Half Past Dead
Michael Paul, Don
98 minutes
(#146)
Theatrical: 2002
Studio: Sony Pictures
Genre: Action & Adventure
Writer:
Date Added: 29 Sep 2008
Half Past Dead
Michael Paul, Don
98 minutes
(#146)
Languages: English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: Chinese, English, Korean, Spanish
Sound: AC-3
Summary: Sony Pictures Half Past Dead (Blu-ray) Welcome to Alcatraz. "The Rock" has just re-opened for business, but the first criminal slated for the electric chair is also sitting on a secret worth $200 million. And an invading group of commandos (led by Morris Chestnut) isn't going to let his fortune go up in smoke. Already undercover in Alcatraz, FBI Agent Petrosevitch (Steven Seagal) has to neutralize the situation and rescue a Supreme Court Justice held hostage. Worse, he has to convince his convict "partner" (Ja Rule) and the other inmates to fight on the right side of the law.
Halloween
John Carpenter
91 minutes
(#147)
Theatrical: 1978
Studio: Anchor Bay Entertainment
Genre: Horror
Writer: John Carpenter, Debra Hill
Date Added: 30 Sep 2008
Halloween
John Carpenter
91 minutes
(#147)
Languages: English
Sound: Dolby
Comments: The Night HE Came Home!
Summary: "Halloween" is as pure and undiluted as its title. In the small town of Haddonfield, Illinois, a teenage baby sitter tries to survive a Halloween night of relentless terror, during which a knife-wielding maniac goes after the town's hormonally charged youths. Director John Carpenter takes this simple situation and orchestrates a superbly mounted symphony of horrors. It's a movie much scarier for its dark spaces and ominous camera movements than for its explicit bloodletting (which is actually minimal). Composed by Carpenter himself, the movie's freaky music sets the tone; and his script (cowritten with Debra Hill) is laced with references to other horror pictures, especially "Psycho". The baby sitter is played by Jamie Lee Curtis, the real-life daughter of "Psycho" victim Janet Leigh; and the obsessed policeman played by Donald Pleasence is named Sam Loomis, after John Gavin's character in "Psycho". In the end, though, "Halloween" stands on its own as an uncannily frightening experience--it's one of those movies that had audiences literally jumping out of their seats and shouting at the screen. ("No! Don't drop that knife!") Produced on a low budget, the picture turned a monster profit, and spawned many sequels, none of which approached the 1978 original. Curtis returned for two more installments: 1981's dismal "Halloween II", which picked up the story the day after the unfortunate events, and 1998's occasionally gripping "Halloween H20", which proved the former baby sitter was still haunted after 20 years. "--Robert Horton"
The Happening
M. Night Shyamalan
90 minutes
(#148)
Theatrical: 2008
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Genre: Horror
Writer: M. Night Shyamalan
Date Added: 17 Oct 2008
The Happening
M. Night Shyamalan
90 minutes
(#148)
Languages: English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, Spanish, Cantonese, Mandarin Chinese, Korean
Sound: AC-3
Comments: We've Sensed It. We've Seen The Signs. Now... It's Happening.
Summary: You'd expect the end of the world to be no day in the park, but in M. Night Shyamalan's "The Happening", a day in the park is where the end begins. One otherwise peaceful summer morning, New Yorkers strolling in Central Park come to a halt in unison, then begin killing themselves by any means at hand. At a high-rise construction site a few blocks over, it's raining bodies as workers step off girders into space. And all the while, the city is so quiet you can hear the gentle breeze in the trees. That breeze carries a neurotoxin, and what or who put it there (terrorists?) is a question raised periodically as the film unfolds. But the question that really matters is how and whether anybody in the Middle Atlantic states is going to stay alive. "The Happening" is Shyamalan's best film since "The Sixth Sense", partly because he avoids the kind of egregious misjudgment that derailed "The Village" and "Lady in the Water", but mostly because the whole thing has been structured and imagined to keep faith with the point of view of regular, unheroic folks confronted with a mammoth crisis. Focal characters are a Philadelphia high-school science teacher (Mark Wahlberg, excellent), his wife (Zooey Deschanel) and math-teacher colleague (John Leguizamo), and the latter’s little girl (Ashlyn Sanchez). Instinct says get out of the cities and move west; most of the film takes place in the delicately picturesque Pennsylvania countryside, with menace hovering somewhere in the haze. There are no special effects (apart from a wind machine and some breakaway glass), but the movie manages to be deeply unsettling in the matter-of-factness of its storytelling. Especially effective is its feel for what we might call the surrealism of banality. One warning sign that someone has been infected by the neurotoxin is irrational or erratic speech and behavior, yet Shyamalan has a genius for dialogue that sounds normal and everyday as it's spoken, yet flies apart grenade-like a second later as its logic (or illogic) sinks in. Then there's Deschanel's eye-rolling dodginess about the messages some guy has been leaving on her cellphone. Or the fellow (Frank Collis) who addresses his greenhouse plants as though they were his children--has a stray toxic zephyr wafted his way, or is this just his idea of normal? "--Richard T. Jameson"
Beyond "The Happening " on DVD
"Jumper" on DVD
"Street Kings" on DVD
"Deception" on DVD
Stills from "The Happening" (Click for larger image)
Hellboy
Guillermo Del Toro
132 minutes
(#149)
Theatrical: 2004
Studio: Columbia Pictures
Genre: Action & Adventure
Writer:
Date Added: 30 Sep 2008
Hellboy
Guillermo Del Toro
132 minutes
(#149)
Languages: English, French, German
Subtitles: Arabic, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Korean, Polish, Slovak
Sound: Dolby
Summary: In the ongoing deluge of comic-book adaptations, "Hellboy" ranks well above average. Having turned down an offer to helm "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" in favor of bringing "Hellboy"'s origin story to the big screen, the gifted Mexican director Guillermo del Toro compensates for the excesses of "Blade II" with a moodily effective, consistently entertaining action-packed fantasy, beginning in 1944 when the mad monk Rasputin--in cahoots with occult-buff Hitler and his Nazi thugs--opens a transdimensional portal through which a baby demon emerges, capable of destroying the world with his powers. Instead, the aptly named Hellboy is raised by the benevolent Prof. Bloom, founder of the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense, whose allied forces enlist the adult Hellboy (Ron Perlman, perfectly cast) to battle evil at every turn. While nursing a melancholy love for the comely firestarter Liz (Selma Blair), Hellboy files his demonic horns ("to fit in," says Bloom) and wreaks havoc on the bad guys. The action is occasionally routine (the movie suffers when compared to the similar "X-Men" blockbusters), but del Toro and Perlman have honored Mike Mignola's original Dark Horse comics with a lavish and loyal interpretation, retaining the amusing and sympathetic quirks of character that made the comic-book Hellboy a pop-culture original. He's red as a lobster, puffs stogies like Groucho Marx, and fights the good fight with a kind but troubled heart. What's not to like? --"Jeff Shannon"
Hidalgo
Joe Johnston
136 minutes
(#150)
Theatrical: 2004
Studio: Touchstone Home Entertainment
Genre: Action & Adventure
Writer:
Date Added: 30 Sep 2008
Hidalgo
Joe Johnston
136 minutes
(#150)
Languages: Arabic, English
Summary: Director Joe Johnston has always had an entertaining sense of adventure, and with "Hidalgo" he proves it in spades. It's yet another underrated film for Johnston (along with such enjoyable popcorn flicks as "The Rocketeer" and "Jurassic Park III"), dismissed by many critics but a welcome treat for anyone drawn to good ol'-fashioned movie excitement. In his first role since playing Aragorn in the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, Viggo Mortensen brings handsome appeal to his low-key portrayal of Frank T. Hopkins, a real-life long-distance horse racer who, as the movie opens, has witnessed the appalling massacre of Native Americans at Wounded Knee in 1890. Drifting into Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, he agrees to compete, with his trusty mustang, Hidalgo, in "The Ocean of Fire," a treacherous 3,000-mile horse race across the Arabian desert. Toss in a bunch of conspiring competitors, a noble sheik (Omar Sharif), his lovely daughter (Zuleikha Robinson), and enough fast-paced danger to fill 133 minutes, and you've got a rousing, humorous, and lightly spiritual adventure that's a lot of fun to watch. It hardly matters that it's almost pure fiction (the real Hopkins was known by many as "a pathological liar"). More important is the love of movies and moviemaking that Johnston so delightfully conveys. "--Jeff Shannon"
Hitman
Xavier Gens
94 minutes
(#151)
Theatrical: 2007
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Genre: Video
Writer: Skip Woods
Date Added: 30 Sep 2008
Hitman
Xavier Gens
94 minutes
(#151)
Languages: English, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
Sound: AC-3
Summary: It’s hard not to feel like one has entered a certain dimension of video-game logic while watching "Hitman", a lightly enjoyable action-suspense movie indeed based on a popular and bloody game about a mysterious hired gun with a bar-code tattoo on his bald head and a number (47) in lieu of a name. Living like a chaste monk while slipping past borders to kill his targets, 47 (Timothy Olyphant of "Deadwood") moves like a determined shark and speaks softly to his contact at the enigmatic "the Organization," which raises cast-off children to become well-paid assassins. Fruitlessly pursued by an Interpol cop (Dougray Scott) who can never get sovereign governments to cooperate, 47 has no trouble slipping in and out of countries to ply his trade. Until, that is, he’s set up to take a fall in Russia by shooting a national leader who is promptly replaced by a lookalike double. Suddenly on the run, 47 has to retrace his steps and formulate a lethal plan for extricating himself from a trap. Caught in the chaos is the lovely Nika (Olga Kurylenko), forced into sex slavery by 47’s new enemies and the one person who seems uniquely qualified to break through 47’s many personal barriers. Directed by France’s Xavier Gens, "Hitman" features loads of bloody mayhem and unabashed moments of pulp absurdity, such as a scene in which 47 and three other Organization killers agree to fight one another respectfully, then proceed to pulverize each other with swords and fists. As fodder for gamers, however, "Hitman" is packed with visuals and dramatic moments that seem so odd on the big screen until one realizes they are basically placemarkers for the video-game edition. --"Tom Keogh"
Beyond "Hitman"
"Hitman" Video Games
"Hitman" Books and Game Guides
More Action and Adventure on Blu-ray
Stills from "Hitman"
Home of the Brave
Irwin Winkler
106 minutes
(#152)
Theatrical: 2006
Studio: MGM
Genre: Action
Writer: Mark Friedman, Mark Friedman
Date Added: 30 Sep 2008
Home of the Brave
Irwin Winkler
106 minutes
(#152)
Languages: English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
Sound: AC-3
Comments: Coming home is the real battle.
Summary: The day after they get the word they'll go home in two weeks, a group of soldiers from Spokane are ambushed in an Iraqi city. Back stateside we follow four of them - a surgeon who saw too much, a teacher who's a single mom and who lost a hand in the ambush, an infantry man whose best friend died that day, and a soldier who keeps reliving the moment he killed a civilian woman. Each of the four has come home changed, each feels dislocation. Group therapy, V.A. services, halting gestures from family and colleagues, and regular flashbacks keep the war front and center in their minds. They're angry, touchy, and explosive: can a warrior find peace back home?
How the West Was Won
Ford, John
164 minutes
(#153)
Theatrical: 1963
Studio: Warner Home Video
Genre: Westerns
Writer: James R. Webb
Date Added: 29 Sep 2008
How the West Was Won
Ford, John
164 minutes
(#153)
Languages: English
Sound: 4-Track Stereo
Comments: A FABULOUS ROMANTIC ADVENTURE
Summary: The first feature film to be photographed and projected in the panoramic three-camera Cinerama process, this epic Western is almost as expansive as the West itself, chronicling a pioneering family's triumphs and tragedies in numerous episodes spanning three generations and a half century of westward movement. Divided into five segments directed by veteran Hollywood filmmakers Henry Hathaway, George Marshall, and the legendary John Ford (and including uncredited sequences directed by Richard Thorpe), the film was one of the most ambitious ever made by the venerable MGM studio. Its stellar cast reads like a virtual who's who of Hollywood's biggest stars. Debbie Reynolds plays a sturdy survivor of many pioneering dangers, and the eventual widow of a gambler (Gregory Peck), who is later reunited with her nephew (George Peppard), a Civil War veteran and cavalryman who heads for San Francisco as the transcontinental railroad is being built. Many more characters and stories are woven throughout this epic film, which is dramatically uneven but totally engrossing with its stunning vistas and countless outdoor locations in Illinois, Kentucky, South Dakota, Monument Valley in Arizona, California, Colorado, and elsewhere. "--Jeff Shannon"
Hulk
Ang Lee
138 minutes
(#154)
Theatrical: 2003
Studio: Universal Studios
Genre: Action & Adventure
Writer: Stan Lee, Jack Kirby
Date Added: 30 Sep 2008
Hulk
Ang Lee
138 minutes
(#154)
Languages: English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
Sound: AC-3
Comments: Unleash the fury!
Summary: The larger-than-life Marvel Superhero The Hulk explodes onto the big screen! After a freak lab accident unleashes a genetically enhanced, impossibly strong creature, a terrified world must marshal its forces to stop a being with abilities beyond imagination.
The Hunt for Red October
John McTiernan
135 minutes
(#155)
Theatrical: 1990
Studio: Paramount
Genre: Action & Adventure
Writer: Tom Clancy, Larry Ferguson
Date Added: 29 Sep 2008
The Hunt for Red October
John McTiernan
135 minutes
(#155)
Languages: English, Russian, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, French, Portuguese, Spanish
Sound: AC-3
Comments: Invisible. Silent. Stolen.
Summary: Before Harrison Ford assumed the mantle of playing Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan hero in "Patriot Games", Alec Baldwin took a swing at the character in this John McTiernan film and hit one to the fence. If less instantly sympathetic than Ford, Baldwin is in some respects more interesting and nuanced as Ryan, and drawing comparisons between both actors' performances can make for some interesting postmovie discussion. That aside, "The Hunt for Red October" stands alone as a uniquely exciting adventure with a fantastic costar: Sean Connery as a Russian nuclear submarine captain attempting to defect to the West on his ship. Ryan must figure out his true motives for approaching the U.S. McTiernan ("Predator", "Die Hard") made an exceptionally handsome movie here with action sequences that really do take one's breath away. "--Tom Keogh"
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/40.jpg)


![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/m03.gif)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/139.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/276.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/138.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/137.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/136.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/125.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/41.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/258.jpg)
![Cover Zoom [+] Cover Zoom [+]](Images/42.jpg)