Dolph Lundgren stars in this live-action film version of the popular television cartoon series. Lundgren is He-Man, a well-muscled super-hero, battling the evil Skeletor (Frank Langella) for control of the universe. Skeletor has designs on conquering the planet Eternia, a ravaged utopia. To achieve this he needs the 'Cosmic Key' which is hidden on Earth. A waitress named Julie (Courteney Cox) and her boyfriend Kevin (Robert Duncan Mitchell) come across the Cosmic Key and become embroiled in the intergalactic battle between He-Man and Skeletor.
A budget crisis has decreed that only one of the state's two cop schools can survive, so the race is on to see which academy can avoid the axe by turning out the superior force. So Mahoney (Steve Guttenberg), Hightower (Bubba Smith), Tackleberry (David Graf), Jones (Michael Winslow), Hooks (Marion Ramsey) and Callahan (Leslie Easterbrook) - led by eternally befuddled Cmdt. Lassard (George Gaynes) - mobilize hilariously in their alma mater's defence. You have the right to remain silent - but you'll end up howling.
"Valley of the Dolls" is the story of three women lives are affected by show business celebrity. Neely O'Hara (Patty Duke) struggles to make it on the Brodway stage. Yet, when she does, she finds it unfulfilling and becomes addicted to pills. Anne (Barbara Parkins), a small-town girl, is unable to resist the bright lights of New York and is quickly catapulted into the role of super-model. Her face is everywhere - magzine covers, billboards, and television. Meanwhile, struggling star Jennifer (Sharon Tate), is forced to make porn movies in order to make a living for herself and her over-demanding mother.
In 1972 Bruce Lee agreed to Action - direct a film for his best friend Unicorn Chan. The result was this action packed fight fest featuring some of Kung Fu cinemas top names like Hwang In Shik, Gee Han Jay, Alan Hsu, Mars, Meng Hoi, Kurata & even Bruce cameo. Never released on DVD in the UK before this is a must for both Lee and Kung-fu fans alike!
The Gentlemen follows American expat Mickey Pearson (Matthew McConaughey) who built a highly profitable marijuana empire in London. When word gets out that he's looking to cash out of the business forever it triggers plots, schemes, bribery and blackmail in an attempt to steal his domain out from under him.
An anti-social nut-job and his leathered band of pranksters are on the prowl, spray-painting the town red and emptying the pockets of anyone sharing the sidewalk. In the wake of this crime wave, you might wonder where the educational system went wrong. But then again, consider the Police Academy. For when the newly graduated misfits in blue tangle with these pinheaded punkers in 'Police Academy 2: The First Assignment', the result it an open-and-shut case of non-stop hilarity. Steve Guttenberg, George Gaynes and other Police Academy originals return to the roll call, facing the formidable Bobcat Goldthwait in the tailor-made role of the wacked-out gang-leader. It's a riot - a laugh riot - in the streets.
Police Academy salutes the men, women and borderline cases who protect the people very much like themselves. A comic success story over a decade, it begat six sequels and both animated and live-action TV series. New recruits include sound-effects wizard Larvelle Jones, florist Moses Hightower, shy Laverne Hooks. and gun buff Eugene Tackleberry, Instructors Harris and Callahan aim to wash these turkeys out before they graduate. As directed by Hugh Wilson, they and stars Steve Guttenberg and Kim Cattrall make some police farce.
How do you write a one-size fits all stand-up comedy show to tour around divided Brexit Britain? Stewart Lee found himself having to do exactly that, as he dragged his resilient 'Content Provider' show around the dis-united kingdom for eighteen months and 214 dates, in the wake of the referendum. Captured in leave-voting Southend-On-Sea, 'Content Provider' sees the country's most consistently critically acclaimed stand-up at the zenith of his powers and the peak of physical collapse, on a stage strewn with obsolete physical media, as he attempts to understand his place in a digital dystopia.
Fist of Fury (1972)Jing wu men / Bruce Lee: Fist of Fury / The Chinese Connection
Shanghai, 1910. Chen (Bruce Lee) returns from study abroad to find that his beloved martial arts teacher has died under mysterious circumstances. Chen immediately suspects members of a rival Japanese dojo, who bully his fellow students and denigrate the Chinese at every turn. Revenge on his mind, Chen starts a one-man war on the Japanese, making him public enemy number one - and he won't go down without a fight!
The very rich and extremely greedy Duke Brothers (Don Ameche and Ralph Bellamy) wager a bet over whether "born-loser" Billy Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy) could become as successful as the priggish Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd) if circumstances were reversed. So begins one of the funniest, most outrageous comedies of the '80s, cementing Eddie Murphy's superstar status. Alongside the street-smarts of Ophelia (Jamie Lee Curtis), Winthorpe and Valentine are a trio ready for a riotous revenge that culminates on the commodities trading floor in New York City.
From Oscar winning cinematographer, Freddie Francis comes a tale of terror that will chill you to the bone! Written by Robert Bloch (the author of 'Psycho') and boasting a cast that includes Peter Cushing, Burgess Meredith and Jack Palance, this is a must have for all horror fans. A special sideshow torture exhibit has the power, according to the showman Dr Diablo (Meredith), to warn people of the evil in their futures. But with this faustian pact comes terrible consequences...
From Robert Eggers, the visionary filmmaker behind the modern horror masterpiece 'The Witch', comes this hypnotic and hallucinatory tale of two lighthouse keepers (Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson) on a remote and mysterious New England island in the 1890's. As an approaching storm threatens to sweep them from the rock and strange apparitions emerge from the fog, each man begins to suspect that the other has become dangerously unmoored.
Meet Spike and Jet, a drifter and a retired cyborg cop who have formed a partnership in a bounty hunting enterprise. In a converted fishing ship the Bebop, with the help of the intelligent data dog, Ein, and the volumptuous and vexing femme fatale, Faye Valentine - Spike and Jet scour the galaxy in search of wanted criminals. They're going to clean up space, one bounty at a time!
Wally (Kichard Pryor) is brash, loud-mouthed and blind. Dave (Gene Wilder) is quiet, mild-mannered and deaf. Both of them are individual disaster zones. But together...they're even worse! When a murder takes place right under their noses, Wally and Dave are the only witnesses. The trouble is, Wally didn't see it and Dave didn't hear it, and all of a sudden they're both wanted for it! Suspected by the police and pursued by the real killers - the cool and calculated Eve (Joan Severance) and her fanatical henchman (Kevin Spacey) - Wally and Dave decide to take the law into their own hands. The results are hilarious! These guys are senseless, but they're certainly not stupid!
Montgomery Brewster (Richard Pryor) is a down-and-out baseball player who discovers that he's the only living relative of an eccentric multi-millionaire (Hume Cronyn). Monty stands to inherit $300 million, but only if he can spend $30 million in a single month without acquiring any assets. If he fails, it's back to zero again.
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