Horror classic a bloody good DVD
Some 25 years after its original theatrical release, George A. Romero's classic splatter film still inspires the same shock and awe it did back in 1978.
Some 25 years after its original theatrical release, George A. Romero's classic splatter film still inspires the same shock and awe it did back in 1978.
If you have never seen Steven Spielberg's "Schindler's List," easily and undoubtedly one of the best movies of the '90s, there will probably never be a better time now that the film is new to DVD. This is probably my fourth or fifth time seeing the film, and it still amazes me and it still makes me cry.
Many consider the original "Metal Gear Solid," released in 1998, as one of the best games of all time.
With their ninth studio album, All That We Let In, Indigo Girls have made a beautifully simple record. But fear not -- the Girls' trademark emotion, earnestness and depth is here in full force.
In one episode of "The Simpsons," we see a shirtless Apu washing his Trans Am. As he hoses the car down, he sings along to Cheap Trick's "Dream Police." There's something inherently hilarious about a cartoon guy with a faux Indian accent crooning, "The dream police, they live inside of my head / the dream police, they come to me in my bed."
Leroy Carr was only 30 when complications from chronic alcoholism put the blues vocalist and piano player six feet under. But while Carr might not have been around for very long, he was around long enough to become one of the most influential and significant artists in the history of the blues.
With Something Beautiful, Great Big Sea pretty much completes its transformation from a Celtic combo into a full-fledged rock band, a metamorphosis which might, somewhat understandably, concern the Newfoundland group's hard-core fans.
The Von Bondies only real claim to fame -- I'm really not kidding -- is the fact that lead singer Jason Stollsteimer got his ass kicked in a bar by White Stripes frontman Jack White.
Say what you will about David Mamet: the man can write. I can think of few stage or screenwriters who use the immensely versatile word "fuck" with such aplomb (okay, Quentin Tarantino and Kevin Smith come close). In giving the coarse class, Mamet has turned obscenity into art. I respect this. You should too.
Writer/director David Koepp adapts Stephen King's novella "Secret Window, Secret Garden," which concerns a writer, Mort Rainey (Johnny Depp), who secludes himself in a cabin after discovering his wife cheating on him after 10 years of marriage.
The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist."
To say "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind," the new movie written by the audacious Charlie Kaufman, is incredibly original would be highly redundant.
Known primarily for his television commercials featuring sleek foreign cars, director Zack Snyder tries his hand at feature filmmaking with a bold remake of a '70s horror classic. That's some balls for a rookie, but amazingly, he succeeds far beyond expectations. Never before (not even in "28 Days Later") have the living dead seemed so unstoppable and menacing.
Maxim's Hottest Woman of the Year for 2003 is now starring in one of her most complex roles, with a movie due out April 9. Elisha Cuthbert, siren and star of "The Girl Next Door," and award-winning actress on the dramatic series "24" speaks about her experiences in a starring role.
Head north and east until you reach North Sydney, Nova Scotia nestled at the very edge of continental North America.
The times roll, but they can also rock. With the eclectic sounds and ever-evolving musicians which make up the Bloomington music scene, another band has emerged. In half compliance with the status quo of collegiate bands -- rock 'n' rollers with energizing intentions of producing their own sound -- The Swell diverge substantially when it comes to the process of conception.
At the end of the long gravel driveway, in a building adjacent to the farmhouse, the tails of horses no longer attached to their owners twitch next to the skeletons of violins. On a shelf across from the tails rests a book titled "How to Rehair a Bow," the masters thesis of Harold Evans, southern Indiana's sole violin maker. Evans Violins, 77 N. Sewell Rd. -- the store run by Evans and his son Michael -- fulfills the needs of a large niche of the Bloomington music community. But in telling the story of Evans Violins, it's impossible to separate the shop from the story of the musical family that runs it. The smell of sawdust hanging in the air of the shop is nothing new to Harold Evans, who spent his childhood watching the workers in his father's shop build cabinets, doors and windows.
Rarely is an NCAA mile won in as decisive a fashion as the one sophomore Sean Jefferson claimed March 14. Grabbing the lead with just over 600 meters left, Jefferson crushed the field -- including reigning 2003 champion, hometown favorite Arkansas' Chris Mulvaney. Crossing the line with arms raised in 4:00.16, Jefferson gave IU its first individual track title since 1993. As he shot a glance up at the massive monitor on the final turn of the NCAA Championships mile, he couldn't believe what he saw.
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip -- Israel threatened to kill the entire leadership of the Islamic militant group Hamas after assassinating its founder and hinted Tuesday Yasser Arafat could wind up on the hit list in the future.
LOS ANGELES -- Some filmmakers tiptoe around the word "remake." Others delicately suggest their film is not so much a remake as a "revisitation or reimagining," afraid of being scorned for filching someone else's ideas. The Coen brothers guffaw over such euphemistic distinctions. "Listen, this is a remake," said Joel Coen, who joined with brother Ethan to write, produce and direct "The Ladykillers," starring Tom Hanks in an update of the 1955 Alec Guinness black comedy. Leave it to the Coens to call it a remake while infusing it with so much of their own warped humor and macabrely funny imagery that it feels entirely original.