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4.1 of 5.0 with 185 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $5.99 2% OFF
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3.8 of 5.0 with 184 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $7.99
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3.2 of 5.0 with 180 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $11.99 1% OFF
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4.0 of 5.0 with 172 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $9.99
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4.4 of 5.0 with 167 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $7.59 75% OFF
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
Brand: 20th Century Fox
Model: 4242510
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
Brand: 20th Century Fox
Model: 4242510
The complete fourth season of the TV series M*A*S*H.
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3.5 of 5.0 with 167 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $9.99
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4.8 of 5.0 with 166 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $10.99 64% OFF
Manufacturer: Paramount
Brand: Paramount
Model: 4948969
Manufacturer: Paramount
Brand: Paramount
Model: 4948969
The inmates of a German World War II Prisoners of War camp conduct espionage and sabotage campaign right under the noses of their warders. While the enemy is often gullible, easily fooled or downright incompetent - the real strength of Hogan's men are the elaborate ruses and sometimes dangerous lengths they will go to complete their mission. "What is this man doing here?" an increasingly agitated Major Hochstetter of the Gestapo demands of Col. Klink (Werner Klemperer) in "War Takes a Holiday," one of the best episodes of Hogan's Heroes' third season (or any season, for that matter). "This man," of course, is Senior P.O.W. Officer Col. Hogan (Bob Crane), who, by now, has the run of Stalag 13, and seemingly, all of Europe. The beginning of the episode, "D-Day at Stalag 13," finds Hogan in London to receive his orders on how his barracks operation will further "tie up" the German general command to distract them from the planned Normandy landing. "You have quite a reputation for the offbeat and the bizarre, and for pulling it off," Hogan is told. And he more than lives up to it over the course of season 3. In "War Takes a Holiday," Hogan and company convince their captors that the war is over. But sabotaging the German war effort is not all fun and games. In "One in Every Crowd," Hogan is threatened with exposure by a barracks traitor, and in "Two Nazis for the Price of One," a top Gestapo officer likewise learns of Hogan's operation, and demands information about the Manhattan Project. These excellent episodes belie Hogan's Heroes unwarranted reputation as a series that treated life in a prison camp as a lark. This season welcomed back several recurring characters, most notably, Bernard Fox's Col. Crittendon, "the most incompetent British officer in the entire British Navy." Reprising her role as the very suspect White Russian, Nita Talbot was nominated for an Emmy for her performance in "The Hostage." For his commanding performance as Klink, Klemperer was honored with an Emmy this season. As lovable oaf Sgt. Sc...
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3.3 of 5.0 with 166 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $9.99
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4.6 of 5.0 with 164 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $11.24 44% OFF
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
Brand: 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTMNT
Model: 4966499
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
Brand: 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTMNT
Model: 4966499
A Greek tycoon's French movie-star mistress tracks down her ex-World War II lover. From the Sidney Sheldon novel. An over-the-top film co-starring a young and gorgeous Susan Sarandon, The Other Side of Midnight is a deliciously melodramatic adaptation of Sidney Sheldon's sweeping (and often schlocky) novel of the same name. Released theatrically in 1977, the film focuses on the intermingling lives of sexily innocent Noelle (Marie-France Pisier), who has a brief affair with a cad named Larry (John Beck), who ends up marrying wealthy and proper Catherine (Sarandon). When Noelle and Larry meet first lock eyes, he is a dashing World War II American fighter pilot who professes his love for her. But when she discovers she is pregnant with his baby, he is nowhere to be found. So what's a poor girl to do but abort her baby, rise to stardom as one of the world's most famous actresses, and plot revenge against her duplicitous ex-lover? But faster than you can say, "You go, girl!" (or "Oh no she didn't," depending on your point of view), Noelle once again falls for Larry's vaguely porn star charms. But what to do with Catherine, who refuses to divorce her cheating spouse? Make no mistake about it: The Other Side of Midnight is not quality filmmaking and is probably not something Academy Award winner Sarandon even lists on her resume. But she is a joy to watch, even as she has to deliver clunky lines such as, "If you don't love me, Larry, don't lay me." This is not a great movie. Heck, it's not even a particularly good movie. But it's one of those guilty pleasures that you'll watch all the way through, even as you're complaining about the implausibility of it all. --Jae-Ha Kim
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4.3 of 5.0 with 164 Reviews
SALE PRICE: $12.14 1% OFF
Manufacturer: Shout! Factory
Brand: VIVENDI ENTERTAINMENT
Manufacturer: Shout! Factory
Brand: VIVENDI ENTERTAINMENT
A young American soldier (Timothy Bottoms) is wounded by a mortar shell on the last day of World War I. He lies in a hospital bed as a quadruple amputee who has lost his arms, legs, eyes, ears, mouth and nose. He remains conscious and able to think, thereby reliving his life through strange dreams, memories and conversations with Jesus (Donald Sutherland), unable to distinguish whether he is awake or dreaming. Dalton Trumbo, author of the famous 1930s antiwar book Johnny Got His Gun wrote and directed this film adaptation. In 1947, he refused to testify before a congressional committee investigating alleged Communist infiltration of the film industry. Blacklisted for nearly a decade, he wrote numerous scripts under pseudonyms including Roman Holiday and Gun Crazy until he was finally credited for his work on Exodus and Spartacus in 1960.Bonus Features: * Includes a limited-edition reproduction of the film poster in-pack.* Dalton Trumbo: Rebel In Hollywood (60 min. feature available for the first time in U.S.).* Interview with star Timothy Bottoms.* Behind-the-scenes footage with commentary by films DP, Jules Brenner & Timothy Bottoms.* Original theatrical trailer.* Metallica Music video for 'One', featuring footage from the film.* 1940 Radio adaptation staring James Cagney. Hollywood screenwriter Dalton Trumbo directed just one film in his career, but it was a doozy: Johnny Got His Gun, Trumbo’s 1971 adaptation of his 1939 novel and a work that has long been considered one of the most powerful anti-war movies ever produced. Ironically, though, there’s very little war in it, and nothing in the way of blood and guts. Instead, what we get is the tortured tale of one Joe Bonham (Timothy Bottoms), a callow 18-year-old who goes off to World War I because he believes that fighting for his country is the right thing to do. But when an officer orders some men to leave their trench and bury a dead enemy soldier, Joe is hit by a mortar shell and left without arms, legs, or a face (he can’t see, hear, or...
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