In this engaging melodrama, Stanton Carlisle (Tyrone Power) is a lowlife working in a carnival. Knowing a good con when he sees one, he learns the tricks of a mind-reading act from Zeena (Joan Blondell), then tosses her aside. In time, he becomes "The Great Stanton", star attraction of swanky nightclubs and the darling of society. But with all his notoriety built on lies, it's only a matter of time before exposure brings Stanton's world crashing down around him.
Angela Bassett and Laurence Fishburne rock the screen in TINA-WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT, the powerful true life story of rock 'n' roll legend Tina Turner. Born Anna Mae Bullock, a small town girl with a one-of-a-kind voice, Tina meets and falls in love with charismatic musician Ike Turner. Together, Ike and Tina skyrocket to the top of the music world, only to come crashing back to earth as their life in the fast lane spins out of control. From the lowest lows to the highest highs, Tina Turner has lived, survived and triumphed over it all. Filled with high-energy music and electric performances, this critically acclaimed smash hit will leave you singing, dancing and cheering.
Elizabeth Olsen stars as a rookie FBI agent tasked with solving the brutal murder of a young woman in a Native American reserve. Enlisting the help of a local hunter (Jeremy Renner) to help her navigate the freezing wilderness, the two set about trying to find a vicious killer hidden in plain sight. The closer they get to the truth the greater the danger becomes with a town full of explosive secrets ready to fight back.
James Stewart stars as the good-natured Elwood P. Dowd, whose constant companion is Harvey, a six-foot tall rabbit that only he can see. To his sister, Veta Louise (Josephine Hull), Elwood's obsession with Harvey has been a thorn in the side of her plans to marry off her daughter. But when Veta Louise decides to put Elwood in a mental hospital, a hilarious mix-up occurs and she finds herself committed instead. It's up to Elwood to straighten out the mess with his kindly philosophy, and his "imaginary" friend.
William O'Neal (LaKeith Stanfield), a thief turned FBI informant, infiltrates the Illinois Black Panthers to track their charismatic leader, Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya), whose rising political prowess has captured the attention of J. Edgar Hoover's bureau. As O'Neal manipulates both his comrades and handler, a battle wages in his soul. Will he align with the side of good - or follow commands to subdue Hampton by any means?
How can one rock band be successful, underrated, hugely influential, and criminally overlooked all at the same time? Take a musical odyssey through five weird and wonderful decades with brothers Ron and Russell Mael, celebrating the inspiring legacy of Sparks: your favorite band's favorite band.
Did European aristocrat Claus von Bulow (Jeremy Irons) try to murder his wife Sunny (Glenn Close) at their luxurious Newport mansion in 1980? Tabloids of the day had their opinions. "You have one thing in your favour," defense attorney Alan Dershowitz (Ron silver) told von Bulow, "Everybody hates you."
Hungry for a taste of the good life, streetwise New York teenager Billy Bathgate (Loren Dean) joins the gang of fiery 1930s mobster Dutch Schultz (Dustin Hoffman). Billy is seduced by the power, money and glamour of crime and quickly rises up through the ranks. But when he falls for Drew Preston (Nicole Kidman), Dutch's sultry, strong-willed girlfriend, he finds himself entangled in a dangerous love triangle that just might get both of them killed.
In streets burning with hatred, corruption and violence, there walks a powder keg with a short fuse called Brennan. When Brennan shoots a small-time crook in cold blood, he covers up the shooting as self-defence and Assistant DA Reilly is assigned to the investigation. Brennan's innocence rests on a clean Q&A but innocence is hard to prove when key witnesses become murder victims. Someone is trying to cover for Brennan and may succeed, unless one surviving witness takes the stand: gangster, drug-runner and racketeer Bobby Texador. Texador, Brennan and Reilly are as far apart as you can get when it comes to ideals-but when it comes to murder, invisible threads are drawing them together, tightening a noose around somebody's neck-but whose?
"Boyz N the Hood" is the critically acclaimed story about three friends growing up in a South Central Los Angeles neighborhood, and of street life where friendship, pain, danger and love combine to form reality. "The Hood" is a place where drive-by shootings and unemployment are rampant. But it is also a place where harmony co-exists with adversity, especially for the three young men growing up there: Doughboy (Ice Cube), an unambitious drug dealer; his brother Ricky (Morris Chestnut), a college-bound teenage father; and Ricky's best friend, Tre (Cuba Gooding Jr.), who aspires to a brighter future beyond the "The Hood". In a world where a trip to the store can end in death, the friends have diverse reactions to their bleak surroundings. Tre's resolve is strengthened by a strong father (Larry Fishburne) who keeps him on the right track. But the lessons Tre learns are put to the ultimate test when tragedy strikes close to home, and violence seems like the only recourse.
An out-of-work college lecturer Yun-ju (Lee Sung-jae) becomes so annoyed by the yapping dogs at his apartment complex that he decides to take drastic action. A bold and confident debut which already displays many of the themes and preoccupations that mark Bong Joon Ho's masterful later films.
Do macabre movies get any more gloriously tasteless than 1990's notoriously nasty slice of creature feature campiness 'The Suckling'! Also known as 'Sewage Baby' this body-horror frightener goes where few fear-flicks would ever dare by focusing on an aborted foetus which comes into contact with some radioactive slime and ends up with a new lease of life. The result is a tiny almost-unborn terroriser that is ready to attack anyone in its wake. Unashamedly sleazy, but also strangely topical, 'The Suckling' pulls few punches and for lovers of maniacally mad movies, this is one of the finest - and funniest - late night monster movies ever to haunt your nightmares!
One night is not enough as members of an underground movement, no longer satisfied with the annual night of anarchy and murder, decide to overtake America through an unending campaign of mayhem and massacre. No one is safe. On the morning after The Purge, a masked gang of killers attacks a wealthy Texas ranching family and their workers. Exposed by daylight, the two families are forced to band together and fight back as the country spirals into chaos and the United States begins to disintegrate around them.
After losing her husband during the Great Plague, Grace Haverstock (Charlotte Kirk) is unjustly accused of being a witch and placed in the custody of England's most ruthless witch-hunter, Judge Moorcroft (Sean Pertwee). Forced to endure physical and emotional torture while steadfastly maintaining her innocence, Grace must face her own inner demons as the devil himself starts to work his way into her mind.
Watch with glee while schoolteacher (Kelly Curtis) becomes the target of a devil-worshipping sect...Soon her friends either disappear, become crazed zombie-like murderers or...get their heart ripped out Still beating. Some even jerk back to life in an undead bloodletting frenzy! Is Jamie-Lee Curtis' pretty sister loosing her mind or has the devil come into her?
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