A hitman is tasked to take out ex-mobsters when he suddenly hears a voice that questions his morality.
A veritable feast awaits fans of Ian Anderson's Jethro Tull on this elaborate DVD package, which boasts extensive concert footage and a load of extras. The focal point is nearly two hours of performances, filmed in late 2001 (primarily in London, with additional material from several other locations) and featuring material from the band's entire lengthy career, including such staples as "Aqualung" and "Bouree." The current Tull incarnation (featuring, as always, Anderson on vocals, flute, and sundry other instruments) takes center stage; there are also a couple of numbers with a string quartet, and even a small-club reunion of the lineup that made the group's very first album back in 1968. Interviews with band members, testimonials from rabid fans, photos, and even an option for viewing a Tull performance from three different audience points of view are among the generous helping of extra features.
Diana The Woman Inside highlights Diana as a woman and mother, rather than just a tragic icon.
A fly can't seem to catch a break from the buzz of apartment life in his bug filled city.
A look at the life and films of the expressionistic movie and television director John Brahm.
The fortunes of three impoverished friends and their families abruptly change after an airplane crashes in a nearby mountain. They rush to the crash site along with all the villagers, not to help the victims but to plunder their valuables. A dead American passenger carried a large amount of money in his briefcase which Mesiong, Ponsoy, and Jamin find and avariciously keep for themselves. But the town mayor gets greedy and with his hirelings abducts the three to divest them of their booty.
An honest employee saves some valuable documents when a fire breaks out in the factory where he works, at the risk of his life. But the secrets hidden in these documents are capable of destroying the relationship between his two bosses.
On the occasion of awarding the Cervantes Prize to the Catalan writer Juan Marsé on 23 April 2009, family members, friends and writers offer a sincere portrait of the best chronicler of life in Barcelona, Catalonia, during the post-war period and the worst days of the General Franco dictatorship, in the forties and fifties, and during the economic development and the hard conquest of freedom, in the sixties and seventies.
Alexis, a very stingy person, saves his friend for the sole purpose of recovering his debt. But when a woman attends this scene, she takes him for the hero he is not.
As the years go by and the infamous bass line of Seven Nation Army remains as distinctive ever, Jack White’s position as the Willy Wonka of modern blues becomes even more secure. Jack is no stranger to Glastonbury... His first performance was with The White Stripes in 2002 and he’s since played with The Raconteurs and The Dead Weather, but this is the first time he’ll be playing the festival solo and if Lazaretto is anything to go by, it’ll be a stompin’ show.
Mael is a naive young man trying to win the girl of his dreams. In his efforts to learn English, one of the conditions set by his dream girl, he meets Teacher, whose patience and kindness causes him fall in love with her instead.
A psycho artist kidnaps models and slices up their faces to create new mutant models.
While on a road trip from a long weekend at the Terlingua cookoff, four lifelong friends decide to veer off road and venture into a small West Texas town known as Marfa. What attracted them to do so? Could it be the strange unexplained ghost lights that Marfa is known for?