Library
Sorted By: Title
DVDs in Collection: 340
Page # 17
# | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y

Pan's Labyrinth
World Cinema Doug Jones, Ivana Baquero
Mixing your Genres is risky. Very Risky and even the most skilled fall short of the mark. This is one of those rare occasions where it works. Its easy to be allegorical with this sort of film, but don't. Enjoy it for what it is; well crafted, photographed, and acted; with eerie yet beautiful music and horrifying but ultimately liberating moments of human sacrifice. Add to this a magical kingdom with fawns, fairies, kings and queens; and a pretty convincing monster and you've got Pan's Labyrinth.

Party Monster
Comedy Seth Green, Macaulay Culkin, Diana Scarwid, Chloë Sevigny, Marilyn Manson, Dylan McDermott, Mia Kirshner, Wilmer Valderrama, Daniel Franzese, Natasha Lyonne Fenton Bailey, Randy Barbato
I couldnx27;t possibly think of a fault in this film. The acting (in particular on the parts of Culkin and Green) is sublime, and, with the considerable help of an exquisite wardrobe and soundtrack, perfectly portrays the drug-fuelled hedonism of the New York Club Kids.
This is easily one of the most underrated films of the 21st century.

People Like Us
Comedy Chris Langham Willy Smax, John Morton (IV)
The spoof documentary has long been a source of television comedy, but few series can claim to have hit the target as accurately as the BBC's "People Like Us". The six episodes of the first series offer moment after moment of well observed, thoughtful and hilarious humour. Taking the fly-on-the-wall documentary genre as its inspiration, it focuses on the everyday lives of a range of different people: businessman, teacher, policeman, photographer, estate agent and solicitor. The comedy walks the line between the observational and the absurd (much of the dialogue is similar to that used in "The Day Today") but mixes the two to perfection.
The man behind the camera is the hapless Roy Mallard, played by Chris Langham, but he is seldom seen. It was the type of role that Langham was to reprise in the film "The Big Tease" but for now, "People Like Us" remains his finest hour. Have fun also spotting the number of actors who would go onto greater things in the likes of "Smack the Pony" and "Rescue Me". --"Phil Udell"

Pirates Of The Caribbean - Dead Man's Chest
Action & Adventure Johnny Depp, Geoffrey Rush, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley, Stellan Skarsgaard, Jack Davenport, Jonathan Pryce, Mackenzie Crook, Kevin McNally, Naomie Harris
This film would be completely rubbish if it wasn't for Johnny Depp. Orlando Bloom is incredibly annoying. Both him and Keira Knightley gave quite wooden performances. The storyline was a bit strange (kracken, Davy Jones and fishmen) and the film seemed to be saying "watch the third film!! Watch the film and earn us lots of money!!!). The first part was good, when they were captured by natives (mainly because of Johnny Depp's amazingly hilarious runnung style as he is chased by his captors), but then it just got very weird.
Every scene improved as soon as Depp appeared. Without him, the film would completely flat.
Bill Nighy was good too(as Davy Jones) but the rest, well...

Placebo - Soulmates Never Die - Live In Paris
Concerts Diego Costa
After seeing Placebo live, I was slightly dubious as to whether this DVD would capture the sheer brilliance of their performance. However, after just thirty seconds it did just that. After opening with 'Bulletproof Cupid', Placebo kick out all the best, old and new. The tour documentary is also definitely worth a watch, with some funny sections involving Stefan and a badger, and not to mention a quick peek of my favourite ladyboy's ass. Delivered with typical Molko flamboyance, it's a DVD you'll want to watch over and over again.

Pourquoi Pas Moi?
World Cinema Amira Casar, Julie Gayet, Bruno Putzulu, Alexandra London, Carmen Chaplin Stéphane Giusti
I find a lot of gay/lesbo films so cliched, tired and not really that entertaining, but this film is fresh, fun, fast paced and very funny. The ending is great, and there are some gorgeous ladies in this film, I could definately watch this film several times over.

Presque Rien
Foreign Jérémie Elkaïm, Stéphane Rideau, Dominique Reymond, Marie Matheron, Laetitia Legrix, Nils Ohlund, Réjane Kerdaffrec, Guy Houssier, Violeta Ferrer, Robert Darmel, Marie-Claire Durand, Charline Levaque, Sarah Reyjasse, Gildas Chotard, Eric Savin Sébastien Lifshitz
Presque Rien is a showcase for the underexplored side of first love, with the added confusion of a burgeoning sexuality. In many films the 'boy meets boy' plot is viewed through a fairy tale perspective, where potentially troubling issues are easy to reach a conclusion. Presque Rien is not this kind of easy film.

The narrative follows Mathieu and his relationship with a youth he meets on holiday, Cedric, and the aftermath of it. As someone who has experienced many of the same things as the protagonist, the realistic nature of aspects that many other filmmakers ignore made the film anything but easy to watch, but you keep watching because you care for Mathieu, he is obviously a fragile, uneasy person, and Jeremie Elkaim deserves much praise for his delicate portrayal of the varied emotions he displays here, lust, 'love', despair, determination and hope all form part of this tour de force of a film.

As with any teenage relationship, sex plays a large role in the film, and some of the sex scenes are explicit, and the male leads seem to spend most of the film in various states of undress, so anyone wary of this may find it best to avoid this film. If not, see this film, a film that makes its gay teenagers much more than either victims or queens. See it.

The Princess Bride
Action Cary Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, Chris Sarandon, Christopher Guest, Wallace Shawn, André the Giant, Fred Savage, Robin Wright Penn, Peter Falk, Peter Cook Rob Reiner
Every now and then, someone makes one of those rare movies that crosses the lines of romance, action, fantasy, fairy tale, and a story for all ages. And isn't annoying either. With snappy dialogue and lovable characters, "The Princess Bride" is a classic tale of high adventure, danger, true love, screaming eels, and Sicilians who talk too much. And yes, there's kissing.

A bored little boy (Fred Savage) is sick in bed, is told a story by his quirky grandfather (Peter Falk). In it, young lovers Buttercup (Robin Wright) and Westley (Carey Elwes) are separated when Westley is apparently killed. A few years later, the heartbroken Buttercup is unwillingly affianced to the slimy Prince Humperdinck. As if that weren't enough, she's kidnapped by a trio of mercenaries.

But things go wrong for the mercenaries -- a mysterious masked man is following them, and he defeats each of the mercenaries with his swordplay, strength and wits. He also knows quite a bit about Westley's fate -- and Buttercup soon finds that he IS Westley after all. But Buttercup is only a cog in Humperdinck's evil plot, and now it's up to Westley, gentle giant Fezzik (Andre) and vengeance-seeking Spaniard Inigo Montoya (Mandy Patinkin) to save her.

If "Princess Bride" had been done in a halfway serious manner, it wouldn't have been even remotely interesting. It would have been just another kids' film. But with William Goldman's tongue-in-cheek script and entertaining characters (Miracle Max, anyone?), it becomes something a lot sweeter and funnier.

Rob Reiner has a deft, wry touch that matches Goldman's story, and he does a superb job of keeping the grim moments lighter than they would have been otherwise ("We'll never make it through!" "Nonsense, you're only saying that because no one ever has"). With scenes like the torture machine, Miracle Max and Westley's three duels, Reiner keeps it deadpan rather than openly comic. But there are also scenes of touching romance and reconciliation, and some very good swordfights for Inigo.

And the dialogue (penned by Goldman) is full of quotables -- lines like "Inconceivable!" "My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die," "I'm not left-handed!" and "As you wish" are more or less immortalized. At the worst of times it's solid; at the middling times, it's memorably quirky; at the best of times, it's hilarious.

Yes, the title is about Buttercup. But she's a pretty pallid character compared to Westley, Fezzik and Patinkan. Elwes always seems to be winking at both the characters and audience, while Andre is lovable as the sportsmanlike, superstrong giant, and Patinkan as the discouraged Spaniard searching for a six-fingered man. His clash with the casually evil Rugen is a wonderful action-packed climax.

And Billy Crystal makes a brief but insanely good appearance as the Miracle Man, an embittered medieval healer with a very peeved wife (Carol Kane, who steals the scene with her shrieks of "Liar!").

Crammed with adventure, true love, swordfights, pirates, casual villains, and a clergyman with a speech impediment, "The Princess Bride" is an adorable comic classic. A must-see.

Punt And Dennis - The Imaginatively-Edited Punt And Dennis Video
Comedy Steve Punt, Hugh Dennis, Evelyn Duah David G. Hillier, Geoff Miles
I bought this video years ago and it recently broke, so I bought it again. It is the perfect video to watch after a few beers, the series was very funny and this is the best bits, including the food and drink spoof, which is hilarious and of course a man called martin. KROPOTKIN!
It is definitely worth a watch and is not dated at all.

Puppets Who Kill: The Complete First Season
Comedy Rob Mills, Shawn Thompson



Created using DVDpedia