Posts Tagged ‘Movies’

How do you retrieve deleted movie lists from yahoo movies?

February 2nd, 2012 by admin | 1 Comment | Filed in American movie star Introduction
Movie
by kalyan3

Question by justdoit: How do you retrieve deleted movie lists from yahoo movies?
Some how my movie list on yahoo movies got deleted, I really don’t want to remake them they were awfully long.

Best answer:

Answer by Mr Mellor
u cant

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
The Video:

First they got mad. Now they’re getting even. Two lovers team for revenge when their exes get together. MPAA Rating: R Ω 1997 Warner Bros., an AOL Time Warner Company, All Rights Reserved.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

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5 movies whose titles tell you everything (AP)

January 27th, 2012 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Movie News

Entertainment News: 5 wonderful motion pictures about airplanes

FILE - In this undated film publicity image released by Paramount Pictures, Tom Cruise is shown in a promotional image for the 1986 film, "Top Gun." (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures)

5 wonderful motion pictures about airplanes

Jan. 19, 2012 7:01 PM ET (AP)
By CHRISTY LEMIRE

Red Tails,” in theaters this weekend, is about the 1st black fighter pilots in the United States: the Tuskegee Airmen who ultimately saw battle in the skies over Europe for the duration of World War II. It really is a story that is extremely a lot worth telling the film itself, nevertheless, is hokey and outdated-fashioned.

Nevertheless, it’s a good opportunity to take a look at 5 movies about airplanes that really do soar:

_ “Airplane!” (1980): Not just 1 of the greatest airplane motion pictures ever, not just one particular of the best comedies ever. This is one of my absolute preferred movies ever, irrespective of genre. When the LA Film Critics Association asked its members to fill out a questionnaire and decide on a single movie everyone ought to see, I didn’t select “Citizen Kane.” I picked this. It’s a dead-on spoof of all these 1970s “Airport” disaster films, the one to which all subsequent parodies have aspired. The tone is so perfect, the cast is so excellent, and the script is so jammed with traditional lines. And even though the entire physical exercise is completely silly, “Airplane!” is also quite precise in its language, in the details inside the sight gags. This variety of comedy is actually challenging to do just right with no going overboard the creating-directing group of Jim Abrahams and David and Jerry Zucker identified that balance.

_ “Wings” (1927): This was the first film to win the Academy Award for greatest image and the only silent film ever to obtain that honor. A restored print of “Wings” lately was shown to a packed residence at the Motion Picture Academy with dwell organ accompaniment, and it was a enormous treat to see it in that setting. This tale of Globe War I fighter pilots, starring Charles Rogers, Richard Arlen and an insanely adorable Clara Bow, was at the time the most high-priced film Paramount had ever created. The price range was set at $ one.two million but it ballooned to $ two.1 million. Director William Wellman insisted that his actors take flying lessons so the aerial scenes would look much more realistic, and to this day they remain thrilling. “Wings” is also notable for the presence of a young Gary Cooper, despite the fact that he’s only in it for about two minutes Arlen’s Boston terrier gets more screen time.

_ “United 93″ (2006): Paul Greengrass’ reenactment of the hijacking of United Airlines Flight 93 on Sept. 11, 2001, which crashed into a Pennsylvania area following passengers foiled the terrorist plot, sounded like a daunting prospect. We know all too well how it’s going to end extended just before it begins, and his documentary-style realism would certainly add to the agony. But it is that extremely realism and Greengrass’ respectful attention to detail that make it impossible not to really feel engrossed with every single fiber in your currently being. “United 93″ provokes a unusual physical response: It can make your muscles tense up, tends to make you sit straight-backed in your seat, digging your nails into the armrests. Numerous films purport themselves, in blurb-friendly verbiage, to be edge-of-your-seat thrillers. This 1 truly is.

_ “Top rated Gun” (1986): This is the 1980s in film form: all the bombast and patriotism, all the large hair and shoulder pads, with Tom Cruise at the height of his powers playing a fighter pilot named _ in all seriousness _ Maverick. Cruise was nevertheless youthful and attractive back then, and “Top Gun” wasn’t precisely subtle in celebrating his cocky, brash screen persona. Or as his superior puts it in scolding him: “Son, your ego is writing checks your entire body can’t money.” Cruise, Anthony Edwards and Val Kilmer perform college students at an elite flying academy. Cruise wins above his instructor (Kelly McGillis) by obtaining an total bar to sing “You have Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” to her. It’s big and cheesy and entirely irresistible.

_ “North by Northwest” (1959): This is a cheat, I will acknowledge that. But the crop-duster scene is so iconic that when I think of films about airplanes, I believe of this. It is not just a single of the most famous scenes in an Alfred Hitchcock film, it really is a single of the most renowned scenes in film history, period. Cary Grant, a victim of mistaken identity who finds himself wrongly accused of murder, goes on the run. In his hunt for clues to the mystery he’s gotten himself tangled in, he winds up on a rural highway in the middle of nowhere, exactly where he’s repeatedly buzzed by an armed crop-dusting plane. Decades later on, this sequence remains chilling, with the menacing whirr of the plane’s engine and the crunch of Grant’s feet desperately pounding the dirt supplying an increasingly tense rhythm.

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PM Cameron: UK movies should be more mainstream (AP)

January 11th, 2012 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Movie News

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Q&A: What is the movie where two guys work in a movie store or something and they act out movies?

January 3rd, 2012 by admin | 5 Comments | Filed in American movie star Introduction
Movie
by gadgetdan

Question by yes_its.nikki: What is the movie where two guys work in a movie store or something and they act out movies?
What is the movie where two guys work in a movie store or something, and they record themselves acting out movies and sell them because the real movies got deleted?

Best answer:

Answer by noselessman
be kind rewind

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
The Video:

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What are good movies for a teen outside movie party?

December 25th, 2011 by admin | 2 Comments | Filed in American movie star Introduction
Movie
by JCT(Loves)Streisand*

Movies for Trees
Movie

Image by Bill Herndon
Movie screen from the Selmont Drive-in –
U.S. Route 80, south of Selma, Alabama, USA

Question by ♪ Seth ♫: What are good movies for a teen outside movie party?
I’m having my 16th birthday party and I’m making it an outside movie party with a big screen and projector. On the invitations I told my friends to bring their favorite movies because I don’t know what we should watch. We’ll only have time for one movie. Do you have any suggestions? It can’t be rated R (Love ya, Mom!) Something that is actually a good movie without a lot of horrible profane jokes or cursing.

I was thinking “The Birds”. It seems like a cool movie to watch with a bunch of teens. What do you think?

Best answer:

Answer by Bomb That Cherry™
Eagle Eye

Give your answer to this question below!
The Video:

Daya Shankar lived with his family in Kashmir, but then subsequently re-located to Bombay where he took to crime as a career. One day while on the run from the Police, he holes up in a small room with a young bar dancer, Simran. She shields him from the Police, and he falls in love. He finds out the bar she dances in and comes in silently to watch her perform. He had come to her rescue when she was being molested and thereafter asked her to move in with him, which she did. For sometime it was as though they seemed to be living in bliss, then all of a sudden, they were on the run again. Then Daya decided that it was time to settle down, and they adopted a young boy, Bittu, made different passports, and decided to re-locate to Dubai. That did not happen, instead Bittu gets killed, and a heart-broken Simran and Daya are forced to live apart, with Simran moving to Seoul, Korea. It is here that she meets with Akash and both fall in love, get intimate and Simran gets pregnant. Then Daya re-enters her life, disrupting it completely, beating Akash to a pulp. It is now that Simran has to decide whether to stay with Akash, get married, and have her baby, or continue to live a life on the run with Daya – who is not only on the run from the Police, but also from the underworld Don, Khan. What the three players do not known that two of them are going to be betrayed – a betrayal so shocking that none of them may be able to survive it.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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5 great movies about alcoholism (AP)

December 9th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Movie News
In this image released by Paramount Pictures, Charlize Theron portrays Mavis Gary in a scene from "Young Adult." (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures, Phillip V. Caruso)

  • Dec. eight, 2011 4:20 PM ET (AP) – 50,833 views

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Harry Morgan made small roles big in TV, movies (AP)

December 8th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Movie News

Dec. 7, 2011 1:06 PM ET (AP) – 286,519 views

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5 NC-17 movies worth seeing (AP)

December 3rd, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Movie News

Dec. one, 2011 six:41 PM ET (AP) – 48,761 views

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Movie Scores: How the critics rated the new movies (AP)

November 20th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Movie News

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Hollywood balks at big budget movies as DVDs drop (AP)

September 17th, 2011 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Movie News
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In this film publicity image released by Disney, from left, Emma Stone and Viola Davis are shown in a scene from "The Help." The declining DVD business has forced Hollywood to rethink what it’s willing to pay to make a blockbuster. While Hollywood’s newfound cost-consciousness doesn’t herald the coming of sock-puppet cinema, belt-tightening could favor more character-driven productions such as “The Help,” which struck box office gold with sales of $  97 million so far, despite a cost of just $  25

Associated Press

Hollywood balks at big budget movies as DVDs drop

Sep. 17, 2011 9:14 AM ET (AP)
By RYAN NAKASHIMA

Hollywood _ long considered the land of excess_ is becoming more cost-conscious, as movie executives rethink what they’re willing to pay to make a blockbuster.

After years of beefing up budgets to meet audience expectations, movie studios are cutting back and canceling projects that are too costly. Half-baked, expensive movie ideas that would have received approval a few years ago are now under scrutiny. For movies that are made, producers have to settle for toned-down special effects, cheaper actors and fewer locations for shoots.

In the past five years, major studios have trimmed the annual number of films they release by nearly a third to cut costs and avoid having big movies compete head-to-head on opening weekends.

In July, two major projects were stopped mid-stream because of budget pressures. The Walt Disney Co. halted “The Lone Ranger,” starring Johnny Depp, even though sets were already half-built in New Mexico. Universal pulled out of “The Dark Tower,” a three-movie, two-TV-series colossus based on books by Stephen King.

A person familiar with Disney’s thinking said the budget on “The Lone Ranger” was creeping north of $ 250 million, and the company wanted to shave it to around $ 200 million.

Universal, which became a unit of cable TV provider Comcast Corp. this year, withdrew from “The Dark Tower” because of problems with the business model, according to another person, who is familiar with that matter.

Neither person was authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Disney CEO Bob Iger explained the company’s approach to analysts in July. “It’s our intention to take a very careful look at what films cost,” Iger said. “If we can’t get them to a level that we’re comfortable with, we think that we’re better off actually reducing the size of our slate than making films that are bigger and increasingly more risky.”

Blame it on declining DVD sales.

Until recently, studios could afford to churn out movies with heart-pumping action scenes featuring pricey special effects and high-salary actors. Although many of those movies cost more than they garnered in ticket sales, Hollywood could count on overall strong sales of DVDs to make up for excessive expenses.

“The DVD buying boom covered up a lot of sins in the middle part of the last decade,” said Tom Adams, principal analyst and director of U.S. media for IHS Screen Digest.

But the curtain is falling on the DVD era. IHS said U.S. video disc sales fell from $ 10.3 billion in 2004 to $ 7 billion last year.

The popularity of low-cost rental options, such as Netflix and Redbox, along with the ease of piracy, has cut into DVD sales, making it tougher to profit from the movie business. Blu-ray disc sales and gains in digital purchases haven’t made up for the shortfall.

Hollywood economics have been strained by movie budgets that have been rising steadily over the past couple of decades. To cut costs, some studios have dropped smaller budget movies with big-name, expensive actors, but kept making summer blockbusters based on franchises such as superheroes.

That trend has increased the average cost of major studio movies to $ 78 million in 2011 from about $ ಪ million in 1995, according to Bruce Nash, the founder and president of Nash Information Services LLC, which operates The-Numbers.com

Fewer small movies means that each big-budget project has more pressure to deliver. Nash believes Hollywood will rely on tried-and-true material _ sequels and reboots _ rather than take a chance on untested pricey projects that follow in the footsteps of “Avatar.”

“Studios are willing to spend money for well-established franchises,” Nash said. “There’s not that much enthusiasm in completely new franchises built from scratch.”

While Hollywood’s newfound frugality doesn’t exactly herald the coming of sock-puppet cinema, the belt-tightening is likely to favor more character-driven productions such as “The Help,” which struck box office gold with sales of $ 139 million so far, despite costing an estimated $ 25 million to make.

That was the strategy former Disney CEO Michael Eisner pursued when he brought cheap-to-produce but profitable films including “Down and Out in Beverly Hills” and “Ruthless People” to the big screen.

While the millions made on each film don’t stack up to the estimated $ 400 million profit on 20th Century Fox’s “Avatar,” Eisner characterized his strategy as an attempt to string together a series of small hits rather than always swinging for a home run.

Eisner said many major studio movie budgets these days appear frightening. Big films can make more money, and they can also lose a ton.

“Yes, you can make a small fortune, but you better come with a large fortune,” Eisner said in an interview. “It’s just a riskier business.”

Consider Universal Pictures’ “Cowboys and Aliens,” which had an estimated budget of $ 163 million but grossed $ 184 million in global ticket sales since its release July 29. Universal likely spent tens of millions of dollars on advertising, and it only keeps about half the take from theaters. Even if it does well on home video, the film is headed toward a multimillion-dollar loss.

Hollywood couldn’t afford to make those bets any longer.

In 2004, American audiences spent $ 2.04 at home consuming movies for every $ 1 they spent on theater tickets, according to IHS Screen Digest. But that ratio has been falling consistently for the past five years. Last year, the ratio was $ 1.37 to $ 1.

Meanwhile, box office sales in the U.S. and Canada were flat in 2010, as rising prices from 3-D ticket surcharges offset falling attendance. The declining home video market means a big chunk of revenue _ more than $ 7 billion a year globally _ has disappeared from the movie economy.

Although theatrical revenue has grown overseas, thanks to booming markets like China, Hollywood is losing share to local producers.

Producers of “The Lone Ranger” and “The Dark Tower” are scrambling to get the movies made after their studios balked.

While neither project is dead, they may be made for less.

Oliver Lyttleton, a U.K.-based writer for the blog The Playlist for IndieWire, said the inflated budget for “The Lone Ranger” might have been caused by an ambitious early script from 2009, which he read.

It featured wolves, a mysterious creature named a Wendigo, a train crash, a silver mine that features a major battle scene and “loads of explosions.” Not to mention the Western theme with its elaborate sets and costumes.

He speculated that Disney might have to swap out director Gore Verbinski to shave costs. The big-budget director helmed Disney’s first three “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies, but, according to the Los Angeles Times, he clashed with a previous studio head over the budget of the third movie and was dropped from directing the latest “Pirates” flick, which came out this year.

“It’s not inconceivable that Verbinski will throw his hands up and just go, `If I can’t make the movie I want to make, I’ll sling my hook,’” Lyttleton said.

Disney isn’t saying anything specific about how it might cut costs.

The producers of “The Dark Tower” are faced with raising money and finding another studio to distribute the series. Producer Ron Howard said in a statement sent to The Associated Press, “we are continuing to be actively working on the project.”

Howard and his co-producer Brian Grazer face a tough fight.

Not only did they produce the money-losing “Cowboys & Aliens,” but Hollywood’s love of sequels tends to fade quickly if the first installment fails to perform.

Warner Bros., dismayed by the disappointing receipts from its June release of DC Comics’ “Green Lantern,” is considering abandoning plans for a sequel, despite heavy hints at the end of the film about a resurgence of evil yellow forces.

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