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Withnail and I – Bloomsbury Film Classics

Posted by Notcot on Dec 19, 2012 in Cult Film
Withnail and I - Bloomsbury Film Classics

Presents the screenplay of the classic cult film by Bruce Robinson, with an introduction by the director.

Price : £ 6.19

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Withnail and I – Bloomsbury Film Classics

Posted by Notcot on Dec 19, 2012 in Cult Film
Withnail and I - Bloomsbury Film Classics

Presents the screenplay of the classic cult film by Bruce Robinson, with an introduction by the director.

Price : £ 6.19

Read more…

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
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Withnail and I – Bloomsbury Film Classics

Posted by Notcot on Dec 17, 2012 in Cult Film
Withnail and I - Bloomsbury Film Classics

Presents the screenplay of the classic cult film by Bruce Robinson, with an introduction by the director.

Price : £ 6.19

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Withnail and I

Posted by Notcot on May 2, 2012 in Cult Film
Withnail and I

Presents the screenplay of the classic cult film by Bruce Robinson, with an introduction by the director.

Price : £ 5.79

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Wonderwall – the Director’s Cut [VHS]

Posted by Notcot on Apr 28, 2012 in Cult Film

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Full of Secrets

Posted by Notcot on Jul 11, 2010 in Cult Film
Full of Secrets

A study of “Twin Peaks”, the first foray into television for film director David Lynch. It addresses topics which include the series’ cult status, its obsession with doubling and its silencing of women. It also analyses the series from feminist, deco

Price : £ 22.99

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Withnail and I

Posted by Notcot on Jul 10, 2010 in Cult Film
Withnail and I

Presents the screenplay of the classic cult film by Bruce Robinson, with an introduction by the director.

Price : £ 7.19

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The Unseen Force

Posted by Notcot on May 18, 2010 in Cult Film
The Unseen Force

The life and work of legendary cult-film director Sam Raimi Raimi has three film in production/post-production for 2004-5 release Film historian and popular writer JK Muir turns his attention to the life and work of legendary cult-film director Sam R

Price : £ 15.5

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5

The Crow

Posted by Notcot on May 12, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (80 Reviews)

Amazon.co.uk Review
The Crow set the standard for dark and violent comic-book movies (like Spawn or director Alex Proyas’s superior follow-up, Dark City), but it will forever be remembered as the film during which star Brandon Lee (son of martial arts legend Bruce Lee) was accidentally killed on the set by a loaded gun. The filmmakers were able to digitally sample what they’d captured of Lee’s performance and piece together enough footage to make the film releasable. Indeed, it is probably more fascinating for that post-production story than for the tale on the screen. The Crow is appropriately cloaked in ominous expressionistic shadows, oozing urban dread and occult menace from every dank, concrete crack, but it really adds up to a simple and perfunctory tale of ritual revenge. Guided by a portentous crow (standing in for Poe’s raven), Lee plays a deceased rock musician who returns from the grave to systematically torture and kill the outlandishly violent gang of hoodlums who murdered him and his fiancée the year before. The film is worth watching for its compelling visuals and genuinely nightmarish, otherworldly ambience. –Jim Emerson

The Crow

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Stunt Man

Posted by Notcot on May 9, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 4.0 / 5 (1 Reviews)

Amazon.co.uk Review
The “lost” sleeper hit of 1980 has since become one of the most revered cult movies of all time, largely due to its bawdy, irreverent story about the art and artifice of filmmaking and an outrageously clever performance by Peter O’Toole. As megalomaniacal film director Eli Cross, O’Toole plays a larger-than-life figure whose ability to manipulate reality is like a power-trip narcotic. The focus of his latest mind game is a fugitive (Steve Railsback) recruited to replace a stuntman killed during a recent on-set accident. In return for protective sanctuary, the fugitive takes a crash course in stunt work but soon discovers that he’s the paranoid player in a game he can’t control, with the dictatorial director making up the rules. Or is he? The Stunt Man is a game of its own, played through the fantasy of filmmaking, and half the fun of watching the movie comes from sharing the stuntman’s paranoid confusion. Barbara Hershey has a smart, sexy supporting role as a lead actress who won’t submit to her director’s seemingly devious behaviour; but it’s clearly O’Toole who steals the show. Director Richard Rush adds to the movie’s maverick appeal–in a career plagued by struggles against the mainstream studio system, Rush hasn’t made a better movie before or since. The Stunt Man clearly represents the potential of his neglected talent. –Jeff Shannon

Stunt Man

Buy Now for £71.95

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