 |
 |
|
|
 |
> Robert Paige in |
|
|
 |
 |
|
 |
Staring:
Gale Harold
,
Hal Sparks
,
Randy Harrison
,
Michelle Clunie
,
Thea Gill
Director:
Alex Chapple
, Bruce McDonald
, Chris Grismer
, David Wellington
, Jeremy Podeswa
A group of gay friends (men & women) lives out their day-to-day lives in Pittsburgh, PA. A groundbreaking series set in a work-a-day blue-collar world. Queer as Folk is the first TV drama that treats gay people simply as real people. This TV series continues to be hailed by critics around the country as astonishingly frank, refreshing, wonderful, bitterly witty, and "Must-See TV."
List Price: $109.98 |
Our Price: $77.42 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Rated: Unrated
Staring:
Ellen Drew
,
Robert Paige
,
Paul Lukas
,
Joseph Calleia
,
Onslow Stevens
Director:
Stuart Heisler
List Price: $14.98 |
Our Price: $10.00 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Rated: NR (Not Rated)
Staring:
Deanna Durbin
,
Robert Paige
,
Akim Tamiroff
,
David Bruce
,
Leonid Kinskey
Director:
Frank Ryan
List Price: $9.98 |
Our Price: $8.98 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Rated: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Staring:
Janis Paige
,
Ken Wisan
,
Joke Tachalom
,
Popin Kukiatton
,
Tim Thomerson
|
|
|
 |
Rated: NR (Not Rated)
Staring:
Sylvia Sidney
,
George Raft
,
Robert Cummings
,
Barton MacLane
,
Roscoe Karns
Director:
Fritz Lang
List Price: $14.98 |
Our Price: $39.98 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Rated: NR (Not Rated)
Staring:
Bud Abbott
,
Lou Costello
,
Robert Paige
,
Mari Blanchard
,
Martha Hyer
Director:
Charles Lamont
List Price: $14.98 |
Our Price: $6.04 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Rated: NR (Not Rated)
Staring:
Robert Stack
,
Polly Bergen
,
Diane McBain
,
Joan Crawford
,
Janis Paige
Director:
Hall Bartlett
List Price: $19.98 |
Our Price: $24.00 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Rated: NR (Not Rated)
Staring:
Lon Chaney Jr.
,
Robert Paige
,
Louise Allbritton
,
Evelyn Ankers
,
Frank Craven
Director:
Robert Siodmak
It was perhaps inevitable that, after playing the Wolf Man, Frankenstein's monster, and the Mummy, Lon Chaney Jr. would round out his horror resumé with a turn at the great bloodsucker himself (not, as the title would suggest, his son). Looking dapper and dignified under the cape, if not exactly threatening, Chaney plays Count Alucard (that's Dracula spelled backwards), a mysterious Carpathian summoned to America by a "morbid" heiress (Louise Allbritton). Eric Taylor's script is rather clunky, but the story (by horror specialist Curt The Wolfman Siodmak) is often quite clever, playing like a supernatural twist on a psycho-thriller. Allbritton's frustrated fiancé Robert Page accidentally "kills" her while trying to shoot Alucard (who imperiously stands up to the hail of bullets) and then goes stark raving mad as he watches the dead rise to life and the living disappear in wisps of smoke and morph into creaky stage bats. Future film noir legend (and Curt's brother) Robert Siodmak (The Killers) does wonders with the swampy, misty Deep South setting despite his obviously threadbare budget, transforming the usual clichés into moments of inspired melodrama. ...
|
|
|
 |
Rated: R (Restricted)
Staring:
Sylvester Stallone
,
Sharon Stone
,
James Woods
,
Rod Steiger
,
Eric Roberts
Director:
Luis Llosa
Just awful enough to qualify as someone's guilty pleasure, this convoluted thriller was supposed to cash in on the supposedly sexy teaming of Sylvester Stallone and Sharon Stone (then hot from her ample exposure in Basic Instinct), but their naked groping in a shower provides one of the film's unintentionally funny highlights. Ray Quick (Stallone) is a former CIA bomb expert whose former colleague (James Woods) is now in cahoots with a Miami drug cartel led by kingpin Joe Leon (Rod Steiger), who chews the scenery while his son Tomas (Eric Roberts) proceeds with a greedy hidden agenda. May Munro (Stone) hires Quick to kill off Roberts. The Specialist, featuring lots of explosions and redeemed by a dandy role for James Woods, is best suited for ardent Stallone and Stone fans. --Jeff Shannon
List Price: $14.98 |
Our Price: $1.83 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Staring:
Gale Harold
,
Hal Sparks
,
Randy Harrison
,
Michelle Clunie
,
Thea Gill
Director:
Alex Chapple
, Bruce McDonald
, David Wellington
, Jeremy Podeswa
, John Fawcett
They're still out and proud, and in their second season the boys (and girls) of Queer as Folk continued to break ground as the most gay-friendly show on television (sorry, Will and Grace). Some plot lines were a little over the top, others truly heartfelt, but they were never less than entertaining, even during their All My Children moments. Season two opened in the aftermath of the gay-bashing of Justin (Randy Harrison), the young artist who wondered if he'd ever be able to paint or draw again, and went on to face a variety of issues and plotlines as diverse as its characters. Some were timely (Michael negotiating a relationship with new HIV-positive boyfriend Ben), some romantic (lesbians Lindsay and Melanie tying the knot), some new to the show (Emmett embarks on a relationship with a--gasp!--older gentleman), and some, well, far-fetched (how many of you had to wrestle, like Ted did, with starting your own pornographic web site?). While the writing tended to flail about a bit, thankfully coalescing by the season's end, the show continued to be anchored by stellar actors, especially Peter Paige's Emmett, who grew the most during the second season; Michel...
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|