10 Unusually Good Motion Pictures For Your Entertainment Delight
Posted on : 02-02-2010 | By : Mark Gilliam | In : Movies
Anytime a Hollywood motion picture is made the objective is to make a movie that the public loves and that will become a blockbuster hit. Take a excellent story line, throw in a few talented actors along with some special effects and voila’, a huge box office success. But it does not always happen that way. Below are some of the best films of all time. Choose a good movie to see tonight.
Trading Mom – It’s about three siblings who couldn’t stand their mom. Spacek cast a spell which makes her-and all memory of her vanish. Here is a flat and lifeless story with meager production values. Cast includes Sissy Spacek, Anna Chlumsky, Aaron Michael Metchik, Asher Metchik, Maureen Stapleton, and Merritt Yohnka.
Underworld – Evolution – The war between the Werewolves and the Vampires rage on. Now we look back to the beginning, and see how the dispute between the two races started out. A altercation that started way in the past is about to be brought into the present day to close here.
Metropolitan – Conventional comedy, packed with sarcasm, is set throughout Christmas season, with hermit Clements drawn into small gang of buddies, and out of his shell. Cast includes Carolyn Farina, Edward Clements, Christopher Eigeman, Taylor Nichols, Allison Rutledge-Parisi, Dylan Hundley, Isabel Gillies, Bryan Leder, Can Kempe, and Elizabeth Thompson.
The Seniors – 4 college students open a counterfeit sex hospital, which mushrooms into a multi million dollar company. The movie is both stupid and sarcastic, with some benign nudity thrown in. Cast includes Jeffrey Byron, Gary Imhof, Dennis Quaid, Lou Richards, PrisciIla Barnes, Alan Reed, Edward Andrews, Robert Emhardl, and Alan Hewitt.
Repossessed – Here’s a fashion satire of The Exorcist, with Blair herself as a housewife acquired anew by the identical demon she was purged of as a kid. Too few gags, too frequent targets, and a paltry finale make this movie weak. Blair and Nielsen as the exorcist are good. Cast includes Linda Blair, Ned Beatty, Leslie Nielsen, Anthony Starke, Lana Schwab, and Thom Sharp.
The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe – This is a witty re-creation of Lily Tomlin’s 1985 one female Broadway show. Her characterizations run the gamut from box woman to juvenile delinquent to New Age Lady, with much of the material in a feminist vein. The show stars Lily Tomlin obviously. (120 minutes, 1991)
Days of Wine and Roses – Modern Lost Weekend set in San Francisco, with Lemmon marrying Remick and lugging her into a state of alcoholism. Practical direction and abrasive inscribing combine for phenomenal outcome. Cast includes Jack Lemmon, Lee Remick, Charles Bickford, Jack Klugman, Alan Hewitt, Tom Palmer, and Jack Albertson.
Rubin and Ed – Strange odyssey of 2 gentlemen on a mission to bury a deceased cat. Can they ever find the right spot? Glover once made a notorious appearance on David Letterman’s Television show playing the identical personality he does here. Cast includes Crispin Glover, Howard Hesseman, Karen Black, Michael Green, and Brittney Lewis.
The Curse of the Cat People – Follow-up to Cat People builds outstanding setting in tale of desolate little gal who summons up vision of Simon, her father’s odd first wife. Bodeen Prudent’s prompting debut and is additionally obtainable in pc-colored rendition Hex of the Red Altar. Cast includes Gunther von Fritsch, Robert Prudent, Simone Simon, Kent Smith, Jane Randolph, Ann Carter, and Julia Dean.
Adam’s Apples – This movie is a peculiar dark comedy about two very different men who have a battle of wills. It is a newly developed religious zealot versus a hard core neo-Nazi criminal. The battle of good versus evil is on. The main stars are Ulrich Thomsen, Mads Mikkelsen, Nicolas Bro, and Paprika Steen. (German-Danish-comedy directed by Anders Thomas Jensen).
These days we have it really great. We can online tv movies. We can also view full-length, high-quality films for complimentary on the internet.


