Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: B- Review: How this poster has much to do with the film, I don’t know. The trailer goes to great lengths to keep the film’s secret but this poster suggests some bizarre Pan’s Labyrinth creation
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: C; C-; C+ Review: Like the trailer, this poster is rather lifeless. It’s a reduction to a suit, which certainly fits the theme of the character, but it’s not very evocative and not very much
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: C-; D- Review: Airbrushed to the hilt, this poster is as appealing as a road accident. Sure, it features people we’re curious to get a look at, but there’s really nothing aethestically pleasing that should
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: C+ Review: There’s nothing really zen about this poster. It’s rather weak and lacking in presentation. It also hides the fact that the film is a documentary about zen cooking, which only serves to confuse
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: B Review: There’s a little bit of cool and chic in this poster. The mirrored words of Youth and “Francis Ford Coppola” give it a surreal quality and with all of the roses blending with
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: B Review: As we get into Oscar season, the posters are going to start looking a lot like the advertising and this is certainly no exception. Highlighting the stars of the film with a scene
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: C+ Review: The split-screen poster has become rather cliche and despite an impressive trailer, there’s little impressive about the poster. Here we have the beauty of nature accompanying the image of Keira Knightley and the
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Sunday, September 16 is the broadcast date for the 59th Annual Emmy Awards. I basically hate the Emmys. I watch the show every year and kick myself afterward for wasting my time. The show is long and boring and they give out way too many awards, usually to the same shows and people they awarded
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: C+; C+ Review: The posters are meant to be paired and although they share the same “golden” hue to match the film’s story, there’s little of intrinsic value. Both actors do their best giving character-centered
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: B- Review: Yellow and black are the new Black, White and Red. This poster makes the film seem like an upper crust version of The Squid and the Whale. Trailer Rating: C- Review: Everything about
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: B; C+ Review: This poster definitely tells us all we probably need to know about this horror film set in a subway. The poster is certainly tantalizing for any horror fans. We’ll have to see
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: C- Review: I’m surprised with the focus on bumpkins in the trailer that the poster would be a feel a bit more rural. Instead, they go for a paired character shot against a faux city
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Trailers (Due to age, may no longer be available) Posters (Due to age, may no longer be available) Poster Rating: B Review: Props to the advertisers for realizing the star of this film is the hatchet itself and not the wilder. While we could have expected more along those lines, I’m doubtful anything more than
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The Nanny Diaries Rating Director Shari Springer Berman, Robert Pulcini Screenplay Shari Springer Berman, Robert Pulcini (Novel: Emma McLaughlin, Nicola Kraus) Length 105 min. Starring Scarlett Johansson, Donna Murphy, Alicia Keys, Nicholas Reese Art, Jodi Michelle Pynn, Laura Linney, Rosa Nino, Chris Evans, Nathan Corddry, Paul Giamatti, Julie White MPAA Rating PG-13 (For language) Buy/Rent
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Wes Craven’s New Nightmare Rating Director Wes Craven Screenplay Wes Craven Length 112 min. Starring Heather Langenkamp, Robert Englund, Mike Hughes, Wes Craven, John Saxon, Robert Shaye, Sara Risher, David Newsom, Tracy Middendorf, Matt Winston, Rob LaBelle MPAA Rating R Buy/Rent Movie Soundtrack Poster Source Material Review Freddy Krueger, the child murderer of Springwood, returns
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