| Collectors Corner For - Cult - Classic's - Rare out of Print |
In A Child's Name In a Child's Name Mini Series [VHS] (1991) $ 29.99 Actors: Valerie Bertinelli, Michael Ontkean, Timothy Carhart, David Huddleston, John Karlen A true story about a woman who fights her brother-in-law's parents for custody of her deceased sister's baby upon learning that her brother-in-law murdered her sister. In 1984 Ken Taylor, a dentist in Marion, Ind., cracked open the skull of his third wife, Teresa, with a dumbbell. Driving her body halfway across the country, he dumped it along a Pennsylvania road, then went to visit an ex-wife in Pittsburgh. Apprehended, Taylor, a calm, eerily confident wife-beater, philanderer and heavy user of marijuana and amphetamines, pleaded self-defense. He put forth a bizarre story that Teresa had been a drug addict and that he had caught her performing oral sex on their five-month-old son, Philip. In a taut, chilling voyage into the mind of a sociopath, Maas ( Serpico ) highlights the regional, religious and ethnic passions unleashed by a case that extended from the Midwestern Bible Belt to New Jersey, from Mexico to Staten Island, N.Y. As dramatic as the trial itself was the custody battle over Philip; his paternal grandparents temporarily adopted him after snatching him away from Teresa's sister, who had won custody.
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Barfly ( 1987 ) DVD $ 14.99 Actors: Mickey Rourke, Faye Dunaway, Alice Krige, Jack Nance, J.C. Quinn The script for this movie was written by outrageous poet-author-alcoholic Charles Bukowski. But director Barbet Schroeder makes it into an oddly amusing story of a pugnacious drunk writer (Mickey Rourke) based on Bukowski himself. Rourke spends almost all of his time at the bar, struggling with sobriety (he's against it) and, occasionally, having fistfights with the bartender (Frank Stallone). He meets another souse, a formerly attractive woman (Faye Dunaway), and gets involved with her, which means they drink copious amounts of liquor and try to have sex. Not much happens beyond that, yet this film is strangely entertaining, for all of its bottom-of-the-barrel humanity. Maybe that's the secret: "Oh, the humanity...."
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Begotten (1991) DVD $ 29.99 Actors: Brian Salzberg, Donna Dempsey, Stephen Charles Barry, Adolfo Vargas, James Gandia. Format: Black & White. BEGOTTEN is the creation myth brought to life, the story of no less than the violent death of God and the (re)birth of nature on a barren earth. Astounding and baffling critics and audiences alike, BEGOTTEN was named one of the Ten Best Pictures of 1991 by Time Magazine. Time's Richard Corliss wrote: "Nobody will get through BEGOTTEN without being marked... BEGOTTEN is a spectacular one-of-a-kind (you wouldn't want there to be two), filmed in speckled chiaroscuro so that each image is a seductive mystery, a Rorschach test for the adventurous eye." In production notes for the film, director Merhige commented, "Each shot in the film went through hours of preparation to achieve the look you will experience when viewing... the etheral "pulse" that hypnotically permeates the film. It took over ten hours to re-photograph less than one minute of selected takes.
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A Midnight Clear (1992) DVD $ 19.99 Set in 1944 France, an American Intelligence Squad locates a German Platoon wishing to surrender rather than die in Germany's final war offensive. The two groups of men, isolated from the war at present, put aside their differences and spend Christmas together before the surrender plan turns bad and both sides are forced to fight the other. William Wharton's autobiographical novel of World War II becomes a moving portrait of war's madness in the microcosm of a small intelligence patrol on the German front in 1944. The unit, composed of high IQ soldiers, is sent to scout ahead. They discover a small platoon of Germans hiding in the forest, but these soldiers would rather fight with snowballs than guns and exchange Christmas presents instead of mortar fire. The young, rather unsoldierly Americans are offered the opportunity to "capture" the Germans without a fight--until a fatal misunderstanding plunges their efforts into tragedy. Director Keith Gordon, who also penned the screenplay, creates an unusually eloquent, offbeat platoon drama shot amidst the tranquil beauty of a snow-covered forest. His excellent cast includes future stars Ethan Hawke and Gary Sinise, with Frank Whaley, Kevin Dillon, Arye Gross, and Peter Berg rounding out the platoon. Though little seen upon its 1992 release, this moving drama received high praise for its vivid characters and delicately wrought imagery and remains one of the most powerful pacifist dramas of the post-war era.
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Caravans(1978) DVD $ 19.99 Cast: Joseph Cotten, Abbas Ghorgbighi, Behrooz Gueramian, Jeremy Kemp, Christopher Lee, Jennifer O'Neill, Anthony Quinn, Duncan Quinn, Michael Sarrazin, Barry Sullivan, Behrooz Vosoughi. From the best-selling author of THE SOURCE, COVENANT, CARIBBEAN and CENTENNIAL, comes this classic tale of a young American embassy official (Michael Sarrazin) who is sent into the Middle-Eastern desert to find the missing daughter of a U.S. Senator. The young woman has left her husband, a Colonel in the Shadom--she was his number two wife--and has opted for the lifestyle of a nomadic tribe. When the diplomat locates the girl he joins the caravan and attempts to persuade the girl to return. Caravans was filmed entirely on locations near the Iran-Afghanistan border and features a fine performance by Anthony Quinn as the aging chieftain of the nomadic tribe.
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My Dinner with Andre (1981) - Louis Malle DVD $ 29.99( Super Mega Rare Movie !! ) Directed by Louis Malle Writing credits Andre Gregory Wallace Shawn Wallace Shawn ... Wally Shawn Andre Gregory ... Andre Gregory Jean Lenauer ... Waiter Roy Butler ... Bartender Runtime: 110 min Country: USA Language: English Note: There may be a short delay doing chapter change depending on your dvd player model. Do NOT Buy that Rare Movie if you expect perfection ! This rare Movie has it flaws but picture quality is good and so is Audio. That film is for the collector, who will be happy to found that movie. try to find it anywhere else for the price offered......you wont. So please don't Buy the movie if you expect Digital flawless quality.
The idea is astonishing in its audacity: a film of two friends talking, just simply talking?but with passion, wit, scandal, whimsy, vision, hope, and despair?for 110 minutes. It sounds at first like one of those underground films of the 1960s, in which great length and minimal content somehow interacted in the dope-addled brains of the audience to provide the impression of deep if somehow elusive profundity. "My Dinner with Andre" is not like that. It doesn't use all of those words as a stunt. They are alive on the screen, breathing, pulsing, reminding us of endless, impassioned conversations we've had with those few friends worth talking with for hours and hours. Underneath all the other fascinating things in this film beats the tide of friendship, of two people with a genuine interest in one another.The two people are André Gregory and Wallace Shawn. Those are their real names, and also their names in the movie. I suppose they are playing themselves. As the film opens, Shawn travels across New York City to meet Gregory for dinner, and his thoughts provide us with background: His friend Gregory is a New York theater director, well-known into the 1970s, who dropped out for five years and traveled around the world. Now Gregory has returned, with wondrous tales of strange experiences. Shawn has spent the same years in New York, finding uncertain success as an author and playwright. They sit down for dinner in an elegant restaurant. We do not see the other customers. The bartender is a wraith in the background, the waiter is the sort of presence they were waiting for in "Waiting for Godot." The friends order dinner, and then, as it is served and they eat and drink, they talk. What conversation! Gregory does most of the talking, and he is a spellbinding conversationalist, able to weave mental images not only out of his experiences, but also out of his ideas. He explains that he had become dissatisfied with life, restless, filled with anomie and discontent. He accepted an invitation to join an experimental theater group in Poland. It was very experimental, tending toward rituals in the woods under the full moon. From Poland, he traveled around the world, meeting a series of people who were seriously and creatively exploring the ways in which they could experience the material world. They (and Gregory) literally believed in mind over matter, and as Gregory describes a monk who was able to stand his entire body weight on his fingertips, we visualize that man and in some strange way (so hypnotic is the tale) we share the experience. One of the gifts of "My Dinner with Andre" is that we share so many of the experiences. Although most of the movie literally consists of two men talking, here's a strange thing: We do not spend the movie just passively listening to them talk. At first, director Louis Malle's sedate series of images (close-ups, two-shots, reaction shots) calls attention to itself, but as Gregory continues to talk, the very simplicity of the visual style renders it invisible. And like the listeners at the feet of a master storyteller, we find ourselves visualizing what Gregory describes, until this film is as filled with visual images as a radio play?more filled, perhaps, than a conventional feature film. What Gregory and Shawn talk about is, quite simply, many of the things on our minds these days. We've passed through Tom Wolfe's Me Decade and find ourselves in a decade during which there will apparently be less for everybody. The two friends talk about inner journeys?not in the mystical, vague terms of magazines you don't want to be seen reading on the bus, but in terms of trying to live better lives, of learning to listen to what others are really saying, of breaking the shackles of conventional ideas about our bodies and allowing them to more fully sense the outer world. The movie is not ponderous, annoyingly profound, or abstract. It is about living, and Gregory seems to have lived fully in his five years of dropping out. Shawn is the character who seems more like us. He listens, he nods eagerly, he is willing to learn, but?something holds him back. Pragmatic questions keep asking themselves. He can't buy Gregory's vision, not all the way. He'd like to, but this is a real world we have to live in, after all, and if we all danced with the druids in the forests of Poland, what would happen to the market for fortune cookies ? The film's end is beautiful and inexplicably moving. Shawn returns home by taxi through the midnight streets of New York. Having spent hours with Gregory on a wild conversational flight, he is now reminded of scenes from his childhood. In that store, his father bought him shoes. In that one, he bought ice cream with a girl friend. The utter simplicity of his memories acts to dramatize the fragility and great preciousness of life. He has learned his friend's lesson.
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Last Year at Marienbad (1962) DVD $ 29.99 French language with English subtitles. Actors: Delphine Seyrig, Giorgio Albertazzi, Sacha Pitoëff, Françoise Bertin, Luce Garcia-Ville. One of the most ferociously iconoclastic and experimental films of the French New Wave, Alain Resnais's 1961 feature, winner of the grand prize at that year's Venice Film Festival, is based on a script by Alain Robbe-Grillet. At its center is what seems to be a simple but unanswerable puzzle: Did its protagonist (Giorgio Albertazzi) have an affair the year before with a woman (Delphine Seyrig) he just met (or possibly re-met) at his hotel? The inquiry becomes an unsettling experiment in flattening the dimensions of past, present, and future so that any difference between them becomes meaningless, while Resnais's coldly formal but oddly dreamlike geometric compositions make space itself seem a function of subjective memory. Add to that Resnais's trademark tracking shots--long, smooth, a visual correlative of a wordless feeling--and this is a film that truly gets under the skin in almost inexplicable ways. One of the most influential works of its time.
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Night And Fog [DVD] $ 49.99 (1955) Alain Resnais HOLOCAUST DOC. aka Nuit et brouillard In French with English subtitles. Director: Alain Resnais. Cast: Michel Bouquet, Reinhard Heydrich, Heinrich Himmler, Adolf Hitler, Julius Streicher Rated: NR B&W/Color. One of the most haunting documentaries ever made, director Alain Resnais' ("Hiroshima, Mon Amour") powerful examination of the horrors of the Holocaust mixes archival footage of Germany's campaign against Jews with contemporary scenes of the abandoned Auschwitz concentration camp. Alain Resnais's NIGHT AND FOG is a landmark documentary that is arguably the foremost film ever made about the Holocaust. Intercutting black-and-white archival material of Nazi concentration camps with new color footage of the deserted camps as they existed in 1955, the result is an incredibly powerful and horrifying experience that no fiction film could ever possibly hope to achieve. Color footage shot in 1955 that depicts birds flying over the peaceful landscape of what was once a Nazi concentration camp is intercut with black-and-white photographs and newsreel footage of the camps in the 1940s. Other archival footage depicts Hitler giving speeches; smiling Nazi officers rounding-up children and old men and women and herding them onto trains that carry them to the camps. They're then stripped, showered, shaved, numbered, and tattooed. Color shots show the now empty wooden bunks and latrines they once used; prisoners who try to escape are trapped in barbed-wire; letters and toys lie on the camp grounds; human guinea pigs are taken to the hospital and used for experiments by Nazi doctors. The prisoners's quarters are contrasted with the luxury of the Commandant's villa, where the officers's wives gather for chess and card games.Himmler visits the camp in 1942 to inspect the incinerators, which the narrator notes are later used by tourists to take pictures in; piles of dead bodies are loaded onto a train; naked men and women are led into the "shower room," where they're gassed; color footage of the room shows fingernail scrapes on the concrete ceiling from the prisoners trying to escape; charred bodies are dumped into a pit; heads are chopped off and put into baskets; human hair is used to make cloth; bones are used for fertilizer; bodies are turned into soap and paper is made out of skin. When the Allies arrive in 1945 and open the doors of the concentration camps, they use bulldozers to push the thousands of corpses into giant mass burial pits. Nazi officers are captured, but when they're put on trial, one after another claims that none of them are responsible for the atrocities.Before his brilliant career as a feature-film director, Resnais was an editor and director of numerous shorts, the best and most famous of which is NIGHT AND FOG. The themes of memory and how the past haunts the present, as well as the virtuoso crosscutting and use of interlocking tracking shots, which would later become trademarks of Resnais's features, are key components of NIGHT AND FOG, and they're as important to the film's overall greatness as the subject matter. The film illustrates perfectly one of the primary differences between American films about the Holocaust, which are invariably fictional, and the European documentary approach (which reached epic proportions in Claude Lanzmann's 1984 film SHOAH). Perhaps it's because the camps themselves were on European soil, but there is no question that a staged depiction, no matter how artistically rendered, can never communicate the true dimension of fear and horror that archival footage can. And even with Resnais's masterly treatment, the film is also a statement about the inadequacy of art to record human suffering.The last third of NIGHT AND FOG is a relentless series of nightmarish images, depicting the incomprehensible savagery of the "Final Solution" in the most graphic possible way, which caused the film to be banned in certain countries when it was first released. Even today, the footage burns an indelible stamp on one's brain and is absolutely impossible to forget, even as the mind tries to reject it. This alone would qualify the film for greatness, but it takes on extra dimension through the narration, which refuses to allow the viewer to pretend that all of this happened only once and in a certain place, and can never happen again. The cycle of man's cruelty to man continues, the narration implies, reinforced by Resnais's poetic intercutting, and history will repeat itself if we don't learn from it. NIGHT AND FOG is that rare film that is more than just poignant and superbly made; it's one of the very few works of art that can actually be called important, forcing us to confront the human evil that exists in all us, while questioning what is responsible for it. (Graphic violence, nudity, adult situations.)
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The Pirate -Harold Robbins DVD Franco Nero $ 29.99 This 1978 mini-series comes on 2 Discs. The quality is good ( 6 out of a 10 ) except for the first 4 minutes on disc 1 which had to be edited in from a source that wasn't in very good condition. This mini is extremely rare and almost impossible to find. It's a real find for serious collectors. An Israeli man, raised by a wealthy and powerful Arab, is put in charge of his country's vast oil fortunes. He comes into conflict with a fanatical terrorist group--headed by his daughter. Also stars Olivia Hussey, Ian McShane, Christopher Lee, Stuart Whitman, Michael Constantine, James Franciscus, Armand Assante, and Eli Wallach.
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Race against the Harvest VHS $ 29.99 Starring: Wayne Rogers, Mariclare Costello, Fredric Lehne, Matt McCoy, Earl Holliman. TV drama set in rural Kansas. Two proud, stubborn families have not spoken to one another for years because of an incident in the distant past. When Walter Duncan (Wayne Rogers), the patriarch of one of the families, finds himself in danger of losing his wheat farm, he knows that his land will be saved if he patches things up with rival farmer Krab Hogan (Earl Holliman). But such a reconciliation seems out of the question. Review : Farmers battle tornadoes, hailstorms, unpredictable labor and each other to save their crops in this television drama. If you dont live on a farm or have never been around one, you should really watch this movie, to actually get the feel of what they go through.This movie is so incredible. "Race Against The Harvest" is so comparable to what it's really like out there trying to make a living as a custom cutter. The struggles that Duncan and his crew went through are just like the real thing. It's movies like this that make people understand what harvesting is really all about and the hardships that the crews go through! I only wish that more people have heard of this movie to understand!
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Resurrection (1987, VHS) $ 39.99 Cast: Ellen Burstyn, Eva Le Gallienne, Richard Farnsworth, Roberts Blossom, Sam Shepard. After a car crash leaves her paralyzed and widowed, Edna McCauley (Ellen Burstyn) returns to her small hometown in Kansas to recuperate. During recovery, she notices a strange, almost mystical side effect of her near-death experience. Despite her own religious disbelief, Edna starts to exhibit miraculous abilities and goes on to become a healer. Edna captivates her town, peacefully healing the sick and dying with a touch of her hands in a deeply moving and spiritual journey. When she heals Cal (Sam Shepard), a local farmer, after a night of fighting, he begins to court her, and the two begin a passionate romance. As their relationship blossoms, Edna begins to heal her own physical and psychological wounds, coming to peace with the death of her husband (Jeffrey DeMunn) and working to understand her new fate. However, Cal believes that Edna's mystical abilities are a sign of God's will, and he refuses to accept Edna's belief that her powers simply come from deep love and understanding. Edna will not compromise her own beliefs in a spiritual and ideological battle with Cal that ends in a violent and disturbing climax. Burstyn delivers a tour-de-force, Oscar-nominated performance as a modern-day miracle in this unforgettable story of love and devotion. Director Daniel Petrie's film features an outstanding supporting cast, including Richard Farnsworth, Eva Le Gallienne, and Richard Hamilton.
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Sissi...Forever My Love 1962 DVD Color $ 14.99. Language English Directed by Ernst Marischka.That Movie was specially dubbed from German into English.Romy Schneider became a star while still in her teens thanks largely to the Sissi films, a trio of confectionary features made between 1955 and 1957 about the Austrian-Hungarian royal family. Portions of all three films were edited together for this 1962 epic, which follows the romantic hurdles faced by Franz Josef, the young Emperor of Austria, and his beloved Sissi (Schneider), the sister of a Bavarian princess. Dubbed in English. 140 minutes. What a wonderfull movie it is. .........Sissi was "the people's empress." She lived in the country, loved the simple life, loved animals, horses, was not pretencious. It's that aliveness, that free spirit in her that the prince falls in love with. This movie has so much to offer. It's such a priceless gem! I can so wax eloquent for I don't believe it'll let you down. It's got romance, drama, life lessons...it's a family movie, a chick-flick, a couples' movie. As you walk with Sissi through the various stages in her life you love and embrace her and, by so doing, you love and embrace life itself. The power of Sissi is that she's you...all women long to be Sissi...and all of us, in our own way, can and should aspire to the greatest and loftiest ideals that Sissi did in her lifetime. Regardless of your actual life situation, this movie will empower you to release the hidden "Sissi" in you.
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SHADOWS (1959) $ 19.99 DVD Black & White. Actors : Ben Carruthers, Lelia Goldoni,Lelia Goldoni, Anthony Ray. Hugh is a washed up jazz singer struggling to keep his career afloat. His younger sister Lelia is a social butterfly, while his kid brother Bennie is a borderline juvenile delinquent. For this black family living in New York City, life is a constant struggle between social acceptance – at least among their close circle of cronies – and racial rejection from the rest of the world. Lelia and Bennie are fair-skinned and can both pass for white, which leads to many personal problems. Bennie takes his lack of identity out onto the streets, where he drinks too much and picks fights. Lelia, on the other hand, never advertises her ethnicity, and that causes problems when she falls in love with Tony. When he discovers her true lineage, he is devastated. It is up to Hugh to help both of his siblings survive in a world that they are too 'dark' to be accepted in, too 'light' to be rejected from. Instead, they dwell in the realm of Shadows.
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Stand By Me (Special Edition) (1986) DVD $ 9.99 Actors: Scott Beach, Marshall Bell, William Bronder, John Cusack, Dick Durock, River Phoenix. A sleeper hit when released in 1986, Stand by Me is based on Stephen King's novella "The Body" (from the book Different Seasons); but it's more about the joys and pains of boyhood friendship than a morbid fascination with corpses. It's about four boys ages 12 and 13 (Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, Jerry O'Connell) who take an overnight hike through the woods near their Oregon town to find the body of a boy who's been missing for days. Their journey includes a variety of scary adventures (including a ferocious junkyard dog, a swamp full of leeches, and a treacherous leap from a train trestle), but it's also a time for personal revelations, quiet interludes, and the raucous comradeship of best friends. Set in the 1950s, the movie indulges an overabundance of anachronistic profanity and a kind of idealistic, golden-toned nostalgia (it's told in flashback as a story written by Wheaton's character as an adult, played by Richard Dreyfuss). But it's delightfully entertaining from start to finish, thanks to the rapport among its young cast members and the timeless, universal themes of friendship, family, and the building of character and self-esteem. Kiefer Sutherland makes a memorable teenage villain, and look closely for John Cusack in a flashback scene as Wheaton's now-deceased and dearly missed brother.
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STAVISKY (1974) DVD $ 29.99 Actors: Jean-Paul Belmondo, François Périer, Anny Duperey, Michael Lonsdale, Roberto Bisacco. Directors: Alain Resnais. Full screen. In French with English subtitles. 120 min. Very good French production set the early 1930's. The film is based on the true-life conman Serge Alexandre Stavisky who inserted himself into the highest levels of French society and induced the powerful and the wealthy to invest in his scam which involved hundred of millions of francs. When the scam was exposed it nearly caused a civil war.Could the true story of the financial scandal that shook France to the brink of civil war in 1933 be more timely? Jean Paul Belmondo is perfectly cast as Serge Alexander (a.k.a. Stavisky), the one-time underworld con man who charms his way to the top of the French financial world with bluff, cunning, and a bankroll of phony vouchers. Screenwriter Jorge Semprún (Z) weaves Stavisky's story through the tapestry of European politics: the rise of fascism, the stain of anti-Semitism, the shadow of impending war. The aloof style of Alain Resnais (Last Year at Marienbad) is warmed by the smiling charisma of Belmondo and by Charles Boyer's poignant turn as a sentimental, nearly bankrupt Baron.
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The Bay outside of Love and Sorrows DVD $ 9.99 Canadian director Tim Southam directs this story of a young, rich idealist who tries to establish a commune in his hometown with tragic results. Michael Skid (Jonathan Scarfe) returns to his boyhood home in 1973 after a life-changing tour of the Indian subcontinent. Setting up his residence in an old rented farmstead, Michael begins to recruit people into forming a commune - which is met with equal amounts of acceptance and hostility. Joining him on the farm are Michael's summer love interest, Madonna Brassaurd (Joanne Kelly), and her brother, Silver (Christopher Jacot), both of whom are attracted to the rich young man's charming personality as well as his access to a wealthy lifestyle that was previously inaccessible to them because of their impoverished upbringing. After some embarrassing experiences with some other members of the community, Michael takes in ex-convict Everette Hatch (Peter Outerbridge), who secretly plots to take advantage of Michael in order to get even with Michael's father, a judge who presided over Hatch's last trial. As Hatch sets his plan into action, Michael, Madonna, and Silver unwittingly aid the criminal well past the point of no return, with grave consequences resulting for the entire town.
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The Bicycle Thief (1949) DVD $ 14.99 Actors: Lamberto Maggiorani, Enzo Staiola, Lianella Carell, Gino Saltamerenda, Vittorio Antonucci.Language: English, Italian - Subtitles: English. A beautiful, simple story of a man in post-war Rome who needs his bicycle in order to work at his job. No sooner does he retrieve it from pawn, then it is stolen. The heartwrenching search teaches the man and his son much about the meaning of life and just how far we will go when pushed to the edge. Winner of a special Academy Award. Vittorio De Sica's remarkable 1947 drama of desperation and survival in Italy's devastating post-war depression earned a special Oscar for its affecting power. Shot in the streets and alleys of Rome, De Sica uses the real-life environment of contemporary life to frame his moving drama of a desperate father whose new job delivering cinema posters is threatened when a street thief steals his bicycle. Too poor to buy another, he and his son take to the streets in an impossible search for his bike. Cast with nonactors and filled with the real street life of Rome, this landmark film helped define the Italian neorealist approach with its mix of real life details, poetic imagery, and warm sentimentality. De Sica uses the wandering pair to witness the lives of everyday folks, but ultimately he paints a quiet, poignant portrait of father and son, played by nonprofessionals Lamberto Maggiorani and Enzo Staiola, whose understated performances carry the heart of the film. De Sica and scenarist Cesare Zavattini also collaborated on Shoeshine, Miracle in Milan, and Umberto D, all classics in the neorealist vein, but none of which approach the simple poetry and quiet power achieved in The Bicycle Thief.
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Wacko aka Crazy Doctor In Love DVD $ 39.99 Move over Star Wars, Wacko is the greatest movie of all time. This movie has it all … from lawnmowers to carrots you don't want to miss Wacko. If you do you are an idiot! Andrew Dice Clay gives a balanced, poignant performance as Tony. Jon Don Baker as Dick Harbinger could go down as the greatest hero since Jesus. While some movies are afraid to push the envelope of brilliance (I'm looking at you Godfather!!!) Wacko takes the horror genre to places not scene in Hollywood. Quite possibly the best horror spoof ever made.
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