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Men Script

January 28th, 2012

The Script – The Man Who Can’t Be Moved


M. Ruskin Manuscript Writing Placemat


M. Ruskin Manuscript Writing Placemat


$2.99


Manuscript Writing Placemat teaches how to print capital and small letters and numbers one through ten. Small numbered arrows give writing sequence and direction. Learning Placemats. Study on one side and practice on the other. Use erasable markers on reverse side. Washable for fun and practice. 12″ x 17.5″…

Royal Blue Personalized Port Authority Insulated Lunch Cooler Bag


Royal Blue Personalized Port Authority Insulated Lunch Cooler Bag



Keep meals cool in our new insulated cooler with its easy-to-clean waterproof lining. Features 600 denier polyester heat-sealed waterproof lining, adjustable web carrying strap, and zippered front pocket. Measures 9.375in x 6.5in x 4.25in Approximately 259 cubic inches. Can be embroidered with a name up to 5.5 inches long and ¾ inch high on the flap. Multiple colored bags available. Several p…


Black Personalized Port Authority Insulated Lunch Cooler Bag


Black Personalized Port Authority Insulated Lunch Cooler Bag



Keep meals cool in our new insulated cooler with its easy-to-clean waterproof lining. Features 600 denier polyester heat-sealed waterproof lining, adjustable web carrying strap, and zippered front pocket. Measures 9.375in x 6.5in x 4.25in Approximately 259 cubic inches. Can be embroidered with a name up to 5.5 inches long and ¾ inch high on the flap. Multiple colored bags available. Several p…


Baby Boy (Special Edition)


Baby Boy (Special Edition)


$3.74


A worthy companion piece to 1991′s Boyz N the Hood, John Singleton’s Baby Boy expresses compassionate but unforgiving criticism of young, African American black men who lead reckless, irresponsible lives while blithely blaming racism for their chronic disadvantage. That’s already enough to make this a provocative and emotionally challenging film, but Singleton injects his drama with such passionat…

Departures


Departures


$13.78


Departures is surely the gentlest, sweetest movie about death that you will ever see. A cellist named Diago (Masahiro Motoki) comes to the rueful conclusion that he’s not talented enough to make a career as a musician; having just returned to his hometown with his wife Mika (Ryoko Hirosue, Wasabi), he answers a job ad for what he thinks must be a travel agency… only to discover that compan…

Disney's The Kid


Disney’s The Kid


$5.82


Russ Duritz (Bruce Willis) is an ultracynical, 40-year-old L.A. image consultant who fashions bogus façades for scumbag clients. Oblivious to his own need for a makeover, he’s a tyrant in the office (to the chagrin of his sarcastic assistant, played to perfection by Lily Tomlin), and he’s emotionally unavailable to the morally centered woman (Emily Mortimer) who senses goodness beneath Russ’s har…

12 Angry Men [VHS]


12 Angry Men [VHS]


$4.94


Sidney Lumet’s directorial debut remains a tense, atmospheric (though slightly manipulative and stagy) courtroom thriller, in which the viewer never sees a trial and the only action is verbal. As he does in his later corruption commentaries such as Serpico or Q & A, Lumet focuses on the lonely one-man battles of a protagonist whose ethics alienate him from the rest of jaded society. As the film op…

Same Time Next Year [VHS]


Same Time Next Year [VHS]


$9.98


Bernard Slade’s smart, funny, and touching play about an adulterous couple who meet one weekend a year for 26 years is nicely adapted for the screen by Robert Mulligan (To Kill a Mockingbird) in this 1978 film. The two-person story stars Alan Alda and Ellen Burstyn, both of whom are outstanding at conveying a rainbow of emotions over a quarter-century as life gives and takes away, and the world co…

12 Angry Men [VHS]


12 Angry Men [VHS]


$59.99



The Wizard of Oz (70th Anniversary Edition) [Blu-ray]


The Wizard of Oz (70th Anniversary Edition) [Blu-ray]


$9.98


When it was released during Hollywood’s golden year of 1939, The Wizard of Oz didn’t start out as the perennial classic it has since become. The film did respectable business, but it wasn’t until its debut on television that this family favorite saw its popularity soar. And while Oz’s TV broadcasts are now controlled by media mogul Ted Turner (who owns the rights), the advent of home video has mad…
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