with people you love.

Watch Next Day Air Movie Online

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Watch Next Day Air Movie Online

Watch Next Day Air Movie Online

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“Next Day Air” is a convoluted but engrossing dark comedy that has the conviction to make gangsters and drug dealers seem like people you would want to root for. It’s a tale of hapless people in an equally hapless situation, and yet director Benny Boom and writer Blair Cobbs aren’t so melodramatic that they fail to see the humor in it all; many moments are genuinely funny, at times in that blatant screwball way, at other times in that underhanded way that makes you think about what was said and by whom. The clever structure helps a great deal, every scene so carefully paced that the whole thing runs like clockwork. Strange, the precision that went into a screenplay about a scenario that was handled very imprecisely. It’s quite possible that this is an intentional display of cinematic irony, which is good because it reveals an intelligence films like this tend to lack.

The plot, essentially, is about a drug deal gone wrong. Using an ordinary delivery service modeled after UPS or Fed-Ex, a ruthless drug lord from Calexico, California named Bodega (Emilio Rivera) ships ten bricks of high-quality cocaine to Philadelphia. It was supposed to be delivered to Jesus (Cisco Reyes) and his girlfriend, Chita (Yasmin Deliz), but a potheaded delivery man named Leo (Donald Faison) accidentally drops it off at the apartment further down the hall. It’s now in the possession of three inept bank robbers: Brody (Mike Epps), Guch (Wood Harris), and Hassie (Malik Barnhardt). While Hassie spends most of the film asleep on the couch, Brody and Guch quickly decide to get rich off the bricks by selling them to Brody’s cousin, Shavoo (Omari Hardwick). Shavoo, unfortunately, is unaware that his secret stash of money has been stolen.

As you can see, this story involves a lot of people, and their personal histories are, to varying degrees, interwoven all throughout. Leo is a slacker who doesn’t take his job very seriously, not caring a bit for boxes marked as fragile. He’s inches away from being fired by his boss, who just happens to be his mother (Debbie Allen). He knows for a fact that his co-worker and friend, Eric (Mos Def), actively steals merchandise from the very boxes he delivers. Jesus and Chita bicker like immature teenagers, almost as if they were already married. It’s a complex, multilayered film, yet it never loses sight of the story or the characters. This is especially important as we approach the final act, at which point Bodega comes to Philadelphia, Jesus and Chita search for Leo, and Brody, Guch, and Shavoo begin distrusting one another. Eventually, nine people find themselves in the same small apartment, and of those nine, seven are armed and dangerous.

One of the film’s best scenes may seem like an obvious gimmick, but it works just the same. Brody calls Shavoo to tell him about the ten bricks. Subtitles suddenly appear, translating slang-heavy ghetto talk into formal English. I found myself laughing, probably because that scene forced me to face a cultural gap head on; had there been no subtitles, I most likely would not have understood a thing they were saying. The rest of the film is linguistically solid, if a little in-your-face with obscene references to Oedipus. Honestly, the four-letter dialogue in this movie none too subtle–if the filmmakers had put a dollar amount on each word, the actors would have probably earned more at the end of the shoot than the total of their salaries.

In spite of this, there are specific passages of dialogue that can actually make the audience think, if only for a moment or two. Take, for example, an ongoing argument between Brody and Guch about the nature of family; while Brody is convinced that Shavoo is acting honestly, Guch believes that no one, not even close family members, can be trusted. His point hits home near the end of the film, at which point his priorities are made abundantly clear. And then there’s Shavoo, who asserts, “If it ain’t worth dying for, you don’t want to be in it.” He remembers that line much later on, and considering what has happened and who it happened to, it’s unclear whether or not he still believes this to be true.

While I’m hard pressed to say that “Next Day Air” is a message movie, there is the sense that something more lurks beneath the zany surface, and whatever that something is, it can do more for an audience than just smack them upside the head with crude dialogue, a lot of drug use, and bloody shootouts. I suspect most of the credit goes to the carefully plotted screenplay, which successfully interweaves multiple storylines without getting them hopelessly confused with one another. I find it both amazing and funny that such a chaotic story achieved its goals because of an organized script. That may, in fact, be the funniest thing about this movie (although I laughed pretty hard at a scene featuring Jesus practicing his stick-up routine in front of a mirror, each time using a bigger gun). Clearly, “Next Day Air” is a lot smarter than it lets on.

From the previews and commercials I thought this movie was going to be a straight through comedy but I was shocked to find out that it actually had a story to go with it. From beginning to end it kept my attention throughout. Don’t get me wrong it was a funny movie but it wasn’t a punchline after punchline type of movie. Check it out, you will be very surprised as I was.

i mean i thought it was suppose to be more of a comedy but it wasnt at all it was more of a drama. it had some funny parts but it is not at all a comedy. guess it is a solid debut from benny boom. i’ve seen much worst than this.

Stiletto Download

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Stiletto Download

Stiletto Download

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This is yet another female revenge flick with a little twist, I wont give that away. All of the money in this flick was spent on the cast..and with the likes of Tom Berrenger, Michael Biehn, James Russo ( who I phkin’ love and is great in this), William Forsythe, Tom Sizemore..and more…they all play their parts to a tee and make what could have been a very formulaic b flick into tons of fun. This one is not really an original in any way…but it is entertaining, and the players all give top notch performances save for Paul Sloan who is the weakest link in the cast. If you are looking for anything ground breaking..you won’t find it here, but what you will find is a cool little indie, with great characters that will take the viewer on a fun little ride..if you let it.

I mostly watched Stiletto for Stana Katic(Castle) as she’s an absolutely thrilling actress and she’s just wonderful to watch.

At first watch I was lightly appalled by the large amount of bloody, gore-ish, violence, but I quickly grew to love it. It has a interesting plotline, murders within a gang with a killer who doesn’t mind leaving behind her perfectly shaped tracks. And I mean how many people kill with a gorgeous, bejeweled stiletto now a days? So Raina is out killing members of a gang. Why? Who freaking knows. But she does it so well that even though they know who it is(well one of the cops anyways), she remains effectively out of their grasp.

Stana portrays heartbreak and fury perfectly. And the rest of the cast does exceptionally well too. The crazy girlfriend who really just has relationship issues that she wants to fix is violent as hell. Her boyfriend is a maniacal gang killer. And their gang boss is in love with her. A perfect watch when you’re really in the mood for a good action flick.

As the other reviewers have mentioned: STILETTO does not lack talent. Michael Biehn, Tom Sizemore, Tom Berenger and William Forsyhte co-star along with Stana Katic. I was pleasantly surprised with this film. Plenty of twists and turns coupled with hard-hitting violence kept me extremely entertained. The performances are all top-notch…Michael Biehn plays a real psycho and the actress that plays his girlfriend is someone to watch. This is not your run-in-the-mill action movie. Instead, STILETTO is a hard-boiled tale of love and vengeance. Set on the gritty streets of Los Angeles, Katic plays Raina, a sexy femme fatale seeking revenge on the rapidly deteriorating crime family responsible for her sister’s disappearance. Berenger plays a overly sensitive, yet hyper violent mob boss. Berenger’s over-the-top offering is one of the many fun performances of the movie. Do yourself a favor and check it out. STILETTO is a stylish thriller filled with revenge, murder, and mystery set in a world permeated by violence and corruption. Instant classic.

Stream Glengarry Glen Ross

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Stream Glengarry Glen Ross

Stream Glengarry Glen Ross

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This is perhaps the most well written movie of our time.If you are looking for explosions and car chases,please move on.The dialogue(David Mamet)is scintillating,the interaction of the characters is intriguing.The editing is quick,the cinemetography superb.The cast is phenomanal.Al Pacino(Ricky Roma):the quintessential swarthy,bottom feeding salesman…Jack Lemmon(Shelly Levine):The has been,looking for any angle to snap out of his sales malaise;the pathos conveyed by Lemmon is gutwrenching…Ed Harris(Dave Moss):The scheming,conniving loser;he will go to any lengths to move ahead…Alan Arkin(George Aranov)The mousy under achiever;easily swayed.His understated lack of direction is carried off with deft subtlety by Arkin.Kevin Spacey(John Williamson)The clueless office manager,and whipping boy.Spacey manages to give this role a sinister undercurrent.He ends up as quite the paradox…Alec Baldwin turns up for ten of the most memorable minutes ever filmed.This role is the highlight of his underwhelming career.Arrogance oozes from his every word;contempt permeates his every sentence.Expertly directed by James Foley,this is 36 hrs.in the lives of men desperate;on the edge.The world of real estate sales will never be the same after you see this classic.An extremely cerebral flick,not meant for those with short attention spans.A gauranteed can’t miss movie experience.

I have been waiting for Glengarry Glen Ross since I first purchased my DVD player several years ago. This film is easily in my all time top 10. When I heard it was going to be a 2 disc special edition, I figured it would be worth the wait. I managed to get my hands on a copy early and to be honest it is a let down. The widescreen transfer is beautiful but this has to be one of the most empty 2-disc SE’s around. The most disappointing missing feature is the commentary that Jack Lemmon did for the SE laserdisc. What better way to preserve his legacy than to include his comments about arguably his finest film performance? Instead, you get a Jack Lemmon “tribute” feature with interviews from his son, Peter Gallagher, and other folks who are mildly ammusing. Another feature is “New Cast Interviews” which is simply Alan Arkin and Alec Baldwin (separately) doing commentary over scenes from the movie. No Pacino, no Ed Harris, no Spacey. They have included a nice Charlie Rose show clip with Lemmon and a very short Spacey clip from “Inside the Actor’s Studio”. Then you get a non-Glengarry related feature on salesman. Why? You do get a new commentary from the director which is nice, but this was an actor’s movie first and foremost. Why Artisan took several years to finally release this on DVD is quite frankly hard to understand with what has been delivered. Mitch and Murray would be very upset with Aristan’s effort here. Long live the Machine!

Welcome to the world of real estate, where the golden rule always is “A.B.C.” Always Be Closing. This means, lie, cheat, steal, whatever. As long as you get a signature on the dotted line, nothing else matters. And times aren’t the greatest for the salesmen at Premiere Properties. None of them are getting the good leads that they need in order to close. And if they don’t start closing soon, they’re going to find themselves out of the job. There are the “Glengarry” leads, but they’re reserved for closers only. And this heated-up and emotional drama gets even more deeper when it turns out that the next day the office was broken into and the Glengarry leads were stolen. In a business where lying, cheating, and stealing all are in a day’s work, everyone is suspect.

I cannot believe I had never heard of “Glengarry Glen Ross” until recently. As soon as I popped the DVD in, I fell in love with it immediately. It is so well written and well acted that you can’t do nothing but watch in awe. And then, you want to watch it again and again. I have just purchased this movie a couple of weeks ago, and I know my viewings of the film are already in the double digits. This is a movie you can really watch whenever you want. You don’t need to be in a certain mood to enjoy it.

The cast is sensational. You’ve got Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, Ed Harris, Alan Arkin, Kevin Spacey, and Alec Baldwin. Pacino is great as always and really steals the show during the second act of the film. Your eyes never leave him for a second. Jack Lemmon was also so terrific in it, and it’s heartbreaking that he didn’t win an Oscar. Everybody else did great in their roles as well.

What I liked about this movie most was the realistic dialogue. People may think that there’s a lot of profanities in this film, but this is the real world. People talk like this, especially in the business world. David Mamet did a spectacular job in writing it. I look forward to reading the play. I love it when the story mainly focuses on the characters than on plot.

The DVD is also very good, but not special. But alas, isn’t that what it says on the cover? “Special Edition.” While there are quite a few extras, it’s still nowhere near “special.” “Requiem for a Dream” had more extras, and it wasn’t even a Special Edition DVD. I know people were let down by this and I can see why. Personally, I didn’t have a real problem since I hadn’t seen the movie before buying the DVD. I was satisfied, but I clearly understand how others were not.You get the choice of either watching a widescreen version or a full screen version. You also get the choice of watching it in DTS, which is always a nice thing. The picture and sound quality is really great. Some of the extras are a documentary, a tribute to Jack Lemmon, new interviews, commentary, production notes, and cast and crew biographies. Aren’t those a couple of features? Yes, but nothing I’d consider “special.” For a two disk set, I was expecting more. However, I’m not that let down.

“Glengarry Glen Ross” is a fabulous film that had me hooked from the very beginning. It is now one of my favorites. If you love a good drama where the main focus is on the characters themselves, then this is the movie for you. The only flaw is the lack of special features, but that’s no fault of the film itself. Welcome to Real World 101. It’s a jungle out there. You think you’ve got what it takes to close the deal? “You call yourself a salesman, you son-of-a-(bleep)?” Maybe you are… and maybe you’re not.

Streaming Meet Me In St. Louis

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Streaming Meet Me In St. Louis

Streaming Meet Me In St. Louis

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This is one of several DVD sets that TCM/WHV is producing over the next year or so that brings the classic films to the masses at affordable prices. All of these films are available in more deluxe editions, so this is mainly for those who are not interested in extra features. Every one of these is a five star film for musical lovers.

Singin in the Rain is my favorite movie musical and perhaps the best movie musical ever made. Thrown together quickly after the success of “An American in Paris” I love it for its comedy, its timing, and its wonderful plag iarism of just about every song written for MGM movies between 1929 and 1940. If you are interested in extras this film is available as Singin’ in the Rain (Two-Disc Special Edition). The two disc edition has some wonderful extras about the transition from silent film to sound.

The Band Wagon is one of Fred Astaire’s best MGM musicals. Fred plays an aging song and dance man whose friends are writing a new Broadway show and want Fred to star. They enlist a Broadway headliner to help them get financial backing, but the show the veteran describes is a musical version of Faust, not the fun romp that was originally planned. This one is available in a more deluxe version as The Band Wagon (Two-Disc Special Edition).

The Easter Parade stars Fred Astaire again. After being rejected by his girlfriend/star, on a lark he offers Judy Garland a job as his partner, claiming he could make her as big a star as his ex-girlfriend. The next day he regrets his offer, but he has to go through with it when Judy shows up for rehearsal after having already quit her current job. Again, if you like extra features it is available as Easter Parade (Two-Disc Special Edition).

Meet Me in St. Louis stars Judy Garland and is about – absolutely nothing. However, this musical which has no big events and no real dramatic climax will grow on you. It is about a year in the life of an extended St. Louis family. The father has accepted a job offer in New York City, and nobody in the family is happy about it. This midwestern group does not want to give up their easy-going way of life and all of their friends for the big treeless city. Worse yet, the move is scheduled to take place at Christmas. This is available in the deluxe Meet Me In St. Louis (Two-Disc Special Edition). The best thing about this 2-disc edition is the inclusion of the 1930 Vitaphone short “Bubbles”. Besides being one of the strangest little musical shorts ever, it stars Judy Garland back when she was still one of the Gumm Sisters.

Without even knowing if “TCM Greatest Classic Films Collection: American Musicals (The Band Wagon / Meet Me in St. Louis / Singin’ in the Rain / Easter Parade)” is offering anything in the way of Special Features, I still can wholeheartedly recommend this collection for two reasons; first, these are, arguably, the four finest examples of the Classic MGM musical (acknowledging that “An American in Paris” and “Seven Brides For Seven Brothers” are equally deserving); second, that these are being ’sponsored’ by Turner Classic Movies, the premiere cable film site, and Ted Turner’s Valentine to Classic films, and all of us that love them.

Each film is magnificent; “Meet Me in St. Louis” stands, with “The Wizard of Oz” and “A Star Is Born”, as the ‘definitive’ Judy Garland films, and “Meet Me…” is the most down-to-earth and totally charming, a slice of Americana at it’s most irresistable; “Easter Parade” teams Judy with Fred Astaire, making a comeback from a brief ‘retirement’ to replace injured Gene Kelly in the lead, in a sweet, nostalgic tale flavored with Irving Berlin tunes; Fred is in top form in the autobiographical “The Band Wagon”, as a fading movie star returning to Broadway (in a hilarious send-up of the ‘New Wave’ stage shows of the era), capped by a slam-bang multiple climax finale and the fabulous “That’s Entertainment” capper; and the greatest of all MGM musicals, “Singin’ in the Rain”, the Gene Kelly/Stanley Donen masterpiece of Hollywood at the dawn of sound pictures. As Frank Sinatra once said, “They don’t get better than this!”

So, if you’ve been waiting to build your musical DVD collection, here’s a great starting point!

This video arrived and I couldnt wait to get this in the DVD player and watch my favorite musical “Meet me in St Louis” the others are just a bonus for me, never seen them so looking forward to watching them all.

Download Bikini Summer 2

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Download Bikini Summer 2

Download Bikini Summer 2

Download & Watch Bikini Summer 2 at Amazon.com.

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Let’s face it. We’re not watching this sort of movie for great character development or intriquite plot twists. This sort of movie is all about women in bikinis, or less. This movie is an excellent piece of work, if judged with that in mind. The women are many and Hot, the situations are funny and provocative, and the outfits are skimpy, revealing and imaginative. There are few movies in this genre that can top this one. If you are a fan, Don’t hesitate to buy this flick!

this movie was good until the bob sagetish moral, meaning of life, message to the people or whatever u wanna call it came in the script.

it is like full house with nudity. if youre bored and wanna see some nudity, or girls from the early 90 in bikini. make your day.

Start with the first Bikini Summer movie. It’s the same movie only way better. You won’t have to put up with some boring subplot about helping a couple of homeless people. That could have been a nice Disney movie but doesn’t belong in Bikini Summer. And the first movie has more nudity – even a couple of full-frontal scenes. I think that gives an extra dimension to movies like this.

Wicker Park Movie Download

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

Wicker Park Movie Download

Wicker Park Movie Download

Download & Watch Wicker Park at Amazon.com.

Click Here Now to Download & Watch Wicker Park Online Now!

WARNING: SPOILERS TOWARDS THE Slay…I went into this movie thinking that it would be an entirely different thing, more fatal attraction than what it actually was. However, seeing the movie, I can understand how some people might feel as if they were jipped because the loyal movie is different than what the previews accomplish it out to be, but the truth of it is, this movie tells about the consequences of how one person can affect all those around them. In this diagram, I own that its more right life than hollywood. Although I admit, the movie can be monotonous in the middle, especially when the viewer figures out whats happening and whats going to happen faster than the movie moves, it is towards the destroy where the spot really starts to buy up and I guarantee you, at the very raze when Josh Hartnett and Diane Kruger are unprejudiced about to derive each other, but yet preserve on missing each other by fate, you literally want to weep and throw something because you want it as grand as they do. Its a big movie, but only for those that can indulge in it for what it is, a myth about unbreakable admire between two people struggling to accumulate through all odds and rep it for what its not, a high-paced thriller.

This film vacillates between romance, mystery and occasional flashes of humor, and the legend is accompanied by a varied and sometimes overly loud sountrack. It is simultaneously a chronicle of lost opportunities, the search for closure, and the pursuit of a dream (or is it a romantic obsession? ) sequenced in an inviting and clever manner by Director Paul McGuigan. It is almost two hours in length and the storyline takes shape slowly at the beginning, so a theatergoer should be prepared for it to choose a while to become alive to with the characters and for the amble to urge.

The movie opens with Matt (Josh Hartnett) rushing to a Chicago restaurant to meet his girlfriend and her family before he is scheduled to leave for Shanghai on a business hurry. (He is employed by his girlfriend’s brother.) Luke (Matthew Lillard), an worn friend who does not know that Matt has returned to Chicago from living in NYC, spots him on the street as he is about to enter the restaurant and Matt promises that they will catch together when he returns from China. While making a visit to the restroom after using the pretext of the need to do a phone call (apparently he doesn’t beget a cell phone) when the discussion of marriage was brought up, Matt accidentally overhears a phone conversation piquant a woman who apparently fears for her safety. Once he concentrates upon the call, he is convinced it is the say of his archaic girlfriend Lisa, who mysteriously disappeared overnight two years ago. Her unexplained absence after failing to meet her for a planned rendezvous in WICKER PARK caused the heartbreak which resulted in his decision to fade to NYC. The woman rushes from the restaurant before he can confront her, but he finds a hotel key left folded in a newspaper in the phone booth. One of the few predictable moments in the movie occurs when Matt decides he has to attempt to locate the woman and choose if it is indeed Lisa, with whom he is tranquil obsessed.

So, Matt’s odyssey begins. He enlists Luke’s benefit, who is of course troubled that Matt would postpone his business scurry and pick the chance of completely ruining his original relationship. However, in a flashback we soon gawk that Luke played a notable role in Matt’s initial meeting with Lisa (Diane Kruger) . Furthermore, the site of Luke’s relationship with his girlfriend and budding actress Alex (Rose Byrne) leaves a lot to be desired. The complexity of the interrelationships betwen the characters is gradually revealed, and while the surprise at the center of the myth is not as tall as that in the SIXTH SENSE, many of the same cinematic techniques of time shifting, misdirection, and well disguised clues are employed. Since I do not want to include any spoilers, I will simply summarize the yarn by saying that the tension builds gradually as the degree of the manipulation resulting from the romantic obsession of one of the characters is gradually revealed.

This is not a film for moviegoers who like linear dwelling expositions and easily categorizable stories. The element which causes it to rise above the usual mundane two or three star film about a manipulative psycho acting out a romantic fantasy is the structure of the film. The chronicle is told in very nonlinear fashion, with cuts to flashbacks of events two years ago becoming more frequent as the film proceeds. Flashbacks to events that have honest transpired are also interspersed, but these are experienced from the point of opinion of other than the important narrator Matt. On occasion the technique was disorienting until I became accustomed to it, because the viewer has to figure out when the action is occuring. But if you end alert, it was a very efective draw of illuminating the events keen and adding contex through the hasty changing perspectives. I definitely would have to examine the film again in order to glance how often such juxtapositions could actually be recognized by an alert moviegoer and how many were totally a function of utilizing closeups which obscured the totality of the action. In summary, this is a technically involving and well acted film telling a moderately gripping. The tension is palpable, because the viewer is never certain until the ruin whether it is primarily a romance or a psyhological thriller. (I certainly won’t jabber!) In conclusion, this is a sage of both shattered lives and restored dreams.

Tucker Andersen

I was very skeptical when I started this film. I notion it was going to be another – boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy mopes around for awhile before he gets girl back- film. I was sorely unsuitable.

Josh Hartnett plays Matthew who is on his device to Shanghai for business, when he spots who he thinks is the girl that left him high and dry two years before, Lisa, played by Diane Kruger (was Helen in ‘Troy’) . So lying to his unique girlfriend he instead tries to track down Lisa. Following a swagger of what, to him, could lead only to Lisa. He does a few things that do you examine his sanity. When he finally reaches the demolish of the run the girl he does procure, Lisa/Alex, played by Rose Byrne. Obviously not his Lisa. But there is something wrong lurking tedious the account of this girl and there are far too many coincidences connecting the two women.

Hartnett is wonderfully tortured, lost, confused, but at the same time so sure to secure the savor of his life. His film roles are steadily getting better and better.

Byrne demands sympathy from the viewer, bringing a whole fresh meaning to “I saw him first.” Matthew Lillard is mammoth as Hartnett’s best friend, Luke, who is trying to serve him but at the same time, knock some sense into him.

This was a substantial film. By the kill of it I wanted Hartnett to bag his closure so poor that I found myself yelling ” NO” every time a current obstacle was thrown in his design.

The final scene is glorious and touching. A perfect ending to a astonishing film.