 | | 1. Snakes on a Plane (Widescreen) coming soon! | | | Starring: Samuel L. Jackson Director: David R. Ellis | | Format: DVD Release Date: 11/11/2008 |  | Snakes on a Plane - DVD By: Sandy Maynard - Cinema Blend DVD Reviews Published on: 1/7/2007 12:18 PM | | I cannot recall ever seeing such a stupid movie executed so smartly. I'm serious: the people responsible for this movie actually took their high-concept idea (movie code phrase for "tiny plot") and made the best movie they could. Not once does it seem like they ever deluded themselves into thinking they were generating high art. read the full review | |
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 | | 7. Die Hard 3-Die Hard with Vengeance | | | Starring: Bruce Willis Samuel L. Jackson Director: John McTiernan | | Format: DVD Release Date: 11/20/2007 |  | Die Hard: With a Vengeance - DVD Review By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 6/29/2007 8:41 PM | |
Die Hard. This time, it's personal. To make the long and extremely silly plotline of Die Hard With a Vengeance short, it breaks down like this. John McClane (Bruce Willis) is back in New York City where he's separated from his wife. The brother of Hans Gruber, from the original Die Hard, is out to get McClane and make some cash for himself in the process, bringing a pack of East German stooges with him to cause trouble. Add to this the character Zeus (Samuel L. Jackson), a Harlem shop owner, who becomes McClane's unlikely sidekick, and a whole lotta bombs exploding all over the city, and what do you get? Well, I still haven't figured that out. read the full review | |
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 | | 13. xXx-State of the Union (Widescreen Special Edition) | | | Starring: Samuel L. Jackson Director: Lee Tamahori | | Format: DVD Release Date: 6/27/2006 |  | XXX: State of the Union - DVD Review By: Jesse Hassenger - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 8/1/2008 6:26 PM | |
Who says sequels are never better than their predecessors? Megabudget producers have hammered away at proving this maxim wrong, primarily through sequelizing as many crummy movies as good ones. Sure, a movie like The Matrix sets a gratifyingly high bar for its successors, but its quite the opposite for films like XXX, Tomb Raider, and Resident Evil; hardly any effort at all is needed to surpass the original. And hardly any effort is often what they get, which brings us to XXX: State of the Union. This follow-up to XXX, the 2002 extreme-sports-and-videogames-themed James Bond knockoff, is markedly superior. read the full review | |
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