Friday, August 26, 2011

The Tuxedo (Widescreen Edition)

  • Condition: New
  • Format: DVD
  • Closed-captioned; Color; Dolby; DTS Surround Sound; Dubbed; DVD; Subtitled; Widescreen; NTSC
Atlanta's experience over the past 15 to 20 years is reflective of many cities, particularly those in the south and west. Thus, the story of how and why Atlanta has changed is informative for cities in general. What accounts for the positive turn-around of the city of Atlanta? What can other cities learn from Atlanta's experience?

This collection examines changes in the city of Atlanta over the past three decades and explores the factors associated with the observed changes. Beginning with several essays that take a broad focus on the city's demographics and the city's economy, the contributions then focus on more specifics aspects of urban development, such as the changing face of retailing; income and poverty; race and ethnicity; the arts; transp! ortation; and housing and gentrification. Later chapters assess the future prospects for the city. Together, the contributions paint a picture of how the city of Atlanta has changed, why it has changed, and its future prospects. The implications for other major metropolitan centers are broad, and the lessons learned are of relevance to anyone interested in the economic and social health of cities.Ever since she was a young girl, Melinda Gordon (Jennifer Love Hewitt) has been able to see and talk to dead people--earth bound spirits who have yet to cross over to the other side and who seek her help in communicating and resolving unfinished business with the living. Melinda sometimes has a hard time accepting her "gift," especially now that she's a newlywed and looking forward to starting her new life with her husband, Jim Clancy (David Conrad), a paramedic. Her friend and business partner in the antique store, Andrea Moreno (Aisha Tyler), is fascinated by Melinda's talent. ! Although Melinda embraces her unique "abilities" as a blessin! g and so metimes a curse, she always helps her clients--alive or dead--find emotional closure.Ghost Whisperer is not a show for cynics (or anyone who hates everything with the word "whisperer" attached to it). Though half of the show aims to make your flesh creep, the other half works just as hard to make everything warm and fuzzy. Ghosts walk into Melinda Gordon's life the way snappy dames walked into Sam Spade's office, hitting her up for aid with a hard-luck story and a whole lot of strings attached. Her job is to help them untie the emotional knot that's keeping them earthbound--which usually involves, in one way or another, telling a still-living friend or relative how much the dead person loved them. Whether it's a Vietnam vet who never met his son, a standup comedian who committed suicide, a bride who died on her big day, or a poltergeist child, in the end Melinda--assisted by her hunky paramedic husband Jim and vaguely useless best friend Andrea--will find a way to l! ead them to the light. (Ghost Whisperer is evasive about its theological implications, but Melinda's black-hatted nemesis from the season's end has a distinctly devilish air.)

Keeping a foot in both worlds as Melinda is Jennifer Love Hewitt (Party of Five, Garfield), an actress who doesn't seem entirely natural; between her cartoonish physical dimension (the show isn't shy about displaying her bosom), her fake eyelashes, and the seemingly molded contours of her face, she's like a life-sized doll. Unfortunately, this quality lends a similarly plastic feel to her telegenic smile and earnest looks of compassion. The scripts are strictly middle-of-the-road tv fare, with obvious turns of plot and heavy-handed emotional crises, but the special effects conjure some eeriness. Extras include docs on the show's development, the lovely opening credits (based on the art of Maggie Taylor), and the paranormal investigators whose work inspired the show, along wit! h a handful of episode commentaries and deleted scenes. Fans w! ill not feel cheated. --Bret FetzerAsian Edition best of from Jennifer Love HewittThis poster is 22 inches by 33 inches. It is in mint condition.Golden Globe and Emmy winner Kelsey Grammer (Frasier) breathes new life into the musical adaptation beloved by millions of theatergoers every holiday season as it comes to television filled with hope, holiday cheer and the uplifting power of the human spirit. Charles Dickens’ classic tale still stirs the same feelings of repentance, love, and forgiveness that transformed Scrooge himself.Fonte: Wikipedia. Pagine: 203. Capitoli: Leslie Nielsen, Meryl Streep, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Fergie, Neil Patrick Harris, Samuel L. Jackson, Eliza Dushku, Michael J. Fox, Nicolas Cage, Stacy Keach, John Goodman, Lou Rawls, Brittany Murphy, Ben Stiller, Kristin Chenoweth, Eddie Murphy, René Auberjonois, Jack Black, Vanessa L. Williams, Jane Lynch, Adam Wylie, Carl Lumbly, Hans Conried, Dom DeLuise, Clancy Brown, Roger L. Jackson, James Woods, Pinto ! Colvig, Sterling Holloway, Joe Mantegna, Ron Perlman, Nicole Sullivan, Juliet Landau, Kenneth Mars, Melissa Fahn, John DiMaggio, Isaac Hayes, Mila Kunis, Wallace Shawn, David Hayter, David Ogden Stiers, Mae Questel, Michael Welch, Jennifer Hale, Fred Tatasciore, Michael Clarke Duncan, Adrienne Wilkinson, Seth Green, Laurie Metcalf, Dan Castellaneta, Phil Morris, Lacey Chabert, Gil Birmingham, Dana Delany, Hank Azaria, Jeff Bennett, Kelly Ripa, Mark Hamill, Alexandra Breckenridge, Kari Wahlgren, Will Friedle, Kelsey Grammer, Grey DeLisle, Stephen Root, Michael Jai White, Larry Miller, Blake Clark, Joshua Seth, Ray Wise, Nicholle Tom, Bradley Pierce, Kathy Najimy, Charlie Adler, Orlando Brown, Christian Erickson, Chloë Moretz, Billy West, Frank Welker, Justin Shenkarow, Alexander Gould, Adam West, Nathan Lane, Wayne Knight, Eleanor Audley, Rob Paulsen, Ahmed Best, Verna Felton, Bud Luckey, Bryan Cranston, Brad Garrett, Mark Harelik, Timothy Daly, Jim Cummings, Katey Sagal, J! odi Benson, Dee Bradley Baker, Gilbert Gottfried, Diana Muldau! r, Chris tine Auten, Wil Wheaton, Keone Young, Jim Varney, John Ratzenberger, Myles Jeffrey, Julie Kavner, Nancy Cartwright, Scott Grimes, Annie Potts, Michael Yarmush, Joe Ranft, Keith David, Don Diamond, Patrick Warburton, Lenny Venito, William Conrad, Dominic Scott Kay, Tom Kenny, Eva Gabor, Wanda Sykes, Johnny Yong Bosch, Marcellite Garner, Richard White, Kath Soucie, Bill Farmer, Bob Newhart, George DiCenzo, Michael Wallis, Jeff Garlin, Eli Marienthal, Mel Winkler, Tom Fahn, Tony Anselm...Jimmy is an ordinary cabbie-turned-chauffer who slips into a 2 billion dollar super-spy suit and inadvertantly becomes a dashing secret agent. Fit for trouble this deluxe tux unwittingly thrusts jimmy and his dazzling partner into a dangerous world of internation espionage. Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 02/13/2007 Starring: Jackie Chan Jason Isaacs Run time: 99 minutes Rating: Pg13Jackie Chan looks spiffy in The Tuxedo, but the movie needs a tailor. No Jackie Chan movie! could be a total misfire, however, and he's charmingly self-effacing here as a hapless chauffeur who inadvertently replaces his injured super-agent boss (Jason Issacs) and foils a madman (Ritchie Coster) who plans to infect the world's water supply (!) and reap a fortune selling pure bottled water. Jackie's a bumbling superhero after donning his boss's high-tech, Inspector Gadget-like tuxedo (it even has a "Mambo" setting), and curvaceous co-agent Jennifer Love Hewitt coaches him in crime fighting while closing in on the bad guys. It's all as routinely ridiculous as it sounds--Jackie's faux James Brown act is the only real highlight--and as critic Roger Ebert observed, the climax hinges on an insect queen that doesn't exist in nature! So, while Jackie and Jennifer provide a few moments of stellar stunts and random amusement, you can blame this mess on screenwriters who didn't do their homework. --Jeff Shannon

0 comments: