Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts

Thursday, July 30, 2015

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Mission Impossible


Watching Tom Cruise hurtle through the latest “Mission: Impossible,” taking one blow after another, you can’t help worrying that he won’t be able to keep this action stuff up. It looks so hard! But here he is, the 53-year-old Tom Terrific, holding onto a plane as it takes off, defying sense and gravity, and making you wonder (not for the first time) if he would actually die for our pleasure. By the time he’s flailing underwater without an oxygen tank, struggling against violent surges as breath and time run out, you can almost feel the life leaving his body.



Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation doesn’t have the nonsensical lyricism of Brad Bird’s stupendous Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol, but it’s still pretty good. It works best when, like Ferguson, it plays things straight instead of (mis)using Simon Pegg’s Impossible Mission Team techie for broad comic relief and Ving Rhames for Lou Grant–like grumpiness. Dull as they usually were, the old poker-faced TV Mission: Impossible crew had dignity. They weren’t always blubbering, “I’m working on it! Hang on! Aaauuggghh!” when one of their thingamajigs jammed. The series is also becoming almost as huggy and self-congratulatory as the Fast and Furious films.

The plot of Rogue Nation has Ethan Hunt (Cruise) once again cast out of the fold, branded as a madman or worse by a CIA director, Hunley (Alec Baldwin), who wants to shut the Impossible Mission Force down on the grounds that it operates without transparency or oversight. There are so many layers of irony here (the CIA whining about lack of oversight, the casting of ultraliberal Baldwin) that Hunley’s congressional debate with IMF coordinator Brandt (Jeremy Renner in the action-movie equivalent of a desk job) ought to be more fun than it is.



Ethan’s crime is arguing that there’s an anti-IMF at large, a “rogue nation” called “the Syndicate” that’s ... doing a lot of bad things. This makes Hunley so angry that he puts much of the CIA’s resources into catching Ethan — while various members of his former team chuckle to themselves that no army could catch Ethan Hunt; he’s that smart, cunning, dexterous, muscular, sexually potent, etc. The script is by director Christopher McQuarrie, whose characters voiced similar sentiments about Cruise’s hero in the pair’s last collaboration, Jack Reacher.

A new strain of highbrow fanboy is lately making a case for McQuarrie as an unsung action auteur. Would it were so. He doesn’t have the visual panache to pull off the slapstick-derring-do prologue in which Cruise hangs from an escaping terrorist plane while his hysterical team tries to get the door open for him. An early, subterranean martial-arts clash is edited for maximum chop. A triple-assassin shoot-out with fisticuffs in a Vienna opera house has one or two good moments, but McQuarrie wants so nakedly for it to be a Brian De Palma–style spatial-temporal tour de force that its semi-coherence is an embarrassment.

On the other hand, he delivers a corker of a high-speed motorcycle chase — the road-level camerawork rattles you down to your joints. A climactic knife fight between Ferguson and a burly villain known as the “Bone Doctor” works like gangbusters: It doesn’t have too many variables and it isn’t broken up by one-liners.

As the icily malignant leader of “the Syndicate,” the twisty-faced Sean Harris is like a medieval demon with thick glasses. He and Hunt have a splendid climactic stare-down — elegantly staged and surprising. And McQuarrie has one foolproof weapon: Lalo Schifrin’s original TV theme, blasted so triumphantly whenever Cruise and Company do something right that it’s like the action-movie equivalent of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy.”

Sunday, May 3, 2015

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Star Wars

Star Wars IS an American epic space Opera Franchise centered on A film Series created by George Lucas.

Finally the first time in Japan! Episode 1 broadcast Determination of "Star Wars rebel who" phantom When did you see? Probably today!

Disney XD in the broadcast in such CS broadcasting " Star Wars of the day on May 4 is a "luxury special organization to broadcast summarizes the related work" Star Wars The revolt Festival "at the 9:00 am 30 I know start!

As part of these efforts, what was made ​​only for the US ABC broadcast " Star Wars rebel who full version of the first episode of " Japan's first broadcasting determine. Highlight is to say the, actor James Earl Jones will place play Darth Vader appeared. Broadcast time is know 0:30. Viewable fan Disney XD is, it will not hand you miss!

[Blu-ray] Star Wars (2, 000 Sets-limited): a Clone Wars Season 1-5 Collectors Edition (Class 14 Pieces) 





  • Language: Japanese (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Subtitles: Japanese, English
  • Region: All Regions
  • Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
  • Number of discs: 14
  • Studio: Warner home video

Star Wars: A New Hope

Young farm boy Luke Skywalker is thrust into a galaxy of adventure when he intercepts a distress call from the captive Princess Leia. The event launches him on a daring mission to rescue her from the clutches of Darth Vader and the Evil Empire. Purchase also includes bonus features, available to watch in Your Video Library.

This release contains two DVDs: the version that Lucas has been tinkering with, and on a bonus disc, the original movie in 4:3 letterbox, taken from the best-available videodisc masters.

About that "tinkering." The 2004 version of Episode 4 looks, for the most part, quite gorgeous. The _restoration_ that Lucasfilm did is impressive: the blacks are blacker, the whites whiter, the color richer, the contrast improved all around, and the soundtrack is great. The dirt and scratches are gone, the shaky color very solid.

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Secrets and Lies

Secrets and Lies is an American drama television series based on the Australian television series of the same name. The series has a 10-episode series commitment.


Abby Killed Tom On 'Secrets & Lies' But The Ending Is Just The Beginning

And there you have it folks. On Sunday night’s Season 1 finale of ABC’s Secrets & Lies, Tom’s killer was finally revealed. Much like the original Australian version of the series before it, Secrets & Lies chose to reveal Tom’s killer as Ben’s younger daughter Abby (Eva from the original series). And while the reason behind Abby killing Tom remains the same in this adaptation, the fallout is different and gives Ben quite the lasting punishment both physically and emotionally. But as tragic an ending as the American version is, to be honest I totally understand why the writers chose it over the original.

The setup for the murder started the same as the Australian version. Abby was missing, Ben accused Jess of kidnapping her, and Jess accused Ben of sexual assault. Thankfully when the episode — smartly entitled “The Lie” — began, Abby was found and Ben was cleared by Cornell of any charges, including the murder of Tom. Here things took a turn away from the original adaptation in quite heartbreaking ways. Ben gleefully returned home a free man and Christy brought over the kids to celebrate New Year’s with him. Unfortunately when Ben started clearing away his ladder in the yard, he found a pair of Abby’s bloody sneakers underneath the guest house. And Abby finally revealed what happened.

She tearfully stated the details of the night Tom died. Abby had heard Christy and Ben fighting over Jess and the affair and told her parents that she wanted to help Tom run away to bring Scott back, because according to Abby when a child runs away, the parents always come back to find the kid. While running into the woods, Tom started getting cold feet about Abby’s plan and decided to run away. That’s when Abby accidentally hit him with the flashlight, and Tom fell down dead.

As the family listened in horror to Abby’s confession and planned out what to do next, Natalie couldn’t handle her parents’ even considering to protect Abby from the police. Ben and Christy decided to get Abby out of town and away from Detective Cornell while Natalie demanded to stay behind. Ben, after having a tragic conversation with Christy over where they went wrong with Abby, decided to do the honorable thing and confess to Tom’s murder to Cornell. Cornell however, knew more than Ben could have ever imagined.

Cornell revealed to Ben during his confession that Tom was struck six times when murdered and that she knew Abby was the one who did it. After realizing what this new information meant about Abby’s confession it basically proved the same thing about her as the original series: She was a cold-blooded killer he still went through with the confession and was arrested. Cornell couldn’t handle Ben’s decision, especially since she tried to level with him and relate to him when she admitted how hard it was for her to arrest her own daughter. But in the end, she couldn’t let it go. She ended the episode stating that she would put Abby away.

Abby on the other hand was far away with her mother during their escape and finally revealed the truth with one blood-curdling line that the series smartly reused from the original Australian series:

“None of this would have happened if I had just gotten Tom to the river.” 
Will Abby ever get caught as she did in the original series? It all depends on whether or not the show gets renewed. So why end it with Abby free and Ben incarcerated rather than Abby coldly confessing to Cornell as in the original? Both endings make sense and are extremely dark and upsetting. But Sunday night’s season finale allows Ben to attempt to redeem himself in the eyes of a family he believes he ruined, despite knowingly allowing his daughter to roam free and potentially kill again. It might not be satisfying, but real life doesn’t always get closure. 

Thursday, April 30, 2015

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Avengers Age Of Ultron


The amazing thing about Avengers: Age of Ultron is that it’s reasonably enjoyable while feeling less like a movie than an epic sowing of seeds for multiple Marvel properties. Perhaps only Joss Whedon  fanboy, scholar, hack, pop visionary, humanist could satisfy both nerd-do-well Comic-Conners and corporate masters so thoroughly. He has managed to locate the epicenter of the “universe” universe.


That’s the new Hollywood buzzword: universe. First came franchise, a term once reserved for 7-Elevens and gas stations, which, when substituted for the previously used series, would make businessmen salivate on cue. Then came tentpole, meaning a franchise so huge it could take care of a studio’s overhead by itself and make a lot of smaller poles (i.e., movies that neither cost nor stand to earn that much), from a financial standpoint, irrelevant. (In publishing, profits from blockbuster authors underwrite the “mid list,” but Hollywood blockbusters are ends in themselves.) The “universe” is that rare Marvel, DC, Star Trek, or Star Wars: a tentpole franchise with the potential to spin off a whole constellation of other franchises in films, books, TV shows, games, and so on. It’s beyond huge. Synergistically speaking, it’s the big bang.

Age of Ultron opens mid-bang, as the Avengers Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, Hulk, Hawkeye, Black Widow, and others attempt to snatch Loki’s scepter from HYDRA leader Baron Strucker. I didn’t have a clue what was going on: As both storytelling and storyboarding, the sequence is a disgrace. There is one nice moment. Iron Man, a.k.a. Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.), thinks there might be a door in a cave wall and says, “Please be a secret door, please be a secret door, please be a secret door,” and as he pushes and it opens, says, “Yay” no exclamation point, the teeny throwaway amid millions of dollars' worth of computer-generated pandemonium the perfect distillation of Downey’s charm. The sequence also introduces two striking “enhanced” beings to the Marvel screen universe, the brother-sister Maximoff twins: the dream-weaving Scarlet Witch of Elizabeth Olsen and hyperspeed Quicksilver of Aaron Taylor-Johnson. Hang on: Wasn’t Quicksilver in some X-Men movies? Turns out he was, but that universe hasn’t yet been linked to this one. Cosmic disconnect!


Here’s this movie’s thrust. Thoroughly shaken by the extraterrestrial invasion of the first Avengers, Stark tells Dr. Bruce Banner, a.k.a. Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), that he’s going to create an interface between the all-powerful Infinity Stone from Loki’s scepter and a computer program, thereby giving birth to “Ultron,” the ultimate planetary defense system. It will bring, says Stark, “peace in our time” famous last words. What actually happens is that Ultron takes the voice (and built-in basso sneer) of James Spader and the ridiculous bodybuilder physique of Mr. Cyborg Universe and decides (rather too quickly for the narrative, I think) that the only way to save the planet is to kill all its humans, which means starting with their protectors, the Avengers. He then enlists the Maximoffs, savoring in particular the Scarlet Witch’s talent for messing with people’s heads, destroying them from the inside.

Whedon takes the Avengers universe seriously enough to pack Age of Ultron with Big Themes. Entrepreneur and self-styled mad scientist Stark rejects what he calls “the man-wasn’t-made-to-meddle medley” (nice line), holding even when Ultron becomes his Frankenstein monster to his quest for bigger and better technologies. This unnerves Banner (a shrinking violet when he’s not a green, 50-foot slab of beef) and incenses Captain America (Chris Evans), who worries that every time people try to stop a war before it starts, they start a war the preemptive use of power leading to the kind of fascism he was created to fight. In a late, nihilistic bit of dialogue, Thor (Chris Hemsworth) and a new team entity, Vision, decide that humans’ fatal mistake is “thinking order and chaos are opposites” suggesting the Marvel credo is Buddhism, which isn’t the worst foundation for an action series.

As he proved in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Firefly, and other shows, Whedon can find the perfect balance between adolescent hero-worship and smartass banter. (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid must have loomed large for him.) His characters make superheroic declarations and then deflate their own pomp, the jokes stopping just short of camp out of respect for the underlying myths. The scenes that anchor Age of Ultron are the loosest: demigods drinking, goofing on one another, competing to pick up Thor’s hammer as if it were Excalibur. Whedon does everything well except, alas, action. He gets by (the Marvel house style is bombardment), but still, nothing he and his FX designers do has the graphic punch of Sam Raimi or Tim Burton at their (increasingly rare) best, or Brad Bird. One problem is the speed, which is too fast to savor all the spatial-temporal variables. The best bit is in slow motion, a showstopper (there was one in the last film, too) in which all the Avengers spin in and out of the frame as the camera weaves among them.


Biggest disappointment? Scarlett Johansson who nearly somersaulted away with the first Avengers as Black Widow is forced into a Beauty-Beast relationship with Hulk and becomes rather mushy. So does Ruffalo. The slight hesitation in his style still works for a man who fearfully monitors his own emotions, but the script makes him into a full-time mope. Downey apart from that “yay”  is getting to be too much the Little King and is borderline unpleasant. Jeremy Renner gets to show a soft side Hawkeye has a wife and kids in a sweet little country house but he’s more interesting in volatile parts, like his scary psycho in The Town. On the plus side, the forthright hunkiness of Hemsworth and Evans has its old-fashioned virtues, and Olsen with her lemur peepers makes the Scarlet Witch so charismatically damaged she steals every scene. Last year I caught her Juliet in the worst professional Shakespeare production I’ve seen. Her verse speaking was fine, she moved simply and well, and she managed to seem real opposite an emotional no-show of a Romeo. I was sold, and still am.

Though a mess by all conventional narrative standards, Avengers: Age of Ultron is a fascinating case study in the rules of “universe” storytelling. Chief among them is that a film may not be self-contained — it must constantly allude to worlds outside its own. Marvel fans want extra characters, extra subplots, in-jokes that pander to their supposed breadth of knowledge. They don’t want closure. There is nothing better than an ending that is also a beginning: The sequel must be signaled because the universe must always live in their fantasies.

Whedon’s heart is pure enough to make this far-reaching commercial strategy seem benign. When his superheroes declared that the way to save the world was by coming together, I almost forgot that superheroes coming together make for the kind of franchise tentpole universe movie that threatens to crowd out the films I care about most. The “universe” could take over the world more efficiently than Ultron.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

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New Dragon Ball series,coming in 2015

Start practicing your best Kamehameha, because Dragon Ball is returning.


Toei Animation announced today that production has begun on Dragon Ball Super, the first Dragon Ball television series to debut in 18 years. The series will follow the events of the film Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection “F” and is set to debut in Japan sometime this July.

Super will follow up on Goku’s battle with Majin Buu as he “attempts to maintain Earth’s fragile peace,” according to Toei. The series will be overseen by Dragon Ball’s original creator Akira Toriyama and produced by Fuji Television.

Little else is known about the series so far, but it will bring the first new ongoing series in the Dragon Ball world since Dragon Ball GT in the mid 90s. Dragon Ball Kai was first broadcast in 2009, but it was a revised version of Dragon Ball Z.

No details about how Super will make its way to American television have been provided.

Dragon Ball Movie Series DVD

Dragon Ball: Season 1

NTSC/Region1. In 1986, the animated adaptation of Akira Toriyama's manga Dragon Ball debuted on Japanese television, launching one of the most popular franchises in anime history. Dragon Ball introduced a special mixture of male bonding, rigorous training, martial arts fighting, slapstick comedy, and sci-fi action that scored a huge hit with boys and led to the follow-ups Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT.

A small boy from another planet, Goku commands super-human strength, but he was raised in the remote mountains by an old man and he knows little of the world. Goku meets Bulma, who's trying to assemble the seven magical Dragon Balls so she can wish for a boyfriend. The naive boy and the hot-tempered girl join forces, then form a quarrelsome alliance with Oolong, the shape-shifting pig, and Yamcha, a dashing bandit with a metamorphic familiar, Puar. The heroes compete for the Dragon Balls against the pint-sized Emperor Pilaf (who wants to rule the world). After defeating Pilaf, Goku goes to study martial arts with Master Roshi, a lecherous but extraordinarily skilled old man. 

Dragon Ball: Season 2

The search for the seven magic balls continues!
After meeting his match in the World Martial Arts Tournament, Goku embarks on a mission to recover the Four Star Dragon Ball that once belonged to his grandfather. His treacherous quest will take him from the terrifying heights of Muscle Tower to the darkest depths of the deep blue sea. But with the Flying Nimbus under his feet and Bulma’s Dragon Radar leading the way – there’s nothing mighty Goku can’t handle. 

With a dangerous new adversary out to get him, this will be Goku’s most dangerous adventure yet. The sinister Red Ribbon Army, led by cigar-chomping Commander Red, is determined to seize the seven Dragon Balls and use them to conquer the world! Watch as colonels, generals, ninjas, android pirates, and giant pink monsters use every dirty trick in the book to stop Goku from getting his hands on the magic Dragon Balls!

Enjoy the next chapter in the saga of this legendary warrior with Dragon Ball: Season Two!

Dragon Ball: Season 3

Goku embarks on a journey to test his strength against the best of the best!
Driven by his promise to a heartbroken young boy, Goku completes his training under Master Korin and prepares for a brutal rematch with Mercenary Tao! These two powerful warriors trade blows in a furious flurry of Dodon Rays and Kamehameha Waves, but that’s only the beginning of this adventure.

The Red Ribbon Army continues to cast a dark shadow across the land as they inch ever closer to attaining ultimate power. Only Goku can halt their reign of terror and resurrect a fallen friend, but first he’ll have to fight for possession of the seven Dragon Balls!

To complete his quest, Goku must beat a fortune-teller at her own game; slam the door on Demon Land; tame the dread Inoshikacho, and survive a beating from a masked dead man. His journey will be filled with danger, but with each victory, Goku gains the strength needed to emerge victorious from the upcoming World Martial Arts Tournament!

Don’t miss the coming of age of the greatest warrior the world has ever known in Dragon Ball Season Three!

Dragon Ball: Season 4

Goku's headed for a showdown with a sinister green fiend!
A new breed of evil - more powerful than anything ever experienced - is taking the world's greatest martial artists down for the count. Goku is quick to join the fight, but he's about to meet his match in the form of King Piccolo. This menacing monster has the power to pulverize the planet, and his murderous rampage will not stop until he controls the power of the seven magic Dragon Balls.

When Krillin is the first hero cut down by the monster's minion, the stage is set for a brutal grudge match between Goku and Piccolo. Earth's greatest champion vows to avenge the loss of his best friend, but first, he must journey to Korin Tower on a quest for the Ultra Divine Water: a magical elixir that could give him the strength to save humanity - or send him straight to the grave!

Dragon Ball: Season 5

Witness the thrilling conclusion to the adventure of a lifetime!
In the aftermath of his epic battle with Piccolo, Goku embarks on an electrifying quest to rescue his fallen friends from the realm of the dead. His perilous journey will take him to the heights of Korin Tower – and beyond – as he searches for Kami, a mystical being with the power to resurrect Shenron and restore the magic of the seven Dragon Balls!

But even if Goku succeeds in raising the dead, there’s no guarantee he’ll live long enough to enjoy a reunion with his slain comrades. The World Martial Arts tournament is just around the corner, and an eerily-familiar foe known only as Junior wants to teach Goku the true meaning of pain! To survive the tournament and finally earn the title of World’s Greatest Martial Artist, Goku must train his mind as well as his body in order to complete his amazing transformation from a bushy-tailed boy into a man to be reckoned with!

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