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The Pink Panther Ultimate Collection

Product Description
Put on your detective hat as MGM Home Entertainment uncovers the best of the Pink Panther with the Pink Panther Ultimate Collection. One of MGM’s largest and broadest appealing film franchises is now in one complete furry box set, including nine film favorites, nine cartoon classics and the quintessential Pink Panther encyclopedia, “Pink Panther, The Ultimate Guide to the Coolest Cat in Town!” written by Jerry Beck. Included in the set is the new collector’s edition of the Oscar® nominated film The Pink Panther (1964) starring Peter Sellers as the bumbling Inspector Clouseau, who tries to catch a jewel thief who’s right under his nose. The 2006 version of The Pink Panther starring Golden Globe® nominee Steve Martin (Father of the Bride) and directed by Shawn Levy (Night at the Museum) is also included in the set as well as over 60 minutes of never-before-seen footage.

Price: $44.95
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Chrono Crusade – Complete Collection

Product Description
CHRONO CRUSADE COMPLETE COLLECTION – DVD MovieAmazon.com
The offbeat supernatural adventure Chrono Crusade takes place in 1928, when the hedonistic culture of Prohibition-era New York has fueled a rise in Satanism. Sister Rosette of the Magdalene Order is a klutzy, gun-toting exorcist-cum-devil-hunter who wrecks her period cars, blows up the wrong buildings, and generally adds to the headaches of her superiors. Her level-headed partner Chrono tries to rein her in and minimize the damage. He’s a devil (literally), but he’s bound to Rosette by psychological and magical ties. The supporting cast includes a lecherous inventor who peeks up Rosette’s habit; handsome Father Remington; Azmaria, a mysteriously powerful girl who adores Rosette; and the formidable head of the Magdalene Order, Sister Kate (who doesn’t shimmy).

Chrono Crusade was adapted from a long-running manga by Daisuke Moriyama, and its biggest weakness is the central character. Rosette is a screechy, clumsy comic heroine, but she and the Magdalene Order are all that’s keeping the devil Aion from realizing his nefarious plot to remake the universe. Chrono Crusade feels like someone dropped Lina Inverse from Slayers into Hellsing: it’s too dark to be funny, but too silly to take seriously. Although many anime series depict battles against devils and demons, the constant references to holy water, God, the Vatican, etc. in Chrono Crusade may offend religious viewers, especially Catholics. (Rated TV 14 V, suitable for ages 15 and older: violence, grotesque imagery, risqué humor, nudity, bizarre religious imagery) –Charles Solomon

Price: $18.99
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The Ultimate Matrix Collection

  • Condition: New
  • Format: Blu-ray
  • Color; Dolby; Dual Disc

Description
The definitive 7-disc Blu-ray set, The Ultimate Matrix Collection features all three films in the trilogy together for the first time ever with a newly remastered picture and sound for The Matrix. Also included is the companion piece The Matrix Revisited and the best-selling The Animatrix, plus five entirely new Blu-ray discs packed solid with brand-new supplemental materials that encompass every aspect of the Matrix universe, including two new audio commentaries on each film, Enter the Matrix video game footage, 106 deep-delving featurettes/ documentaries and much more!Amazon.com
The Matrix
By following up their debut thriller Bound with the 1999 box-office smash The Matrix, the codirecting Wachowski brothers–Andy and Larry–annihilated any suggestion of a sophomore jinx, crafting one of the most exhilarating sci-fi/action movies of the 1990s. Set in the not too distant future in an insipid, characterless city, we find a young man named Neo (Keanu Reeves). A software techie by day and a computer hacker by night, he sits alone at home by his monitor, waiting for a sign, a signal–from what or whom he doesn’t know–until one night, a mysterious woman named Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) seeks him out and introduces him to that faceless character he has been waiting for: Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne). A messiah of sorts, Morpheus presents Neo with the truth about his world by shedding light on the dark secrets that have troubled him for so long: “You’ve felt it your entire life, that there’s something wrong with the world. You don’t know what it is, but it’s there, like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad.” Ultimately, Morpheus illustrates to Neo what the Matrix is–a reality beyond reality that controls all of their lives, in a way that Neo can barely comprehend.

Neo thus embarks on an adventure that is both terrifying and enthralling. Pitted against an enemy that transcends human concepts of evil, Morpheus and his team must train Neo to believe that he is the chosen champion of their fight. With mind-boggling, technically innovative special effects and a thought-provoking script that owes a debt of inspiration to the legacy of cyberpunk fiction, this is much more than an out-and-out action yarn; it’s a thinking man’s journey into the realm of futuristic fantasy, a dreamscape full of eye candy that will satisfy sci-fi, kung fu, action, and adventure fans alike. Although the film is headlined by Reeves and Fishburne–who both turn in fine performances–much of the fun and excitement should be attributed to Moss, who flawlessly mixes vulnerability with immense strength, making other contemporary female heroines look timid by comparison. And if we were going to cast a vote for most dastardly movie villain of 1999, it would have to go to Hugo Weaving, who plays the feckless, semipsychotic Agent Smith with panache and edginess. As the film’s box-office profits soared, the Wachowski brothers announced that The Matrix is merely the first chapter in a cinematically dazzling franchise–a chapter that is arguably superior to the other sci-fi smash of 1999 (you know… the one starring Jar Jar Binks). –Jeremy Storey

The Matrix Reloaded
Considering the lofty expectations that preceded it, The Matrix Reloaded triumphs where most sequels fail. It would be impossible to match the fresh audacity that made The Matrix a global phenomenon in 1999, but in continuing the exploits of rebellious Neo (Keanu Reeves), Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne), and Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) as they struggle to save the human sanctuary of Zion from invading machines, the codirecting Wachowski brothers have their priorities well in order. They offer the obligatory bigger and better highlights (including the impressive “Burly Brawl” and freeway chase sequences) while remaining focused on cleverly plotting the middle of a brain-teasing trilogy that ends with The Matrix Revolutions. The metaphysical underpinnings can be dismissed or scrutinized, and choosing the latter course (this is, after all, an epic about choice and free will) leads to astonishing repercussions that made Reloaded an explosive hit with critics and hardcore fans alike. As the centerpiece of a multimedia franchise, this dynamic sequel ends with a cliffhanger that virtually guarantees a mind-blowing conclusion. –Jeff Shannon

The Matrix Revolutions
Despite the inevitable law of diminishing returns, The Matrix Revolutions is quite satisfying as an adrenalized action epic, marking yet another milestone in the exponential evolution of computer-generated special effects. That may not be enough to satisfy hardcore Matrix fans who turned the Wachowski Brothers’ hacker mythology into a quasi-religious pop-cultural phenomenon, but there’s no denying that the trilogy goes out with a cosmic bang instead of the whimper that many expected. Picking up precisely where The Matrix Reloaded left off, this 130-minute finale finds Neo (Keanu Reeves) at a virtual junction, defending the besieged human enclave of Zion by confronting the attacking machines on their home turf, while humans combat swarms of tentacled mechanical sentinels as Zion’s fate lies in the balance. It all amounts to a blaze of CGI glory, devoid of all but the shallowest emotions, and so full of metaphysical hokum that the trilogy’s detractors can gloat with I-told-you-so sarcasm. And yet, Revolutions still succeeds as a slick, exciting hybrid of cinema and video game, operating by its own internal logic with enough forward momentum to make the whole trilogy seem like a thrilling, magnificent dream. – Jeff Shannon

Price: $35.98
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Suburban Psycho: Horror Collection

  • SUBURBAN PSYCHO HORROR COLLECTION (DVD MOVIE)

Product Description
Studio: E1 Release Date: 08/24/2010

Price: $6.50
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Wresling Gold Collection, Vol. 2

Product Description
WRESTLING GOLD COLLECTION #2 – DVD Movie

Price: $10.97
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Disney Pixar Collection: 3 Games in 1

  • Includes full versions of Disney / Pixar’s top-selling PC/MAC games
  • The Incredibles – Using the characters’ unique superpowers, fight and race through over 19 levels of action and adventure
  • Cars – Burn rubber in over 30 races and mini-games
  • Cars – Speed to the finish line with over 10 playable characters
  • Ratatouille – Relive the movie’s most intense action scenes through the eyes of Remy and Emile in over 5 action packed worlds

Product Description
Start your adventure with The Incredibles and help save the world as a superhero. Then race to the finish line in Cars as you help Lightening McQueen capture the coveted Piston Cup Championship. Later, dash, swim and glide through the streets of Paris in Ratatouille as Remy, a young rat who dreams of becoming a great chef.

Price: $2.99
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Wes Craven Collection: Dracula 2000 / Dracula II: Ascension / Dracula III: Legacy

Product Description
DRACULA 2000
When a team of techno-savvy thieves break into a high-security vault, they don’t discover priceless works of art…they find a crypt unopened for 100 years. Suddenly, the ancient terror of Dracula is unleashed, and his first destination is America and the exotic city of New Orleans—a place where he feels right at home. Not far behind, however, is a vampire hunter from London determined to save a young woman with whom Dracula shares his dark legacy.

DRACULA II: ASCENSION
This sequel to Wes Craven’s Dracula 2000 begins as a group of medical students discover the body of the infamous count. Soon, the students find themselves in the middle of a bizarre and dangerous conflict when a shadowy figure offers them $30 million for the body so that he may harvest his blood. At the same time, the kids find that they are being targeted by a Vatican-sanctioned vampire killer who will stop at nothing to see Dracula destroyed once and for all.

DRACULA III: LEGACY
Wes Craven’s modern Dracula series continues. The dreaded Dracula leads vampire hunters Father Uffizi and Luke back to Eastern Europe and a country plagued by civil war. There, powerful local warlords are assisting Dracula by capturing victims and delivering them to feed the vampires residing in Dracula’s castle. And to worsen matters, Father Uffizi must overcome the vampire virus he’s infected with.

Price: $4.51
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John Wayne Collection, Vol. 2

Product Description
Set Includes:
Dakota
Fighting Kentuckian
A Lady Takes a Chance
Rio Grande

Price: $14.99
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TCM Greatest Classic Films Collection: Hitchcock Thrillers

  • GREATEST CLASSIC FILMS COLLECTION ~ ALFRED HITCHCOCK THRILLERS Suspicion Strangers on a Train I Confess The Wrong Man Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: MYSTERY/SUSPENSE Rating: NR Age: 883929082162 UPC: 883929082162 Manufacturer No: 1000103543

Product Description
GREATEST CLASSIC FILMS COLLECTION ~ ALFRED HITCHCOCK THRILLERS Suspicion • Strangers on a Train • I Confess • The Wrong Man Amazon.com
Repeated viewings can’t dispel the shock of the final scene in this classic 1941 romantic mystery–a brief but disorienting confrontation that suddenly inverts the heroine’s mounting conviction that she’s married a murderer, forcing us to reconsider virtually every scene and line of dialogue that’s preceded it. It’s a masterful coup de grace for director Alfred Hitchcock, who has built a puzzle around the corrosive power of suspicion, threaded with deft ambiguities that toy with dramatic conventions and character archetypes in nearly every frame.

As embodied by Joan Fontaine, who nabbed an Oscar in this second outing with the director, Lina McLaidlaw is a buttoned-up, bookish heiress whose prim exterior conceals longings for a more engaged emotional life. Her solution materializes in the darkly handsome Johnnie Aysgarth, a gambler, womanizer, and spendthrift who flirts, then pursues, and soon marries her. As Aysgarth, Cary Grant is both irresistible and sinister, capable of deceit and petty theft, as well as grander designs on his bride’s impending fortune. Lina’s passion for Johnnie is clouded by each new revelation about his apparent dishonesty, from clandestine gambling to real estate development schemes; more troubling are clues implicating him in the death of his best friend, and the prospect that Johnnie may be slowly poisoning Lina herself. By the time we see him ascending a darkened staircase with a suspicious glass of milk, an image made all the more indelible through the spectral glow the director captures in the glass, the evidence seems damning indeed.

In fact, even as Hitchcock stacks the deck against Johnnie, and takes full advantage of Grant’s skill at conveying such menace, the director also dots his landscape with visual clues to Lina’s own neurotic (and erotic) obsessions. The final scene forces us to reevaluate her behavior while leaving enough of a cloud over Johnnie to rob him, and us, of a complete exoneration. It’s a wicked, unsettling payoff to a brilliantly executed thriller. –Sam Sutherland

Price: $10.70
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The Henry James Collection

  • Best known for his novels the chronicle the passions and missteps of 19th century Americans in Europe, Henry James continues to appeal to modern sensibilities with his deep understanding of character. This collection of adaptations from the BBC archives includes: The American with Matthew Modine and Diana Rigg, The Portrait of a Lady with Suzanne Neve, Richard Chamberlain and Edward Fox, The Spoil

Description
Best known for his novels the chronicle the passions and missteps of 19th century Americans in Europe, Henry James continues to appeal to modern sensibilities with his deep understanding of character. This collection of adaptations from the BBC archives includes: The American with Matthew Modine and Diana Rigg, The Portrait of a Lady with Suzanne Neve, Richard Chamberlain and Edward Fox, The Spoils of Poynton with Gemma Jones and Ian Oglivy, The Wings of the Dove with Elizabeth Spriggs, Betsy Blair and John Castle, and The Golden Bowl with Daniel Massey, Barry Morse and Cyril Cusack.Amazon.com
The novels of Henry James are celebrated for their psychological nuance and social detail–which becomes the raw material for surprisingly juicy and lavish television, thick with seduction, betrayal, sinister motives, and troubling secrets. The five BBC adaptations in The Henry James Collection transform high literature into the best soap opera you could ask for, resulting in a rich and satisfying collection of mini-series and movies. The most famous of the lot, The Portrait of a Lady, is unfortunately the weakest, despite the presence of Richard The Thorn Birds Chamberlain. Screenwriter Jack Pulman’s stiff script leads to brittle performances, though Beatrix Lehmann has many marvelous moments as an acidic matriarch (a delicious character type that recurs in almost every James novel). When her effete son rhapsodizes about Isabel Archer, the American heiress visiting their estate, Lehmann pulls the rug out with “She’s just a young girl on a trip to Europe; don’t make such a meal of it.” This mini-series is too much of a meal, all too faithful to the novel’s plot but losing much of its drive.

Pulman does a much better job with The Golden Bowl by turning one of the novel’s side characters–an elderly man with a nosy wife–into its narrator; and in the hands of top-notch Cyril Cusack, this narrator combines seeming obliviousness and sly understanding as he unwinds the story of a perhaps overly close father and daughter, whose familial bond threatens to destroy both of their marriages. The Golden Bowl also benefits from a lively, handsome cast and some gorgeous fashions–style mavens will drool over the creations of costume designer Ian Adley. The Spoils of Poynton, though not ranked highly among James’ works, proves enormously entertaining as a mother and son manipulate a kind-hearted young woman in their fight with each other to claim the treasures of the family estate. Gemma Jones, Ian Ogilvy, and especially Pauline Jameson (as, of course, a scheming matriarch) skillfully balance light and dark as simple acquisitiveness turns into bitter struggle. The last two adaptations are movie-length, but what they lose in detail they gain in momentum and dramatic force. The American stars Matthew Modine as a wealthy American in love with a widowed Parisian gentlewoman; Diana Rigg is magnificently poisonous as the young widow’s mother who spurns Modine, driving him to seek revenge. The most visually stylish of the set, The American takes a minor James novel and gives it plenty of zest; Modine, often bland, is perfect here, earnest and direct and all the more appealing for it. Finally, The Wings of the Dove vividly captures James’ vision of Europe as shark-infested waters in which naive Americans get chewed up. Two British lovers, prevented from marrying by their lack of money, try to solve their problem by taking advantage of a wealthy American orphan, Milly Theale. Lisa Eichhorn’s performance as Milly is so endearing and so hapless that the machinations around her grow increasingly horrifying–especially as the lives of the lovers themselves turn to ruin. –Bret Fetzer

Price: $24.99
Buy Now: The Henry James Collection

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