Stars : Salimeh Rangzan, Mohsen Emadipour, Ali Farahani, Ali Farhad." />
Movie Quality : HDrip
Format : MKV
Size : 870 MB
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Corporate salesman Steve Butler (Damon) arrives in a rural town with his sales partner, Sue Thomason (McDormand). With the town having been hit hard by the economic decline of recent years, the two outsiders see the local citizens as likely to accept their company's offer, for drilling rights to their properties, as much-needed relief. What seems like an easy job for the duo becomes complicated by the objection of a respected schoolteacher (Holbrook) with support from a grassroots campaign led by another man (Krasinski) who counters Steve both personally and professionally.
Much better then I expected. Really makes you feel and understand both sides of the argument. I highly recommend. I say A.
"I'm not selling them natural gas. I'm selling them the only way they have to get back." Steve Butler (Damon) is a salesman working for Global, a natural gas company. Him and his partner travel to a small farming community to buy up property rights in order to drill. When an objection by a local teacher causes an enviormentalist activist to show up things get harder for Steve. This is a movie where the trailer doesn't do it justice. I wanted to see it based off the cast but it looked a little boring. While the movie is a little slow moving it is in no way boring. The writing and acting is very good and the "bad guy" that Damon plays really makes you feel for him and kind of root for him instead of the "good guy". While the movie does get a little political towards the end this is not a typical "enviromental/save the Earth" type movie. This movie makes you able to feel both sides of the argument and almost forces you to pick a side. I expected this to be boring with good acting going in. I got sucked in pretty fast and ended up really liking this much more then I thought I would. Overall, much better then expected and I highly recommend this. I give it an A.






As the campus of Hollows Point University, a psychotic killer is on the rampage, brutally murdering three students, and terrifying the rest. Eager to take leave of their panic stricken school, ten students head into the woods for a camping trip that they hope will get them away from the killer. However, after a night filled with partying and drinking, the students feel that something is out there, watching them. Soon, the maniacal killer begins hunting them down, one by one, as they fight desperately for their lives.

A man is arrested and appears in court for conning and betraying four women, posing as four different men.



Experimentation and Existentialism
Sion Sono's "Bad Film" is an exploration of human nature in cultural conflicts. The central themes are racism, homosexuality and violence. The characters are marginal misfits who make mayhem in various neighbourhood of Tokyo. The central dilemma of the high-density Chinese immigrants who are perceived as a threat especially as the 1997 Handover of Hong Kong to China is looming, coupled with the more comically-toned fear of "Blacks" for their hypothetically huge penises and ensuing vagina-stretching paranoia for the poor Japanese girls from their "protecting" male counterparts.
The long movie follows a rather typical gang attacks gang pattern with periods of peace and respite, but despite its shortcomings and simple story, it shines with bouts of beautiful artistic cinematography (especially for the budget and guerilla-style street film-making) and engaging, endearing and strange characters. It also showcases Sono's humour, innovation, eclectic vision and symbolic synthesis.
The soul-searching in society's fringe is evident and the sedated pace allows for much reflection. At part life-affirming and at parts looking- glass alarming, this examines the essence of being alive in our melodramatic times.
The racist dialogue is consistent with typical bigotry, ignorance and fear anywhere in the world, but there is a well-researched and executed scene where the two warring interpreters discuss the merits and underachievements of China versus Japan in a more didactic and less derogatory way which is extremely effective. The other memorable scenes are the visceral eye-stopping "Slap Scene" and the various non-sexual lesbian scenes between the two "Juliette & Juliette" of the rival clans. The music and editing work well in most part and the ending brings closure to this epic episode, while not necessarily inducing change like epigenetics.
So this movie is no clear masterpiece as Canadian "Crash (2004)" did much better (and more subtly) evaluating our remaining racist societal compass, but it certainly pushes the boundaries in a beautiful and thoughtful way. All and all, it is a worthwhile, if at times long, watch.
It enviably sits in the same decadent universe as Sion Sono's "Hazard (2005)" which takes place in New York, versus the elaborate erotic worlds of "Strange Circus (2005)" & "Guilty of Romance (2011)" but does not completely achieve greatness like "Noriko's Dinner Table (2005)" and "Cold Fish (2010)" which are more refined on almost every level.

When college friends reunite after 15 years over the Christmas holidays, they discover just how easy it is for long-forgotten rivalries and romances to be reignited.
Surprisingly funny and heartwarming.
I am African American but I don't usually go to the typical Black movies because I find them too heavily silly, religious and manipulative so I was surprised as how funny and heartwarming Best Man's Holiday was. I really loved seeing all of these beautiful Black men and women getting together and celebrating their ups and downs. Terrance Howard was great, I never thought he could be so funny. It was great seeing Nina Long and Sanaa Latham who are great actresses and don't get enough screen time (Hollywood just don't tap its Black talent like it should). Morris Chestnut was also great and Taye Diggs (that's not to say that Howard Perrineau, Monica Calhoun and Melissa De Sousa weren't good because they were). Yes this movie is predictable and in some places overly preachy but you'll have a fun time and that's what movies are for.
