Ron Perlman would have us believe that war never changes, but the movies about it certainly have. The last 15 years have brought no shortage of films about the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan (for obvious reasons), but World War II continues to fascinate filmmakers most of all. That includes Christopher Nolan, whose recent hit “Dunkirk” manages to bring something new to a genre that constantly feels at risk of becoming old hat.
Read More‘Dunkirk’ Is Too Loud For Some Viewers, But Christopher Nolan Says That’s the Way He Likes It
And while those two conflicts have dominated the genre of late, everything from the Civil War to the Battle of Red Cliffs has found powerful expression onscreen. Kathryn Bigelow’s “The Hurt Locker” tells us that “war is a drug,” and the films below suggest that movies about war are just as addictive — maybe even more so.
Read More‘Dunkirk’ Is Too Loud For Some Viewers, But Christopher Nolan Says That’s the Way He Likes It
And while those two conflicts have dominated the genre of late, everything from the Civil War to the Battle of Red Cliffs has found powerful expression onscreen. Kathryn Bigelow’s “The Hurt Locker” tells us that “war is a drug,” and the films below suggest that movies about war are just as addictive — maybe even more so.
- 7/28/2017
- by Michael Nordine and Anne Thompson
- Thompson on Hollywood
One of the most useful things about a supercut video is being able to absorb a vast swath of related imagery and concepts in an extremely short period of time. Whether you’re looking to soak up knowledge of the 20 highest-rated TV shows of the ’90s or simply run down an assemblage of great serves from every tennis player in competition at Wimbledon this year, these videos can be a repository of enlightening information. Or, if you just want to see a bunch of dogs scared of farts, that’s also an option.
But some videos are worth calling attention to as a means of pointing out the fluidity of terms we now face daily on the internet. For example, let’s take a look at this new video from Looper called “The Most Underrated Horror Movies Of The Last 15 Years.” Presumably, the list wants to provide viewers ...
But some videos are worth calling attention to as a means of pointing out the fluidity of terms we now face daily on the internet. For example, let’s take a look at this new video from Looper called “The Most Underrated Horror Movies Of The Last 15 Years.” Presumably, the list wants to provide viewers ...
- 6/26/2017
- by Alex McLevy
- avclub.com
See larger image Antibirth New From: $6.99 Usd In Stock Release date September 2, 2016.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gx1K4yZW5Ds
I…don’t know where to start here. It’s Antibirth! This movie is totally crazy! Let’s just summarize.
Lou (Natasha Lyonne) is a chainsmoking, hard partying — and I mean Hard — lady. The last thing you would expect or want to see for her is a pregnancy, but after a night of black out she soon discovers that’s maybe the case. Her denial is strong, but she keeps getting bigger and it’s the obvious answer. But then strange things begin happening to her body: bizarre dreams involving mascot characters, infected skin, rotting teeth, extremely blistered feet, and an absurdly distended belly that pulsates. Aided by her friend Sadie (Chloe Sevigny) and a mysterious woman named Lorna (Meg Tilly) who wants to help her, they set...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gx1K4yZW5Ds
I…don’t know where to start here. It’s Antibirth! This movie is totally crazy! Let’s just summarize.
Lou (Natasha Lyonne) is a chainsmoking, hard partying — and I mean Hard — lady. The last thing you would expect or want to see for her is a pregnancy, but after a night of black out she soon discovers that’s maybe the case. Her denial is strong, but she keeps getting bigger and it’s the obvious answer. But then strange things begin happening to her body: bizarre dreams involving mascot characters, infected skin, rotting teeth, extremely blistered feet, and an absurdly distended belly that pulsates. Aided by her friend Sadie (Chloe Sevigny) and a mysterious woman named Lorna (Meg Tilly) who wants to help her, they set...
- 9/13/2016
- by Mike Hassler
- Destroy the Brain
Jimmy Iovine and Dr. Dre have very little hope for the state of music — at least, beyond what they’re doing at Apple. “If you tell a kid: ‘You’ve got to pick music or Instagram,’ they’re not picking music,” current Apple Music boss and former cofounder of Interscope Records Iovine said in this month’s Wired cover story. “There was a time when, for anybody between the ages of 15 and 25, music was one, two and three. It’s not anymore.” And things are only getting worse, per Dre’s Beats partner. “The last 15 years of the record industry allowing itself to get.
- 8/17/2015
- by Tony Maglio
- The Wrap
Carrie Mathison is one of television’s most polarizing protagonists. Every week on Homeland, it seems that she is a step away from being fired from her agency post, as she clearly does not have the trust of the people under her command and she botches a rather high number of operations. However, that causes a dilemma for the writers, between letting what would realistically occur – Carrie loses the job – and heightening the drama, putting her in a place of greater power and, thus, greater conflict.
For the second time in three episodes, Homeland’s climactic scene occurs in the CIA compound as Carrie makes a critical decision. It seems like ages ago when she had an affair with Aayan and became all weepy-eyed when Haqqani shot him. Her outrage during that tumultuous operation seems much more embellished when compared to her chilly (although still devastated) response at the end...
For the second time in three episodes, Homeland’s climactic scene occurs in the CIA compound as Carrie makes a critical decision. It seems like ages ago when she had an affair with Aayan and became all weepy-eyed when Haqqani shot him. Her outrage during that tumultuous operation seems much more embellished when compared to her chilly (although still devastated) response at the end...
- 11/17/2014
- by Jordan Adler
- We Got This Covered
WWE.com
The old saying of ‘sex sells’ has certainly been used by Vince McMahon’s WWE. The wrestling show in the 90′s and 2000′s at times resembled more of a Playboy party than it did a scripted sports contest. Not to say it was all ‘bra and panties’ matches, the WWE also had some very capable in-ring female wrestlers. Trish Stratus for example was the greatest female worker of all time, her athletic matches were on occasions better than the male contests. In saying that, Trish was still marketed as a sex symbol.
That generation of ‘Divas’ had way more exposure, at times literally, than today’s diva landscape. However, a range of the current girls are really making mainstream fame for themselves by starring in Total Divas. The last 15 years really have been a great time to be a female in the WWE, whether it was as...
The old saying of ‘sex sells’ has certainly been used by Vince McMahon’s WWE. The wrestling show in the 90′s and 2000′s at times resembled more of a Playboy party than it did a scripted sports contest. Not to say it was all ‘bra and panties’ matches, the WWE also had some very capable in-ring female wrestlers. Trish Stratus for example was the greatest female worker of all time, her athletic matches were on occasions better than the male contests. In saying that, Trish was still marketed as a sex symbol.
That generation of ‘Divas’ had way more exposure, at times literally, than today’s diva landscape. However, a range of the current girls are really making mainstream fame for themselves by starring in Total Divas. The last 15 years really have been a great time to be a female in the WWE, whether it was as...
- 4/22/2014
- by Grahame Herbert
- Obsessed with Film
Fist 2 Fist 2: Weapon of Choice - Review Action Martial Arts Drama Directing4.0Overall ScoreReader Rating: (1 Vote)
https://www.facebook.com/WeaponOfChoiceMovie
Directed by: Jino Kang/Tony Urgo
Written by: Jino Kang/Tony Urgo
Starring: Jino Kang, Katherine Celio, Don Williams, Robert Parham, Kelly Lou Dennis, Douglas Olsson
Fist 2 Fist 2: Weapon Of Choice is the follow up to the 2010 Fist 2 Fist (aka Hand 2 Hand), which won “Best Action Martial Arts Feature” at Action of Film Festival on it’s release. The second movie has plenty of action, fight scenes and some great directing by Jino Kang and Tony Urgo. Jino Kang is a 7th Degree Black Belt in Hapkido and a Black Belt in Gracie Jiu-Jitsu, Kyokoshin-Kai Karate and Tae Kwon do.
Plot:
He was so good at what he did – so quick and so invisible – they called him “The Ghost”. He struck and he vanished,...
https://www.facebook.com/WeaponOfChoiceMovie
Directed by: Jino Kang/Tony Urgo
Written by: Jino Kang/Tony Urgo
Starring: Jino Kang, Katherine Celio, Don Williams, Robert Parham, Kelly Lou Dennis, Douglas Olsson
Fist 2 Fist 2: Weapon Of Choice is the follow up to the 2010 Fist 2 Fist (aka Hand 2 Hand), which won “Best Action Martial Arts Feature” at Action of Film Festival on it’s release. The second movie has plenty of action, fight scenes and some great directing by Jino Kang and Tony Urgo. Jino Kang is a 7th Degree Black Belt in Hapkido and a Black Belt in Gracie Jiu-Jitsu, Kyokoshin-Kai Karate and Tae Kwon do.
Plot:
He was so good at what he did – so quick and so invisible – they called him “The Ghost”. He struck and he vanished,...
- 4/19/2014
- by kingofkungfu
- AsianMoviePulse
Legendary voice-over artist Hal Douglas, whose sonorous delivery starred in trailers for thousands of movies and documentaries, has died, his family said Thursday. Douglas, who was 89, died March 7 at his home in northern Virginia with his wife Ruth and daughter Sarah at his side, the family said in a written statement. He was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2010. While Douglas could probably walk down any street in the U.S. unrecognized, his voice was unmistakably a star. He was among the top voice-over artists of a generation, creating a career based on a rich baritone speaking voice that ranged from biblically epic to theatrically cheesy.
- 3/13/2014
- by Associated Press
- PEOPLE.com
HBO’s much praised crime anthology True Detective is nearing the climax of its engrossing eight-episode first season with a head of hard boiled steam and so many mysteries. Who really killed Dora Lange? Might our enlightenment-challenged heroes – pessimist grump Rust Cohle (Matthew McConaughey) and dim Everyman Marty Hart (Woody Harrelson) – actually be the villains? Will an otherworldly spaghetti monster soar and seize control of the godless Louisiana waste? We brought creator Nic Pizzolatto in for questioning and tried to make him spill. “In our third act, timelines, action and character all align. In that way, they may play as...
- 2/27/2014
- by Jeff Jensen
- EW - Inside TV
HBO’s much praised crime anthology True Detective is nearing the climax of its engrossing eight-episode first season with a head of hard boiled steam and so many mysteries. Who really killed Dora Lange? Might our enlightenment-challenged heroes – Nihilist grump Rust Cohle (Matthew McConaughey) and dim Everyman Marty Hart (Woody Harrelson) – actually be the villains? Will a supernatural spaghetti monster rise up from hell and seize control of the godless Louisiana waste? We brought creator Nic Pizzolatto in for questioning and tried to make him spill. “In our third act, timelines, action and character all align. In that way, they...
- 2/27/2014
- by Jeff Jensen
- EW - Inside TV
For the original movie review by El Mayimbe, click here.
Let me be honest, I have never seen any of the other “Paranormal Activity” movies. So I’m coming from a fresh perspective with this “Paranormal Activity” franchise.
“Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones” is another one of those “found footage” movies that started long ago with “The Blair Witch Project.” If you watched many of these “found footage” horror movies, then “Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones” is no different from the rest. In fact, this film lacks surprises and you may nod off until the ending. The last 15-20 minutes may be the most interesting part of the film. I won’t spoil the ending here.
There are some humorous parts in the film with a few scares. The problem is with many of the scares—one could see it coming a mile away. For example, if there are curtains or doors,...
Let me be honest, I have never seen any of the other “Paranormal Activity” movies. So I’m coming from a fresh perspective with this “Paranormal Activity” franchise.
“Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones” is another one of those “found footage” movies that started long ago with “The Blair Witch Project.” If you watched many of these “found footage” horror movies, then “Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones” is no different from the rest. In fact, this film lacks surprises and you may nod off until the ending. The last 15-20 minutes may be the most interesting part of the film. I won’t spoil the ending here.
There are some humorous parts in the film with a few scares. The problem is with many of the scares—one could see it coming a mile away. For example, if there are curtains or doors,...
- 1/3/2014
- by Gig Patta
- LRMonline.com
The second of the “Carte Blanche” double bills began with The Last 15, Antonio Campos’ sophomore short film which followed in the footsteps of Buy It Now (winner of Cinefondation‘s First Prize at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival) and competed for the festival’s 2007’s Palme d’Or. Influenced by the work of master filmmaker Michael Haneke who would ultimately influence Campos’ own filmmaking approach, The Last 15 focuses on the NYC dwelling filled with members of the Kirkland clan (familiar faces in Zoe Lister Jones and Christopher McCann are amongst the actors). With the family home’s ceiling crumbling, Campos displays a collective accumulating individual net worth/debts by utilizing intertitles (think tragic version of the Priceless ad campaign) to detail income, debt, possible financial woes. Twisted and mordant, the short is filled with overlapping spoken dialogue, shut out members hearing but not listening to one another in a controlled chaos setting,...
- 7/6/2013
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
Today’s film is the 2007 short The Last 15. The film is written and directed by Antonio Campos, and stars Zoe Lister Jones, David Christgau, and Leslie Lyles. Campos has been steadily making a name for himself among film fans over the last decade, with his 2008 feature filmmaking debut Afterschool getting him the most notice. His second feature, titled Simon Killer, which he co-wrote with leads Brady Corbet and Mati Diop, opened in limited release in North American theatres this weekend.
****...
****...
- 4/7/2013
- by Deepayan Sengupta
- SoundOnSight
Before you grab your fire-axes and pistols, no I don’t mean that kind of zombie.
When Telltale released their newest episodic, point-and-click adventure game I was more than a little skeptical. From what I’d read, their past was riddled with mediocrity. They did a Sam & Max game, a couple of CSI’s, Back to the Future and Jurassic Park, all of which had some sort of major flaw or were considered to be nothing more than merely average. So when they released episode one of The Walking Dead, based on Robert Kirkman’s best-selling comic series and TV show, I said one thing to myself.
“Meh, it’ll probably be like that thing which was alright. I might play it, I guess… maybe.”
Yeah, boy was I wrong. ‘Alright,’ might have been an understatement of the year! It took a couple of weeks before I heard through the...
When Telltale released their newest episodic, point-and-click adventure game I was more than a little skeptical. From what I’d read, their past was riddled with mediocrity. They did a Sam & Max game, a couple of CSI’s, Back to the Future and Jurassic Park, all of which had some sort of major flaw or were considered to be nothing more than merely average. So when they released episode one of The Walking Dead, based on Robert Kirkman’s best-selling comic series and TV show, I said one thing to myself.
“Meh, it’ll probably be like that thing which was alright. I might play it, I guess… maybe.”
Yeah, boy was I wrong. ‘Alright,’ might have been an understatement of the year! It took a couple of weeks before I heard through the...
- 2/26/2013
- by Mitch Hewson
- Obsessed with Film
Tags: Pretty Little LiarsTwitterBooRadleyVanCullenIMDb
Be honest, when Pretty Little Liars came back last night, you did a little dance and squealed a little squeal and twirled a little twirl — and then vomited because someone stabbed a cow brain inside Mona's locker! But the best part, as always, was the #BooRadleyVanCullen chatter on Twitter. All that Byron hate warmed my heart like fire in a phone booth.
Prettttttty sure the muffin that Mona actually wanted to give Hanna was not in that basket arrangement. #BooRadleyVanCullen
— Brooker (@FortyZwei) January 9, 2013
Even 'A' knows not to fuck with the Batcycle.#booradleyvancullen
— Terias McKlay (@TeriasMcKlay) January 9, 2013
Mona- "I set Meredith on fire for you Hanna, I hope you see it as a visual representation of my burning love" #booradleyvancullen
— Katy Fox (@katy_fox90) January 9, 2013
I hope this fire doesn't hurt Jody Sawyer's dancing career. #BooRadleyVanCullen
— Stephanie (@StephiPottho) January 9, 2013
Nobody. And I mean Nobody. Messes with...
Be honest, when Pretty Little Liars came back last night, you did a little dance and squealed a little squeal and twirled a little twirl — and then vomited because someone stabbed a cow brain inside Mona's locker! But the best part, as always, was the #BooRadleyVanCullen chatter on Twitter. All that Byron hate warmed my heart like fire in a phone booth.
Prettttttty sure the muffin that Mona actually wanted to give Hanna was not in that basket arrangement. #BooRadleyVanCullen
— Brooker (@FortyZwei) January 9, 2013
Even 'A' knows not to fuck with the Batcycle.#booradleyvancullen
— Terias McKlay (@TeriasMcKlay) January 9, 2013
Mona- "I set Meredith on fire for you Hanna, I hope you see it as a visual representation of my burning love" #booradleyvancullen
— Katy Fox (@katy_fox90) January 9, 2013
I hope this fire doesn't hurt Jody Sawyer's dancing career. #BooRadleyVanCullen
— Stephanie (@StephiPottho) January 9, 2013
Nobody. And I mean Nobody. Messes with...
- 1/9/2013
- by stuntdouble
- AfterEllen.com
Robert De Niro embraces every moment of life. The 69-year-old actor has realised how quickly time goes by as he's got older so now he makes the most of everything that comes his way. Talking about life, he said: 'I enjoy it. I like it. And especially when you get older, you start realising you don't have that much time. And you look back and say, 'The last 15 years, it went by kind of quickly.' You don't really know it until you get there and look back and say, 'Geez, where did that time go?' I know I've gotta account for every day, every moment, every this, every that, but it still went, that time went. So now I...
- 11/13/2012
- Monsters and Critics
Robert De Niro embraces every moment of life. The 69-year-old actor has realised how quickly time goes by as he's got older so now he makes the most of everything that comes his way. Talking about life, he said: ''I enjoy it. I like it. And especially when you get older, you start realising you don't have that much time. And you look back and say, 'The last 15 years, it went by kind of quickly.' You don't really know it until you get there and look back and say, 'Geez, where did that time go?' I know I've gotta account for...
- 11/13/2012
- Virgin Media - Celebrity
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
I concluded in last weeks Pilot Review, that ‘Perception’, whilst entertaining and solidly different, needed to improve on a couple of key areas in order to become a great TV show and match TNT’s other quality crime dramas. I am happy to report that this weeks episode ‘Faces’ improved vastly on one of my main two gripes with last week’s outing. Yes, the other remains unresolved.
That ‘vastly improved’ for this episode is the case-of-the-week, which started slowly but by the end of its runtime turned out to be interesting, twisty and informative all at once. If you’re reading this review then you’re likely to have seen the episode, so I won’t relay it for you completely (this isn’t a recap). The last 15 minutes dished out a double twist I didn’t see coming. First we were lead to...
I concluded in last weeks Pilot Review, that ‘Perception’, whilst entertaining and solidly different, needed to improve on a couple of key areas in order to become a great TV show and match TNT’s other quality crime dramas. I am happy to report that this weeks episode ‘Faces’ improved vastly on one of my main two gripes with last week’s outing. Yes, the other remains unresolved.
That ‘vastly improved’ for this episode is the case-of-the-week, which started slowly but by the end of its runtime turned out to be interesting, twisty and informative all at once. If you’re reading this review then you’re likely to have seen the episode, so I won’t relay it for you completely (this isn’t a recap). The last 15 minutes dished out a double twist I didn’t see coming. First we were lead to...
- 7/18/2012
- by Connor Davey
- Obsessed with Film
The record-breaking franchise that has terrified audiences around the world returns with the scariest story yet as Paranormal Activity 3 debuts on January 24, 2012 from Paramount Home Entertainment in a Blu-ray/DVD combo pack with UltraViolet™ and a Digital Copy. The Film As a follower of this franchise, I was expecting more from this third installment. I thoroughly enjoyed the first film and felt that, although entertaining, the second one suffered from sluggish pacing. I had heard good things about this third film, including the repeatedly used critic quote "The last 15 minutes will mess you up for life”. Coming from an easily scared viewer, I found the ending to be completely bogus and hardly frightening at all. Although I was not startled-scared as I had been by the previous films,...
- 1/25/2012
- by Zoë Gulliksen
- The Daily BLAM!
Donju is my kind of film. Nobody does colorfully retarded like the Japanese and all the promo material for Donju seemed to point in that particular direction. Director Hideaki Hosono has a background in directing commercials (think Gen Sekiguchi) and with Kankuro Kudo responsible the source material there was plenty of potential for a new personal favorite. Donju didn't get that far, but what remains is still highly enjoyable.
This type of colorful manga-come-to-life comedy, even though quite popular in the West, is not as common as you might presume. The last 15 years there have been a few prime examples getting good reviews over here (Survive Style 5+, Taste of Tea, Party 7, maybe even Cromartie High), but it never reached the stage where a group of true followers could launch it into a hype. And so we are left with one or two big films each year to quench...
This type of colorful manga-come-to-life comedy, even though quite popular in the West, is not as common as you might presume. The last 15 years there have been a few prime examples getting good reviews over here (Survive Style 5+, Taste of Tea, Party 7, maybe even Cromartie High), but it never reached the stage where a group of true followers could launch it into a hype. And so we are left with one or two big films each year to quench...
- 9/16/2010
- Screen Anarchy
Chilean director Pablo Larraín is a bit of a wild card. His sophomore effort Tony Manero (a film about a serial killer obsessed with the title character in Saturday Night Fever) was hailed by some as genius and others as a twisted mess but however you cut it, the film marked the arrival of Larraín on the world circuit and now his follow-up is turning more heads.
Taking place during the last days of the 1973 Chilean coup, Post Mortem has as its centrepiece the autopsy of Chilean President Salvador Allende but the story focuses on Mario, a man working at the morgue who falls for a woman who has mysteriously disappeared during the coup.
Admittedly, I wasn’t a big fan of Larraín’s previous film but I did love the look of it and the audacity of the story and though Post Mortem doesn’t seem quite as outlandish,...
Taking place during the last days of the 1973 Chilean coup, Post Mortem has as its centrepiece the autopsy of Chilean President Salvador Allende but the story focuses on Mario, a man working at the morgue who falls for a woman who has mysteriously disappeared during the coup.
Admittedly, I wasn’t a big fan of Larraín’s previous film but I did love the look of it and the audacity of the story and though Post Mortem doesn’t seem quite as outlandish,...
- 9/7/2010
- QuietEarth.us
Paranormal Activity 2 was inevitable and the trailer has started to spread as of today. The low-budget smash went on to shock people all over the world. On its way to earning nearly $200 million worldwide off a $15,000.00 budget. With marketing costs, the budget probably increased to a million tops. Either way, Paramount Pictures had one of the most profitable flicks of all-time based on return on investment.
Greed runs deep in Hollywood. From an artistic point of view, a sequel should not have been made. Frankly, the phenomenon was overrated. The last 15 minutes were solid but getting there wasn't anything special. A sequel may actually do wonders for the franchise. Since the first flick had some flaws, director Oren Peli could use this installment to improve upon the franchise and help move it forward. Although, when mockumentaries try sequels (i.e. Blair Witch 2), it usually spells death.
Even though cities,...
Greed runs deep in Hollywood. From an artistic point of view, a sequel should not have been made. Frankly, the phenomenon was overrated. The last 15 minutes were solid but getting there wasn't anything special. A sequel may actually do wonders for the franchise. Since the first flick had some flaws, director Oren Peli could use this installment to improve upon the franchise and help move it forward. Although, when mockumentaries try sequels (i.e. Blair Witch 2), it usually spells death.
Even though cities,...
- 6/30/2010
- Tampa Film Examiner
- Despite the accolades (awards, festival prizes, and critical praise), sometimes a film with seemingly bright future in terms of an eventual theatrical release may have fallen through the cracks. "Desperately Seeking Studio" is our way of bringing attention to a film that has yet to be picked up for distribution. This month we put the focus back on: Antonio Campos' Afterschool. Having already been to Cannes on two previous trips with his short films The Last 15 (which I was rattled by in a good way – watch it here) and Cinefondation winner Buy it Now) Antonio Campos got to make his third trip out with Afterschool in the Un Certain Regard section in 2008 and the film would appear at Tiff and the New York Film Festival in the fall. Kudos came in the shape of nominations at the Gotham Awards for Best Film Not Playing at a Theater
- 6/17/2009
- IONCINEMA.com
- First reaction: non-surprise. Many of the films mentioned below were tagged to be amongst the final choices – and the ones that I thought were going to break into the fest (namely a couple of American pics) look to be headed to Italy’s Venice film fest in the fall. Two films that I won’t be checking out are the ones that I’ve already seen (albeit, 10 minutes more of Deathproof could be interesting) and Zodiac a film that could have been featured apart from the comp titles. Here is the complete list below. Opening film: My Blueberry Nights - Wong Kar Wai4 Luni, 3 Saptamini Si 2 Zile (4 Months, 3 Weeks And 2 Days)- Cristian Mungiualexandra - Alexander Sokourovauf Der Anderen Seite - Fatih Akinbreath - Kim Ki DukLES Chansons D’Amour - Christophe HONORÉDEATH Proof - Quentin Tarantinoimport Export - Ulrich Seidlizgnanie (The Banishment) - Andrey Zvyagintsevthe Man From London
- 4/19/2007
- IONCINEMA.com
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