Harrison, Russell
Sep 16
2007
2007

Harrison Ford or Kurt Russell?
I say Kurt Russell. Harrison Ford is a very boring actor. Kurt Russell takes any movie and makes it entertaining.
you can put Kurt Russell in any role Harrison Ford played and the movie would be just as good or even better.
Kurt Russell. He is very underated. His Snake Pliskin character in Escape From NY is my favorite. He is also a better comedic actor then Ford.
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Concert for Bangladesh [VHS] $12.99 Before We Are the World, before the Amnesty International concerts, before Live Aid, Live 8, 46664, and all the other charitable and/or political events that have used popular music as their principal draw, there was George Harrison’s 1971 Concert for Bangladesh, a stirring affair released here in a fine two-disc set. The cause–raising money for the beleaguered people of Bangladesh (formerly East… |
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The Uninvited [VHS] $14.98 One of the spookiest ghost stories ever put to film, The Uninvited is also one of the few classic haunted-house movies to treat the subject with respect and seriousness. Ray Milland and Ruth Hussey play a brother and sister who leave the city to live in a beautiful old house dramatically perched on a cliff overlooking the Cornish coast. As they discover some of the house’s peculiarities–the unexp… |
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The Citadel [VHS] $17.39 The Citadel is still one of the most powerful films every made about a doctor’s personal and professional struggles. This adaptation of A.J. Cronin’s best seller earned wide praise and several Oscar nominations. Robert Donat stars as the idealistic young Dr. Manson. Starting his career in a Welsh mining village, Manson quickly runs up against the medical establishment when he tries to expose t… |
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Robin Hood (Unrated) $2.99 … |
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Queer as Folk – The Final Season (Collector’s Edition) $16.78 Gay has rarely been so glamorous as in the American version of Queer as Folk. But the show’s success rests on more than hard bodies and glossy, picture-perfect sex (though there’s an abundance of that); this series gave its characters a multidimensional richness that rivals more high-profile programs like Six Feet Under or The Sopranos, while tackling an impressive breadth of social and political … |
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Frank Herbert’s Dune (Three-Disc Director’s Cut) $14.98 It’s a mixed blessing, but Frank Herbert’s Dune goes a long way toward satisfying science fiction purists who scoffed at David Lynch’s previous attempt to adapt Herbert’s epic narrative. Ironically, director John Harrison’s 288-minute TV miniseries (broadcast on the Sci-Fi Channel in December 2000) offers its own share of strengths and weaknesses, which, in retrospect, emphasize the quality of Lyn… |
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Chicago $4.94 The movie version of Kander and Ebb’s Chicago was long in the making, but it’s well worth the wait. Director Rob Marshall’s main change was to turn the classic musical numbers into fantasy sequences, but of course this isn’t obvious on CD. Most importantly, the arrangements are bursting with life while being true to the show’s spirit, and the casting is simply inspired. Catherine Zeta-Jones actual… |
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Concert for Bangladesh $19.17 Ravi Shankar planted the seed, but it was George Harrison who turned this historic benefit concert into reality. The publicity-shy former Beatle could’ve easily written a check and forgotten all about the matter–impoverished East Pakistani refugees stranded in India–but instead recruited some of his most talented and compassionate friends and created an event remembered as much for the quality o… |
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Concert for Bangladesh $18.58 Before We Are the World, before the Amnesty International concerts, before Live Aid, Live 8, 46664, and all the other charitable and/or political events that have used popular music as their principal draw, there was George Harrison’s 1971 Concert for Bangladesh, a stirring affair released here in a fine two-disc set. The cause–raising money for the beleaguered people of Bangladesh (formerly East… |
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The Happiness Trap: How to Stop Struggling and Start Living $7.71 Are you, like milllions of Americans, caught in the happiness trap? Russ Harris explains that the way most of us go about trying to find happiness ends up making us miserable, driving the epidemics of stress, anxiety, and depression. This empowering book presents the insights and techniques of ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy) a revolutionary new psychotherapy based on cutting-edge researc… |
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