Saturday, December 18, 2010

Inception

Leonardo DiCaprio has never stopped mencengang audience with her acting talent. After playing as a mental hospital patient in Shutter Island, the famous actor Leonardo DiCaprio again shows his acting ability that has matured through his latest film Inception. The Departed star is now taking the role of the brain that makes you play with the way the story is packed neatly by Christopher Nolan.
Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) suddenly stranded on a beach and saw two small children playing in the sand, then he was detained by men Saito (Ken Watanabe). A moment later he was fired upon and returned in a wet state. Apparently the incident was just a bad dream Cobb.

The Twilight Saga: Eclipse

In Eclipse, Bella again surrounded by dangers which the Seattle hit by a series of mysterious murders and vampires continue to chase for revenge. In the midst of all this, he was forced to choose between her love for Edward and her friendship with Jacob - knowing that her decision could trigger a battle between vampires and a werewolf (werewolf). Soon, Bella is faced with the most important decisions in her life.

THE CRAZIES

David Ogden Dutten, Marsh Ogden town sheriff, the picture perfect American city with residents who live happy and obedient to the law. But one day, one of them came to school baseball game brings a weapon, ready to kill. Another man set fire to his own house after locking his wife and son in the closet. The city is transformed into a horrible place, a quiet life turned into a depraved, murderers thirst for blood, hiding in the dark with guns and knives. Sheriff Dutten trying to understand what is happening. Something has infected residents Ogden Marsh with madness, attacked them one by one, turned to violence

In an effort to stop this madness, the government closed all access to the city and do not let anyone in or out - even people who are not infected. Some are still not infected come trapped. Together, they do anything to get out of town safely.
Cast: Timothy Olyphant
Radha Mitchell
Joe Anderson

RAPUNZEL (RAPU)

Once, a king and queen were expecting the birth of their child. Unfortunately, the queen of pain during her pregnancy, struggling to survive for the sake of herself and the child she is carrying. In desperation, a bodyguard desperate to steal the magic of plants from the garden of a wicked witch named Gothel. Queen and their baby daughter, Rapunzel, healthy and have the strength. Revenge for stolen plants, and still wanted the power and strength, Gothel kidnap Rapunzel. Rapunzel grew up, locked in a tower, only accompanied by the mother Gothel evil. Gothel always forbade him to leave the tower. Every year on the anniversary of Rapunzel, the kingdom held a lantern festival to commemorate their missing daughter. Rapunzel saw the lanterns from the window and keinginnya to visit the kingdom

THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: THE VOYAGE OF THE DAWN TREADER (CHRO)

This time the story of Edmund and Lucy Pevensie, along with their cousin, Eustace Scrubb - enter the painting into a ship toward the end of a fantastic world of Narnia

Back to join with friends royal soldier Prince Caspian and Reepicheep mice, they headed for a mysterious mission to the Lone Islands. This magical journey will test the heart and spirit of the three faces Dufflepuds witch, an evil slave traders, the roar of the dragon and the mermaid's charming. The only route towards Asian countries that have not been mapped - the trip will be fate of each crew Dawn Treader - to save Narnia and all the incredible creatures in it from an unexpected fate.

TRON: LEGACY (TRON)


Sam Flynn (Garrett Hedlund), youth 27 years old, haunted by the causes of the loss ofhis father, Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges), a mysterious man known as the designer of the world's leading video game. When Sam finds a strange signal being sent from the game's dingdong Flynn, he went into a world where Kevin has been trapped for 20years. In 2107, with the help Quorra (Olivia Wilde), Sam and Kevin started the journeyof life and death through-visual digital universe created by Kevin stunning, with vehiclesand weapons that have never been created, and ruthless criminals who tried to preventthem to run themselves from the world.
TRON: Legacy is every bit the exciting adventure Disney has been promising to deliver for several years. It also has all the flaws you’ve, unfortunately, come to expect from a big budget blockbuster. But that doesn’t mean it’s not an awesome time at the movies. Forgive and have fun.




Cast: Jeff Bridges
Garrett Hedlund
Bruce Boxleitner
Olivia Wilde
Michael Sheen
James Frain
Director: Joseph Kosinski
Writer: Adam Horowitz
Edward Kitsis

Thursday, September 30, 2010

WILD TARGET


WILD TARGET: Bill Nighy is Victor Maynard, a murderer, who live to please mother, Louisa (Eileen Atkins), despite having his own reputation for lethal efficiency. professional interrupted when he finds himself drawn to one of his intended victim, Rose (Emily Blunt). He's part of his life, unexpected menjalain relationship in the process, Tony (Rupert Grint). Victor believed to be a private detective, with two new friends to come along, while he tried to foil the assassination client does not bersaalah (Rupert Everett).

The Last Airbender

Aang (Noah Ringer) was a little kid without realizing he was the Avatar who served to save Earth from destruction. With the help of Katara (Nicola Peltz) and his brother, Sokka (Jackson Rathbone), Aang also begin the long journey to restore balance in the face of the earth is divided by war. Unfortunately the effort was not going to be easy because Admiral Zhao (Aasif Mandvi) and Prince Zuko (Dev Patel) from the State Fire will not let Aang granted.

The Last Airbender Fire District are not satisfied with the territory they have and intend to fight other countries in order to hold the highest authority. Now the safety of the State Soil and Water Affairs depends on the homepage that has the ability to manipulate the power of fire, water, soil and wind power before the whole world ruled by the Fire District.

Is Aang and his friends succeeded in carrying out its mission?

IP MAN


Ip Man (To Yu-Hang), born into a wealthy family in Foshan. Since childhood, Ip Man Wing Chun trained (one of the flow in Kung Fu martial arts) but no one thinks that Ip Man's eventually going to be people attached with self-defense itself. Ip Man Wing Chun became a teacher and many of his students who managed it the name of this martial itself, including Bruce Lee is better known as an actor.

Since the age of 13 years has studied Ip Man Wing Chun, but two years later he had to leave Foshan to Hong Kong because they have to study in a country. Maybe Ip Man is destined to be part of Wing Chun, even when you are away from China were he still meets people who later became his martial arts teacher.

After a 24-year-old, Ip Man must go back to Foshan for the education is over. Ip Man was never officially became a teacher of Wing Chun. He worked as a policeman while still teaching Wing Chun at the people around him. These people who later become teachers of the famous Wing Chun Ip Man and inherited knowledge that they call their professors.

SEX IS ZERO

In Sunjong University, some students are serious, including Eun-hyo, who worked hard in aerobics in the hope that doing well in a national competition. Most students have mistakes: drinking, partying, and focus on sex. Eun-shik, a law student who was in the military, older but not feasible in the sederhanaadanya, the excesses of his youth made him irrelevant when Sung-ok, a rich kid who pretty, charm Eun-Hyo. They began an affair, leaving Eun-shik on the sidelines. The approach of national competition and complications occur

FIGHT CLUB


tell about a person suffering from insomnia and how he removes the disease is by following clubs who have problems, illness and disability and how it eventually succeeded. But in the end all to fall apart when Marla Singer, a woman began to come in and follow the clubs that he followed too far. And from here the adventure begins, when the narrator met Tyler Durdan. formed a club fight club that eventually became known throughout the U.S.. Tyler Durdan here is a great, be a role model in the fight club, even the narrator makes a role model. in the ending movie Tyler Durdan suddenly just disappeared, leaving a big plan, the narrator around the U.S. to seek him, seeking the identity of Tyler Durdan but obtained very surprising facts. whether that fact? Tyler Durdan what big plans?

WALL-E


In the future, the earth had to be abandoned because they satisfy the waste products from the Buy N Large companies are not responsible. To clean the garbage that piled up, chosen WALL-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter-Earth-Class), a small robot that is programmed to perform these global clearing.
After 700 years, WALL-E (Benjamin Burtt) tireless clean up the garbage that was mounting. WALL-E had never complained and felt lonely. Everything went smoothly until one day, WALL-E meets EVE (Elissa Knight). EVE is a beautiful robot sent to find information on whether the earth is ready to become uninhabitable.
Unfortunately, WALL-E even fall in love with EVE. During EVE was on earth, WALL-E trying to always protect EVE. WALL-E even shows the locations where there are plants that start to grow. Evidence that the earth has begun to show symptoms can be inhabited again.
EVE who hold the job she was adopting, then contact the manufacturer. Some time later, a plane arrived to pick up EVE. WALL-E is already in love with EVE and then go sneak into the aircraft that it should only bring EVE.
The aircraft was then brought EVE and WALL-E into a huge spaceship that turned out to contain human descent who left the earth. Unfortunately not everyone wants to return to earth

AMERICAN HISTORY X

Played by: Edward Furlong, Edward Norton, Beverly D'Angelo

Derek Vineyard released after serving 3 years in prison for killing three thugs who tried to break into / steal his truck. Derek is a skinhead and leader of the violent white supremacist gang who commit hate crimes in LA and his actions greatly influenced Danny. Reform out of jail, Derek severs contact with the gang and becomes determined to keep Danny to come down to the street violence the same as he

THE PIANIST

Review The Pianist:

Władysław Szpilman (Brody) is a Jewish pianist who is very famous in Poland, and worked for Radio Warsaw. Unfortunately all of his talent almost vanished along with the expansion titled Blitzkrieg attack Germany through a September 1939. Life is not running again as usual, the radio has begun broadcasting prohibited except in the interest of FullJerman Justify. So no one can do besides Szpilman went home to gather with family and listening to foreign radio who happened to preach the French declaration of war to Germany. Feeling optimistic that the war had stopped by coming to an end with the defeat of Hitler's armies. But unfortunately life just continues to plunge into the abyss of the deepest barbarism, especially for those Jews, ranging from policies to limit money in the family until their obligation to use the star sign of David on their arms to distinguish them Jewish or not. They were forced to live in specific aisles (Ghetto), all treatments had at least the Jewish extermination intent slowly. Their lives as worthless, if the Germans are not having a good mood, they justified it out by killing Jews. Like the impression that the story you want to display, on whether or not this history still has a lot of debate. The events that became known worldwide as the Holocaust is a main theme of this movie, while Szpilman is an illustration of the difficulties of living a Jew who faced death many times.
Profession as a pianist proved very useful during the war for Szpilman, proven over and over again he survived the pinhole. One time when the deportation of the Jews to Trebelinka, Szpilman was saved by one of the Jewish Ghetto police that he knew nearby. For the people in the train were not being led to this city, but were on their way to their deaths. Szpilman is really panic at having to part with the whole family, and he now truly without purpose in the lion's den. Many years trying to survive, became smugglers for the Jews who planned to fight from inside the Ghetto where they were exiled from another resident and was employed as a slave.
The film is trying to explore the feelings of the audience when he saw the massacre of the Jews through Szpilman personality who tried to be steadfast and hope help will come soon. Will Szpilman managed to escape from this curse or fail before help arrives?

Monday, September 27, 2010

The Social Network

With a thieves den of borderline-Shakespearian characters, a wickedly literate screenplay, potent direction by David Fincher, an exceptional ensemble cast and subject matter that speaks to a generation and well beyond, The Social Network is mesmerizing. Never less than extraordinary, the film details the founding of Facebook and the legal and personal repercussions that began with the site's origin and blossomed as the thriving business grew to be worth $25 billion dollars. But as the movie so adroitly shows, success comes with a human toll that can't be counted in gigabytes. Confirm a smash hit among the young adopters of Facebook who make up the prime moviegoing audience. Also count on stellar reviews and lots of awards attention to bring in the older crowd who still thinks "tweets" are from a Looney Tune.

As socially significant to this generation as films like Network, All The President's Men and The Graduate were in their own time, Aaron Sorkin's stunning, biting and richly detailed screenplay (inspired by Ben Mezrich's book The Accidental Billionaires) trades on actual court depositions to frame the story of how Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg) "created" what was then known as The Facebook, the social network that would later make My Space about as relevant as an eight track player. As Sorkin's script tells it, Zuckerberg was a petulant, impatient computer genius studying at Harvard when fellow students and twin brothers Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss (Armie Hammer and Josh Pence) came up with an idea to selectively meet girls and stay in touch with desired friends through a campus online connection service. The twins' plan needed a maestro, and they enlisted the brilliant Zuckerberg to create the codes to make it a reality. Six weeks go by before Mark finally tells them he has run into a snag. Meanwhile, with the help of his friend and now "CFO" Eduardo Saverin's (Andrew Garfield) $1,000 starter money, he's instead been working on his own variation of the idea, one that will create friction between friends, make new enemies, set lawsuits in motion and eventually change the face of the internet.

Fincher and Sorkin manage never to lose sight of the blistering human element at work here, despite the high tech canvas on which their tale is painted. Taking a business phenomenon that only had its beginnings in a dorm room in 2003 and bringing it full circle now, Social Network is a time honored, old fashioned yarn of naked ambition, restless genius, bald deception, betrayal and cold-hearted calculation, set against the succeed-at-all-cost mentality of today's cyberpreneurs.

Eisenberg is superb as Zuckerberg, perfectly capturing all the considerable contradictions and personality flaws of this impatient wunderkind. Garfield matches him scene-for-scene as the loyal friend and partner who's eventually screwed. Justin Timberlake is also ideal casting as the huckstering Napster founder, Sean Parker, who slyly seizes the opportunity to move in on the action. Armie Hammer, playing both Winklevoss twins (with the clever help of facial special effects and Josh Pence), is highly amusing. Among the large cast, Max Minghella and Rooney Mara are also standouts.

Shot digitally and handsomely by Jeff Cronenweth, sharply edited and containing a cool Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross score, Social Network is not what we'd typically expect from the prodigious talent of Fincher (Se7en, Zodiac, The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button). With Sorkin, Fincher has taken this compelling true story and given it drama and significance well beneath its surface to create a landmark masterwork and a must-see movie event.

by Box Office Magazine

Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps

I was hesitant about seeing this film because my last Oliver Stone experience, "W," was underwhelming to say the least. However, the famed director redeemed himself with "Wall Street 2." The cast is superb. Shia is not only eye candy, he has the goods, he'll be an actor to watch for the foreseeable future. Mulligan with her unique look took some adjusting to as the female lead, but once you get used to her, her character works. You begin to accept and even root for them as a couple. Their chemistry is really appealing and even welcoming.

Other highlights are the cameos, from Charlie Sheen to what seemed like the whole cast of CNBC anchors to even Stone himself who appeared more than once on film.

The plot and storyline are solid, even if predictable in some areas (like Gecko cleaning out his house and shipping out after being wired the money from overseas.) The movie is great but not flawless. It felt a little slow, long, and drawn out in some areas. As aforementioned, some of the characters took a little getting used to. Frank Langella looked out of place when first being introduced on screen, on the stock exchange floor, his age a major contrast to the surrounding more youthful stock traders. Mulligan's character was a little irritating with all her hatred towards her dad, especially so if you didn't know the storyline from the previous movie. In fairness, they did attempt to explain a little afterwards so it wasn't a huge problem. It also took some getting used to seeing Susan Sarandon play a slacker. And even Lebouf's character seems a little old for the young looking actor at first, but he pulls it off as the film unfolds. I could nitpick other small things here and there, but none of it really takes away from the overall quality of the film.

By IMDB

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Knight Rider 2010

Differences between Knight Rider and Knight Rider 2010

  • The car is a custom Ford Mustang built on a mid-'90s Ford Thunderbird chassis, its style very different from the sleek Pontiac cars that were the two incarnations of KITT, whose AI would have been removed and replaced with K.D. (Hannah Tyree)
  • There is nothing in common with Knight Rider's basic concept, except the title, a talking car, and the "one man can make a difference" concept.
  • Notably, early drafts of the script were far closer to the franchise, even including KITT, (who would have been a female), however the makers believed at that time there would be no hi tech cars.
In a Mad Max style future, Jake McQueen is the ultimate smuggler, smuggling people for money to survive, only for his smuggling to come to a halt when he is busted by his brother while getting his truck repaired.

However, what he doesn't know is that he is under observation by Jared, the crippled head of Chrysalis Corporation, who sends one of his most valued employees, Hannah Tyree, to bring him in to work for them as part of their video games division.

Jake initially is skeptical about the idea of working with Hannah, and is scared away when she admits that she accidentally downloaded herself onto PRISM, a crystalline solid-state memory unit for her computer, once, due to an unexpected side-effect.

Jake is then hunted down after Jared has his data, and eventually finds his way back home, only to find his father near death. Acquiring a junked Mustang, and a special engine his father had kept in trust, he goes to find a way to stop Chrysalis.

While pursuing a lead, he ends up shot, and is witness to Hannah's apparent death, only to find she was trapped in her PRISM. Going into battle against Jared, with Hannah as his car's new AI, he eventually destroys him when he discovers the one side effect of Jared's life support...that it is slowly killing the person it protects...

Now, Jake and Hannah travel the world of the future, fighting for justice in a lawless desert that is forgotten by the world...

by Wiki

Thursday, June 24, 2010

The A-Team


The A-Team may very well be summer 2010's most pleasant surprise. It's a balls-to the-walls action flick that owes more to 1980s action movies than it does to the '80s TV series that it's adapted from. The film captures the spirit of the show and the camaraderie among its titular quartet while jettisoning much of the campy humor and ramping up the action to almost absurd levels (a tank falls out of a plane for Pete's sake!). Indeed, there's an action set-piece seemingly every 15 minutes, and yet the movie isn't so breathlessly paced as to forget to pause to have some quieter moments (even if it's just banter).

We don't know much about who these guys were before they met each other save for B.A., the only one with a bit of backstory (enough to explain where his mohawk came from). We know Hannibal was in Desert Storm and that he and Face have been brothers-in-arms longer than the rest of the team, but otherwise these guys seem to live in the moment moving from one mission to the next until their military careers (and their sense of identity) are stripped from them. Performance-wise, the four main actors for the most part do a fine job in paying homage to their small screen predecessors even as they attempt to make these beloved characters their own.
review by IGN

The Karate Kid


As the remake's Mr. Miyagi substitute, Jackie Chan is solid as Mr. Han. Chan is a lovable presence in comedic roles, but in recent years has resorted too much to over the top mugging in projects far beneath him, such as The Spy Next Door. That being the case, it's nice to see him in a much more subdued and serious role here. Chan may not be the actor the late Pat Morita was (in a role that got him an Oscar nomination, no less), but he certainly gives one of his better performances in this film, including the key scene where a drunk Han reveals his tragic past to Dre.
As Dre, Smith -- son of the film's producers, Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith and just 11 when the film was shot -- is a strong young actor who is clearly very comfortable in front of the camera. Smith is charming and likable, even though he and Chan are never able to quite find the natural chemistry Ralph Macchio and Pat Morita had in the original – an inspired and unique pairing that was so integral to making that film, which certainly was derivative in many ways, work so well.

review by ign

Friday, May 21, 2010

Robin Hood (2010)



Set in 12th Century England, “Robin Hood” chronicles the adventures of Robin Longstride (Russell Crowe), a common archer in the army of King Richard the Lionheart (Danny Huston) during his 10-year Crusade to the Holy Land. His Crusade effectively over and his army badly demoralized, Richard is headed back home, sacking every French castle they cross to fund their retreat. After Lionheart is killed in battle, Robin and his merry men decide that 10 years is more than enough service to the Crown, and ditches the army for home. On their way back to Jolly ol England, they run across a French ambush led by the duplicitous Englishman Godfrey (Mark Strong), and the badly injured Sir Robert Loxley. In a moment of weakness, Robin agrees to take the dying Knight’s sword home to his father.
Back in England, squirrely Prince John (Oscar Isaac), the next in line to the throne, greets news of his brother Richard’s death with less than Princely jubilation. Immediately, John assigns Godfrey, unaware of the man’s treachery, to begin collecting owed taxes by any means necessary. Godfrey does this by bringing over French raiders to sack English towns, quickly turning the country’s Lords against their new King. Meanwhile, Robin arrives in Nottingham, where he delivers the sad news to Sir Walter Loxley (Max von Sydow) and Robert’s beautiful and suffering wife, Marion (Cate Blanchett), who only knew her husband for one week before he went off to the Crusade. Here, the kindly Lord makes Robin a deal he can’t refuse: pretend to be the dead Robert, so that Marion will retain their possessions once Walter passes. Thanks to a combination of chivalry, Marion’s soulful glances, and the ability to open the door when opportunity presents itself, Robin agrees.
Ridley Scott (director) / Brian Helgeland, Ethan Reiff, Cyrus Voris (screenplay) CAST: Russell Crowe … Robin Longstride Cate Blanchett … Marion Loxley Max von Sydow … Sir Walter Loxley William Hurt … William Marshal Mark Strong … Godfrey Oscar Isaac … Prince John Danny Huston … King Richard The Lionheart Mark Addy … Friar Tuck Matthew Macfadyen … Sheriff of Nottingham Kevin Durand … Little John Scott Grimes … Will Scarlet

Bad Blood (2010)


The film kicks off in fine, action packed style with Tung Luen Shun gang boss Lok Cheung On (Eddie Cheung) being caught during a botched counterfeit money job in Mainland China, and then summarily executed. This leaves a power vacuum for the gang back in Hong Kong, with the oddly named but ambitious Funky (Simon Yam) being first in line to step up and lead the family. However, many others are also vying for position, including Lok’s naïve son (Chris Lai), recently returned from the US, his seemingly quiet and obedient daughter Audrey (Bernice Liu), and Calf, a young man with a disfiguring birthmark on his face and a massive chip on his shoulder – not to mention Lok’s many wives, mistresses and other triad henchmen. It soon becomes clear that one of them is only too willing to kill for the job, as cast members start dropping like flies, forcing the others to try and figure out who the murder is before they find their own throats cut.

There’s no denying that, by traditional cinematic standards, “Bad Blood” is a bit of a mess. Law has never been much of a storyteller, showing a strange predilection for alternately ignoring his characters and then spending far too much time focusing on their more mundane activities. Despite its basic high concept premise of being a triad murders whodunit, the plot has a real tendency to go off on odd and pointless tangents, though thankfully less so than in other recent Law efforts such as “Womb Ghosts”. The good news is that all of this actually works well to make “Bad Blood” extremely entertaining, if perhaps not for the intended reasons. With all of the cast playing strange, larger than life and not quite believable cartoon figures, their infighting and scheming makes for some wonderfully hysterical melodrama, most of which is all the funnier for being played straight. Once the identity of the assassin is revealed, wisely quite early on in the proceedings, things get even better, with some top notch ruthlessness and wacky murders. Here, Law shows his usual taste for randomness, with characters being abruptly dispatched with no thought to generating tension, something which also makes for some unexpected, laugh out loud moments.
Dennis Law (director) / Dennis Law (screenplay)
CAST: Wai-Man Chan … Zen
Pinky Cheung … Lucy / The Seventh Wife
Siu-Fai Cheung … Andy
Luxia Jiang … Dumby
Suet Lam … Peter Wong
Bernice Liu … Audrey
Ken Lo … Hung
Andy On … Calf
Xin Xin Xiong … Kong
Simon Yam … Funky



Ip Man 2



2008’s “Ip Man” is one of the best martial arts movies you’ll see in the last 10 years, a film that all but cemented Donnie Yen’s crown as the new kung fu king of Hong Kong cinema. 2010’s “Ip Man 2” is a get rich quick scheme, and that’s me being very generous. The film’s one big success story is that it actually allows star Donnie Yen to expand on his acting chops. Somewhat. I’m not saying Yen has become Tony Leung or Chow Yun Fat overnight, but he seems to have understood that his character has aged since the first movie, and it shows here. Then again, who the hell watches a Donnie Yen movie for acting? Don’t get me wrong, there are a couple of entertaining bits here and there, but overall, the sequel is 110 minutes of rehashed plotlines and wasted opportunity. When Donnie Yen fighting 20 guys in a fish market makes you yawn, something is very wrong.

After the events of the first movie, Ip Man (Donnie Yen) travels to Hong Kong with his family, including young son and pregnant wife (Lynn Hung). Ip, as I like to call him, is intent on opening his school and propagating Wing Chun to the Hong Kong masses. Alas, he faces difficulties, and never you mind that this is the same guy who famously and nearly single-handedly defeated the Japanese Army (if the first movie is to be believed), but no one in Hong Kong even knows who he is. Wha…? You would think his exploits would get around, but apparently not so much. In any case, our hero is stuck in neutral (or as the kids call it, he’s dirt poor), with his pregnant wife henpecking him to, you know, become successful or something. He’s opened a rooftop school, but has no students. It’s so bad, the lady downstairs uses his school to hang her laundry.

source by beyondhollywood

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

A Nightmare on Elm Street


Nancy, Kris, Quentin, Jesse and Dean all live on Elm Street. At night, they’re all having the same dream—of the same man, wearing a tattered red and green striped sweater, a beaten fedora half-concealing a disfigured face and a gardener’s glove with knives for fingers. And they’re all hearing the same frightening voice. One by one, he terrorizes them within the curved walls of their dreams, where the rules are his, and the only way out is to wake up. But when one of their own dies a violent death, they soon realize that what happens in their dreams happens for real, and the only way to stay alive is to stay awake. Turning to each other, the four surviving friends try to uncover how they became part of this dark fairytale, hunted by this dark man. Functioning on little to no sleep, they struggle to understand why them, why now, and what their parents aren’t telling them. Buried in their past is a debt that has just come due, and to save themselves, they will have to plunge themselves into the mind of the most twisted nightmare of all, Freddy Krueger.

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Kick-Ass


Adapted from Mark Millar's hyper-violent comic book of the same name, director Matthew Vaughn's (Layer Cake) vigilante superhero film tells the tale of an average New York teenager who decides to don a costume and fight crime. Comic book geek Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson) may not have good coordination or special powers, but that doesn't mean he isn't a fully capable crime fighter. After purchasing a flashy wet suit on the Internet, Dave starts busting up baddies with nothing but brute force. He calls himself Kick-Ass, and he can take a beating as good as he can dish one out. Before long, Kick-Ass has become a local sensation, and others are following his lead. Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage) and Hit-Girl (Chloe Moretz) are a father-daughter crime-fighting duo who have set their sights on local mob heavy Frank D'Amico (Mark Strong). They're doing a decent job of dismantling Frank's sizable underworld empire when Kick-Ass gets drawn into the fray. But Frank's men play rough, and his son, Chris (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), is about to become Kick-Ass' very first arch nemesis. When Chris assumes the persona of Red Mist, the stage is set for a superhero showdown that could spell the end of Kick-Ass once and for all. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

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Iron Man 2


Six months after the end of the first movie, Tony Stark (Robert Downey, Jr.) has used his Iron Man armor to bring about a negotiated peace treaty between the major super powers of the world, and his immense popularity with the general public is only furthered when he fulfills his father's dream by opening the "Stark Expo", to showcase all the latest inventions that will benefit the world. Stark is, however, still vilified by the United States government, and Senator Stern (Gary Shandling) in particular, who demands that he hand his armor technology over for military application. Stark refuses, publicly shaming rival Justin Hammer (Sam Rockwell) in the process by highlighting his own failed attempts at recreating the technology. All is not well in Stark's life, however: he has discovered that the palladium in the arc reactor keeping his heart beating has begun to poison his body, slowly killing him, and all attempts to find a substitute element have failed. Slowly going off the rails as a consequence of what he believes to be his impending death, he appoints his former personal assistant Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) CEO of Stark Industries, replacing her with Natalie Rushman (Scarlett Johansson).

While racing in Monaco, Stark is attacked by Ivan Vanko (Mickey Rourke), who has constructed a miniaturized arc reactor of his own, including whip-like attachments harnessing the electrical energy. Defeating Vanko with the aid of his Mark V armor (a transforming briefcase), Stark discovers that Vanko is the son of disgraced Russian physicist Anton Vanko, who collaborated on the first arc reactor with Stark's father Howard (John Slattery). Vanko is promptly broken out of jail by a revenge-seeking Justin Hammer, who puts him to work fashioning a line of "Iron Drones" that he will use to upstage Stark at his own Expo.

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