VHS : Search

VHS : Search

Click here for your favorite eBay items
could not open XML input
STARS ~ CELESTIALonly $ 19.95Bid Now!19h 45m 14s left!
Pt 109

Pt 109

»rank: 866

starring: Cliff Robertson, Robert Culp, Ty Hardin, James Gregory, Grant Williams
directed by: Leslie H. Martinson


0ur opinion: :John F. Kennedy lived long enough to see this Hollywood account of his Navy career and his heroism following a ruthless attack by a Japanese ship on his small patrol craft. Cliff Robertson is an amiable choice to play Kennedy, though one won't find a lot of the late president's mannerisms in his performance. The key battle sequence, which finds Kennedy and his crew bloodied and battered while trying to stay alive in shark-infested waters, makes a big impression on young viewers. --Tom Keogh



More details
The End (1978)

The End (1978)

»rank: 4875

starring: Burt Reynolds, Dom De Luise, Sally Field, Janice Carroll, James Best


0ur opinion: :Burt Reynolds directed and stars in this dark comedy, which suffers from diminishing returns the longer it goes on. He plays a fellow who discovers that he has a terminal illness and wants to spare himself and everyone he knows the seemingly unavoidable end of a painful malady. So he decides to kill himself. But he proves surprisingly inept at it and after several tries winds up in a mental hospital, where he meets a cheerfully homicidal inmate (Dom DeLuise). The suicide stuff was handled ...



More details
Bullitt (Spec)

Bullitt (Spec)

»rank: 4147

starring: Steve McQueen, Jacqueline Bisset, Robert Vaughn, Don Gordon, Robert Duvall
directed by: Peter Yates


0ur opinion: essential video:Peter Yates's 1968 cop drama has its existentialist pretensions, but there is something seductive about its strained seriousness and Steve McQueen's intentionally stoic performance as a San Francisco police detective on the trail of a murderer. A couple of key action sequences boost the film's stature, the most memorable of which is a vertiginous car chase that Yates almost approaches as a dance. Jacqueline Bisset provides window dressing as Bullitt's girlfriend--worried about how much his job strips away his humanity--and Robert Vaughan is ...



More details
Fitzwilly

Fitzwilly

»rank: 6176

starring: Dick Van Dyke, Barbara Feldon, John McGiver, Edith Evans, Harry Townes
directed by: Delbert Mann


0ur opinion: essential video:Peter Yates's 1968 cop drama has its existentialist pretensions, but there is something seductive about its strained seriousness and Steve McQueen's intentionally stoic performance as a San Francisco police detective on the trail of a murderer. A couple of key action sequences boost the film's stature, the most memorable of which is a vertiginous car chase that Yates almost approaches as a dance. Jacqueline Bisset provides window dressing as Bullitt's girlfriend--worried about how much his job strips away his humanity--and Robert Vaughan is ...



More details
The Graduate

The Graduate

»rank: 4412

starring: Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft, Katharine Ross, William Daniels, Murray Hamilton
directed by: Mike Nichols


0ur opinion: essential video:Few films have defined a generation as The Graduate did. The alienation, the nonconformity, the intergenerational romance, the blissful Simon and Garfunkel soundtrack--they all served to lob a cultural grenade smack into the middle of 1967 America, ultimately making the film the third most profitable up to that time. Seen from a later perspective, its radical chicness has dimmed a bit, yet it's still a joy to see Dustin Hoffman's bemused Benjamin and Anne Bancroft's deliciously decadent, sardonic Mrs. Robinson. The script by ...



More details
Killers (1964)

Killers (1964)

»rank: 11285

starring: Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, John Cassavetes, Clu Gulager, Claude Akins
directed by: Don Siegel


0ur opinion: :As with its 1946 predecessor of the same title and directed by noir maestro Robert Siodmak, this version of The Killers makes much ado out of Ernest Hemingway's classic short story of two hit men who shake up a diner while looking for their prey. Hemingway's sketch took up perhaps the first six minutes of Siodmak's film, and everything after that was an add-on. This 1964 remake (of sorts) by Don Siegel builds another whole world around Hemingway's narrow if intense premise. The two assassins ...



More details
PT 109

PT 109

»rank: 12167

starring: Cliff Robertson, Robert Culp, Ty Hardin, James Gregory, Grant Williams
directed by: Leslie H. Martinson


0ur opinion: :John F. Kennedy lived long enough to see this Hollywood account of his Navy career and his heroism following a ruthless attack by a Japanese ship on his small patrol craft. Cliff Robertson is an amiable choice to play Kennedy, though one won't find a lot of the late president's mannerisms in his performance. The key battle sequence, which finds Kennedy and his crew bloodied and battered while trying to stay alive in shark-infested waters, makes a big impression on young viewers. --Tom Keogh



More details
Paternity

Paternity

»rank: 4498

starring: Burt Reynolds, Beverly D'Angelo, Norman Fell, Paul Dooley, Elizabeth Ashley
directed by: David Steinberg


0ur opinion: :John F. Kennedy lived long enough to see this Hollywood account of his Navy career and his heroism following a ruthless attack by a Japanese ship on his small patrol craft. Cliff Robertson is an amiable choice to play Kennedy, though one won't find a lot of the late president's mannerisms in his performance. The key battle sequence, which finds Kennedy and his crew bloodied and battered while trying to stay alive in shark-infested waters, makes a big impression on young viewers. --Tom Keogh



More details
The Boneyard

The Boneyard

»rank: 14140

starring: Phyllis Diller, Norman Fell, Ed Nelson
directed by: James Cummins


0ur opinion: :John F. Kennedy lived long enough to see this Hollywood account of his Navy career and his heroism following a ruthless attack by a Japanese ship on his small patrol craft. Cliff Robertson is an amiable choice to play Kennedy, though one won't find a lot of the late president's mannerisms in his performance. The key battle sequence, which finds Kennedy and his crew bloodied and battered while trying to stay alive in shark-infested waters, makes a big impression on young viewers. --Tom Keogh



More details
The Stone Killer

The Stone Killer

»rank: 2639

starring: Charles Bronson, Martin Balsam, Jack Colvin, Paul Koslo, Norman Fell
directed by: Michael Winner


0ur opinion: :John F. Kennedy lived long enough to see this Hollywood account of his Navy career and his heroism following a ruthless attack by a Japanese ship on his small patrol craft. Cliff Robertson is an amiable choice to play Kennedy, though one won't find a lot of the late president's mannerisms in his performance. The key battle sequence, which finds Kennedy and his crew bloodied and battered while trying to stay alive in shark-infested waters, makes a big impression on young viewers. --Tom Keogh



More details

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (VHS)only $ 0.99Bid Now!5d 9h 41m left!

 Next > 
page 1 of  6
 1  2  3  4  5  6 
 






REHOBOTH BEACH, Del. -- The "no vacancy" signs outside hotels, sunburned families packing boardwalk amusement rides and thousands of students working in surf shops and souvenir concessions along the avenues suggest that the beach economy is booming this summer.

Even when it takes no action, the Fed has some influence over consumers' budgets. Here's how the Fed's announcement affects both borrowers and savers.

Cut your energy bills with these simple steps.

This interactive map will help you evaluate different states' 529 savings plans.

Open House takes a look at cities likely to recover first from the real-estate slowdown, a luxury boom in North Texas and Phoenix neighborhoods with high foreclosure rates.


Compare up to 4 free offers! Refinance and lower your monthly payments. All credit types accepted!






by Fil Hunter, Steven Biver, Paul Fuqua
$32.23

Average customer rating: 5.0 ISBN: 0240808193

by Lee Varis
$23.99

Average customer rating: 4.5 ISBN: 047004733X

by Gary Gordon
$63.06

Average customer rating: 4.0 ISBN: 047144118X
$11.98



On their debut album, 1999's Something About Airplanes, Death Cab for Cutie proved there's a reason why Northwest music critics continue to sing their praises. The foursome combined the emo sounds of Modest Mouse and 764-Hero with an inventive, and often sly, sentimentality. It worked wonders, but still sounded a little too lo-fi. Luckily, on We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes the group has figured out all the production nuances that flawed that auspicious debut. The opening "Title Track" begins by sounding both crappy and shallow, but the band is merely pulling your leg; two minutes later, the tune expands into a gorgeous, well-produced masterpiece. The album never looks back. Ben Gibbard's songwriting continues to evolve--"Company Calls" segues into, what else, the slower "Company Calls Epilogue"--while the simple lyrics of "For What Reason" and "405" tell infectious stories that demand repeated listenings. Proof positive the Northwest is still churning out great music. --Jason Verlinde
$16.98



The first Black Box Recorder album, 1998's England Made Me, was originally conceived by Auteurs and Baader Meinhof frontman Luke Haines as a typically baleful response to the cultural and political hysteria--respectively, Britpop and Tony Blair--then gripping Britain. Recorded with the help of former Jesus & Mary Chain drummer John Moore and singer Sarah Nixey, it did for Britpop roughly what the film Carrie did for the senior prom. The Facts of Life, the follow-up, maintains the withering glare but fixes it this time on the personal. The songs here obsess with unnerving clarity and mordant wit on the banal, cruel details of human relationships and are narrated perfectly by Nixey. Where her perfectly English-accented whisper infused England Made Me with the air of a bored aristocrat finding contemptuous amusement in the misery of others, on The Facts of Life she has located an edge of taunting viciousness all the more diabolical for being so understated. The tunes, as ever, are sweet and insidious, perhaps best thought of as Saint Etienne turned feral. Highlights on an album full of them are "English Motorway" and "The Art of Driving"--BBR triumphantly reclaiming the American rock & roll prerogative of the road song for their damp, claustrophobic homeland. The Facts of Life is a masterpiece. --Andrew Mueller


Killer Stone The
Shopping at vhs.greatestgiftstore.com  Created at Tue Nov 18 17:15:57 2008