A young woman and her two children reside in a secluded island mansion awaiting the return of her husand from the war. Her children have a mysterious disease that wont allow them to be near sunlight so she is vigilant about keeping the curtains and doors closed at all times. Studio: Buena Vista Home Video Release Date: 01/10/2006 Starring: Nicole Kidman Fiona Flanagan Run time: 104 minutes Rating: Pg13
No Description Available.
Trapped in their new york brownstones panic room a hidden chamber built as a sanctuary in the event of break-ins newly divorced meg altman and her young daughter sarah play a deadly game of cat-and-mouse with three intruders burnham raoul and junior during a brutal home invasion. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 09/27/2005 Starring: Jodie Foster Dwight Yoakam Run time: 112 minutes Rating: R Director: David Fincher
This intense edge-of-your seat horror film follows a young suburban couple who record the sinister disturbances in their home while they sleep – even as the domestic haunting becomes more frequent, more threatening and all too personal. Hypnotic and harrowing, Paranormal Activity uniquely delivers frightful suspense punctuated by moments of sudden and unexpected terror, all the way to the shocking ending.
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 07/03/2007 Run time: 165 minutes Rating: R
Disney Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl (Blu-ray) |
Actors: David AttenboroughFormat: Color, WidescreenLanguage: EnglishRegion: All RegionsAspect Ratio: 1.78:1Number of discs: 4RatingStudio: BBC WarnerDVD Release Date: April 24, 2007Run Time: 550 minutes
Fbi agent will graham has been called out of early retirement to catch a serial killer known by authorities as the tooth fairy. He asks for the help of his arch-nemesis dr. Hannibal the cannibal lecter.The only problem is that the tooth fairy is getting inside information from lector Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 05/23/2006 Starring: Anthony Hopkins Ralph Fiennes Run time: 124 minutes Rating: R Director: Brett Ratner
Marilyn Manson worked on the soundtrack, so it's no surprise that Resident Evil is best enjoyed by headbangers, goth guys, and PlayStation junkies. Like the interactive game it's based on, this horror hybrid pits a small band of SWAT-like commandos (including Milla Jovovich and Girlfight's Michelle Rodriguez) against a ravenous hoard of zombies, resulting in a gorefest that only sociopaths could love. The tenacious heroes are trapped inside the Hive—an underground complex where an evil corporation conducts illegal research with a deadly virus—and the zombies (reanimated corpses of sacrificed employees) are fodder for endless rounds of gunfire. It's utter nonsense (not unlike director Paul W.S. Anderson's previous Event Horizon), so your best defense is to wallow in it or avoid this trash altogether. A few cool sequences are borrowed from better films (that slice-and-dice laser is cribbed from the 1998 Canadian shocker Cube), but if you're in the mood for heavy-metal carnage, this movie's for you. —Jeff Shannon
2002's popular video-game-derived hit Resident Evil didn't inspire confidence in a sequel, but Resident Evil: Apocalypse defies odds and surpasses expectations. It's a bigger, better, action-packed zombie thriller, and this time Milla Jovovich (as the first film's no-nonsense heroine) is joined by more characters from the popular Capcom video games, including Jill Valentine (played by British hottie Sienna Guillory) and Carlos Olivera (Oded Fehr, from 1999's The Mummy). They're armed and ready for a high-caliber encounter with devil dogs, mutant "Lickers," lurching zombies, and the leather-clad monster known only as Nemesis, unleashed by the nefarious Umbrella Corporation responsible for creating the cannibalistic undead horde. Having gained valuable experience as a respected second-unit director on high-profile films like Gladiator and The Bourne Identity, director Alexander Witt elevates this junky material to the level of slick, schlocky entertainment. —Jeff Shannon
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 06/24/2008 Run time: 94 minutes Rating: R
Disturbing images and a few good shocks don't stop The Ring from being a hash of half-baked ideas. It's the kind of frightfest you'll watch to set a chilling mood or spook your susceptible friends, but when you try to sort it out, this well-mounted American remake (of the 1998 Japanese hit Ringu, based on Koji Suzuki's popular novel) collapses into a heap of incoherent parts. The negligible plot follows a Seattle reporter (Naomi Watts) as she investigates the death of her niece, the victim of a mysterious videotape that, according to vague urban legend, causes the viewer's death seven days later. (Fear Dot Com borrowed the same idea while avoiding this film's lofty pretensions.) The reporter, her son, and her estranged boyfriend view the tape, and the film's countdown structure follows them into deepening layers of terror—all quite effective until the movie attempts to explain itself. At that you're better off shutting down your brain and letting the creepy visuals take over. —Jeff Shannon |
Made with Delicious Library