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Ribbon Horror Movie

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Best Horror Movie Songs $5.99 Best Horror Movie Songs |
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4 Movie Marathon: Horror Collection (DVD) $17.32 4 Movie Marathon:Horror Collec |
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Horror and the Horror Film (Hardcover) $255.9 Horror films can be profound fables of human nature and important works of art, yet many people dismiss them out of hand. `Horror and the Horror Film` conveys a mature appreciation for horror films along with a comprehensive view of their narrative strategies, their relations to reality and fantasy and their cinematic power. The volume covers the horror film and its subgenres ? such as the vampire movie ? from 1896 to the present. It covers the entire genre by considering every kind of monster in it, including the human. |
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Horror and the Horror Film (Paperback) $94.9 Horror films can be profound fables of human nature and important works of art, yet many people dismiss them out of hand. `Horror and the Horror Film` conveys a mature appreciation for horror films along with a comprehensive view of their narrative strategies, their relations to reality and fantasy and their cinematic power. The volume covers the horror film and its subgenres ? such as the vampire movie ? from 1896 to the present. It covers the entire genre by considering every kind of monster in it, including the human. |
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The Last Horror Movie (DVD) $16.5 A wedding videographer uses a slasher video rental that he`s recorded over with real murders to recruit victims, then speaks into the camera to the viewer before and after killing his latest quarry. Kevin Howarth delivers a chilling performance in this diabolically intricate and frightening meta-movie about watching horror movies. |
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Nosferatu, a Symphony of Horror, German Movie Poster, 1922 $19.99 Nosferatu, a Symphony of Horror, German Movie Poster, 1922 - Premium Poster |
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Horror Movie Freak (Paperback) $27.95 You`ll scream with delight while reading this fun and engaging book that discusses fright flicks all horror fans need to see to ascend to the level of a true Horror Freak — from classics (Dracula and Psycho) to modern movies (Drag Me to Hell) and lesser-known gems (Dog Soldiers). Movies are divided into various categories including Asian horror, beginners, homicidal slashers, supernatural thrillers, and zombie invasion. Features more than 130 movies, 250+ photos of movie stills and posters, and a chapter on remakes and reimaginings. The book also includes the DVD of George A. Romero`s original 1968 version of "Night of the Living Dead." |
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The Horror $10.49 The Horror |
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4 Movie Marathon-Cult Horror Collection (DVD) (2discs) $12.7 4 Movie Marathon:Cult Horror C |
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The Last Horror Movie - Widescreen $6.99 Julian Richards' The Last Horror Movie centers on Max, a wedding photographer who, at night, with the assistance of a homeless person, makes brutal home movies of him killing a variety of innocent people. Max often addresses the camera in a chilling and flamboyant manner. His psychotic state grows even more toxic as he begins to consider how the people watching his films are reacting. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi |
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The Red Ribbon Movie: a barbie horror movie
G.I. Joe "X-Men"-meets-"Top Gun
If this review makes less sense than normal, it's because we saw the movie at midnight, and wrote it up very early Friday. Like hundreds of bad horror films, movies adapted from video games, and Jamie Kennedy pictures before it, "G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra" didn't have a screening for critics.
Although there may have been calculated reasons for this move, it shows a deeper problem for Hollywood studios: Their complete lack of faith in professional moviegoers to appreciate well-executed trash.
Yes, this movie is essentially a two-hour toy commercial.
Yes, at times it seems like a sequel to "Team America: World Police," except with live actors instead of marionettes. ("America, #%&@ yeah!")
Yes, Dennis Quaid actually says the words "When all else fails, we don't" with a straight face.
Yes, "G.I. Joe" would have played a lot better if Sarah Palin were our vice president.
Yes, the bloated-with-visual effects final 30 minutes will make audiences yearn for the realistic, clutter-free action and human contact of "Star Wars: The Clone Wars."
Yes, Jonathan Pryce, who was born in Wales, was cast as our U.S. president. (Where's Lou Dobbs when you actually need him?)
Yes, this film is best enjoyed if you're an 11-year-old boy - or a grown-up man who just drank four cans of Pabst Blue Ribbon.
But it's hard to deny that the first two-thirds of "G.I. Joe" are enjoyable, especially when graded on the curve of lowered expectations. Compared with other big-budget movies out this summer, it's pretty mediocre. But as a movie that no one thought would be any good because it's based on an action figure that isn't even a foot tall anymore, it succeeds wildly.
"G.I. Joe" stars Channing Tatum as Duke, whose onetime true love, Ana (Sienna Miller), now leads a group of well-gadgeted terrorists. When her evil consortium tries to steal a warhead filled with metal-eating nanotechnology robots - which looks suspiciously like a shaken-up can of Mountain Dew - Duke gets recruited into G.I. Joe, a sort of international SWAT team that includes Quaid as its leader and a cool-looking ninja dude named Snake Eyes.
The whole thing has an "X-Men"-meets-"Top Gun" vibe that may seem really dumb if your favorite movie is "Atonement" but will be easy to groove right along with if you're the type of person who never turns the channel when "Commando" comes on cable.
Stuff blows up. Lots of it. Most of the actors are hot-looking, and those who aren't do cool things with swords. And although the 118-minute movie is about 25 minutes too long, the script has a nice self-deprecating feel, without losing its sense of patriotic excess.
In other words, nobody who made this film thought he was making "Sense and Sensibility." Sometimes that's a good thing.
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