Xbox 720 Durango will have Blu-ray, need always on internet connection
Christmas 2013, like PS4/Orbis
Christmas 2013, like PS4/Orbis
Hollywood seems to have lost their ability to create new and interesting movies. They now look toward proven ideas or safe-bets – everything from board games (this summer’s mega-blockbuster Battleship, based on the game of the same name), or movies based off of popular, runaway books (Twilight and The Hunger Games), or sequels (American Pie 4, Wrath of the Titans, Ice Age 16??).
$1.2 billion The final film in the Harry Potter series is also the highest grossing.
Ray Kinsella has calmed down over what he initially perceived as an insult from the ballplayers. They didn’t invite him to join them in his Iowa cornfield, and instead asked Terrence Mann to be the honoured guest who bears witness to whatever mysteries lay beyond the outfield.
Macs have never supported Blu-ray, but now you can thanks to Macgo’s Mac Blu-ray Player.
It’s that wonderful time of year when baseball begins once again and you can just taste that warm, flat beer and smell those hot dogs on the grill. If you’re thinking about watching a baseball movie to get you in the right mood for the game, here are nine movies (one for each inning, of course) you might not want to watch.
Movies in the Park returned to Marco Island Friday evening at Mackle Park, with a showing of the animated kid flick “Fly Me to the Moon.” Hundreds gathered on the playing field as the sun set, with blankets, lawn chairs, buckets of popcorn and the children, with the stars above mirroring the spaceflight theme of the movie.
DVD Talk Collector Series THE FILM: Please Note: The screen captures used here are taken from the DVD version included in the set, not the Blu-ray edition under review. A cinematic event years in the making, the 2010 restoration of Georges M li s’s technically pioneering, thematically prescient, eternally charming 1902 film A Trip to the Moon ( Le Voyage dans la Lune ) represents, for the …
The “Great Movies You Missed†film festival at the Stratford Library this week. The series is free and open to the public.
