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Nees tainies 2003


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<blockquote><font class="small">Quote DownUNDERground:</font><hr> Re lalaki vale kana keno sto location sou.Den vlepeis pws ginontai ta topics? <hr /></blockquote>

 

hahahah sostos!!! hehehe.... edo pou ta leme omos den fteei to paidi... kanonika to keli afto tou pinaka tha eprepe na eixe fixed-width oste na ehei panta stathero platos se pixels asxeta me to ti tha grapsei o allos sto location i sto nick tou...

 

HAL i think that u have to fix it with the next update

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10. Finding Nemo

 

 

 

While Toy Story was great fun and I thought A Bug's Life was good but not great, Monsters Inc. reset the bar for the kind of storytelling Pixar could do. I daresay Monsters is a better film than Toy Story, and that's why I'm looking forward with great anticipation to watching Finding Nemo when it arrives in May. By now you've seen the trailers and heard Albert Brooks talk like a fish (which ain't too different from what he sounds like in every other movie, is it?), but I think Nemo best card in its hand has yet to be shown yet: the story concept itself and the reason why Nemo sets out on his quest, to rescue his son from a dentist's fish tank somewhere in the city. We haven't even seen any of that footage yet and already audiences are pumped to see this film. Now that's marketing, and it's why Michael Eisner should be doing everything in his power to make sure the Pixar gang is happy and content remaining with Disney. Smarten up Mike!

9. The Butterfly Effect

 

 

 

I knew nothing about this puppy until Dayna and Reg, our two head honchos from Corona's Test Pattern site, visited the set last year. When they got back I picked their brain and asked them to explain what this strange time travel story seemed to be like. The stuff they told me shocked me -- and it also gave me a thrill.

 

Imagine someone doing a movie involving time travel that was like Back to the Future meets Seven, or better yet, The Deer Hunter. Imagine a time travel movie that makes Donnie Darko look like Lilo & Stitch. That's the kind of balls this film wants to have.

 

When the promos and trailers for this movie come out, pay attention to them and see if the stuff they show shows promise even if it doesn't make any sense to you. The two directors (who are also the writers of the script) are taking chances with The Butterfly Effect, and if they can pull it off this movie won't be as marketable as a Marty McFly time travel adventure, but damn, the stuff you see might haunt you for years. That's the same stuff that Reg and Dayna told me about, and it made my hair stand on end (in a good way.)

 

8. Kill Bill

 

 

 

Darwin Mayflower may have hated Quentin Tarantino's script but I thought it's going to be the closest thing we'll ever get to seeing Frank Miller's Sin City ever on celluloid. Darwin is right in saying that, at least structurally on the page, the script isn't more than a vanity project for Tarantino to act out hyperimpossible swordfighting battles and that it only concerns itself with one thing, and that's revenge. But if only Alex Proyas' adaptation of The Crow had turned out to be more like the graphic novel it was based on and less of a cop- and-his-supernatural-buddy flick, I might have had my craving for "spaghetti samurai" movies sated. Kill Bill is going to be nothing but two hours of watching Uma Thurman hack to pieces dozens of opponents in order to face down her demon, the man who done her wrong, Bill. It doesn't aspire to be anything more than that, and I won't be looking for it when I go see it. While it may seem somewhat two-faced to expect more substance from some action films I'm looking forward to (like say The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen) than others (namely Kill Bill), KB is the cinematic eqiuvalent of a first-person shooter like Quake. It is what it is.

7. The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen

 

 

 

Don't [censored] this up is all I can say to the filmmakers working on Fox's League film. Based on Alan Moore's stupendous six-issue comic book of the same name, three years ago I had the misfortune of reading the second draft of the League script and finding out that the direction the movie adaptation would be taking wasn't as faithful to the comic book as I had hoped for. I want to have faith in the talented people who've been working on the movie because they're nice guys who've done work I've enjoyed before, as well as guys that I've had personal conversations with which I've enjoyed. I know that the film's producer, Don Murphy, is an avid comic book fan because I've interviewed him a couple of times back when I used to work for Wizard. I also know he's a stand-up guy and a man who've I've told other filmmakers only good things about: while writing one of those Wizard articles, Murphy called me up and told me what my new editor had been saying behind my back, which eventually was the reason why I quit their mag. Steve Norrington, the director, took the time to write me an email and comment on some of the bullshit rumors making the rounds while Blade was shooting back in '97. In Norrington's hands, Blade turned out to be a great flick. I've been waiting to see what he'd be working on next.

 

But while I can understand the decisions made to changes the League story from its original comic book one, the story the script told took second place to Moore's tale. I sincerely hope that The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen turns out to be a great flick, and if I enjoy it I'll certainly eat a nice portion of humble pie. God, let's hope so.

 

6. The Last Samurai

 

 

 

Yeah, I thought John Logan's script for Star Trek: Nemesis sucked vacuum but his The Last Samurai kicked ass. That one scene where the samurai ride out of the fog on horseback, dressed in their various brightly-colored suits of armor with all kinds of bad-ass weapons by their side should be one helluva image on-screen. The story isn't anything we haven't seen before -- protagonist meets his enemy and realizes he's on the wrong side -- but with Cruise playing the fallen Civil War hero who adopts the samurai code, we should have action sequences with greater aspirations than the standard Mission: Impossible formula of high-speed chases and shoot-outs. You go Tom!

5. Dreamcatcher

 

 

 

The director of The Bodyguard and Grand Canyon turns another Stephen King novel into a movie. So what's so special that I'm looking forward to this Warner Bros. flick moreso than Terminator 3? Three reasons: one, that director happens to be Lawrence Kasdan, the guy who also co-wrote Raiders of the Lost Ark and The Empire Strikes Back -- and this is his first foray into genre stuff since working on the script for Return of the Jedi. Second, when I spoke with Kasdan on the set last February, he told me he wanted to shape this picture into a true horror film, and to do that the most important aspect was going to be the characters. Third, and here's your proof: tell me where in the trailer for Dreamcatcher is there one glimpse of a "[censored] weasel" or Mr. Gray? That's right folks, it looks like we're dealing with a filmmaker here who is sticking to his guns and using his smarts to make his horror movie. The result could be the scariest King adaptation since Kubrick's Shining.

4. X-Men 2

 

 

 

Will Bryan Singer's second X-Men movie prove to be the roller-coaster ride fans of Marvel's comic have been waiting for? Oh, the things I've been told by friends in high places...the secrets I could whisper in your ears...the stories that I could share...

 

And then there's the stuff I've heard about the actual movie itself. Like Magneto taking on the X-Jet. And two fully loaded F-16s. In the air. By himself. Nuff said.

 

3. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

 

 

 

This year will be proven to be the year genre geeks have been waiting for. I've already forgetten about 1999 and the anticipation and then eventual disappointment brought by The Phantom Menace; next year we'll have the final chapters in two franchises, one of which will be Peter Jackson's The Return of the King. If a comparison has to be made, Jackson has proven to be the George Lucas of the start of the new century. He did the impossible and not only turned J.R.R. Tolkien's mammoth tome The Lord of the Rings into a gripping trilogy of films, he's proven that fantasy films can be every bit as successful as science fiction. Lucas did the same when back in 1977 and redefined escapist entertainment; now here comes Jackson and his team of WETA code-cutters to bring characters like Gollum, Sauron and the world of Middle-earth alive. Add to that first-rate acting, screenwriting, scoring, costuming and cinematography and you have a series of films that will be watched for decades to come. I've been keeping myself spoiler-free as I can for the Rings films, and CA's pages have suffered for it... but I've wanted to treat myself and watch the series unfold without knowing who lives or dies or what's coming around the corner. I'm probably the only webmaster from a movie site who hasn't read Tolkien's novels but I'm loving every second of Jackson's epics each December -- and I know the final chapter will probably top the others.

2 and 1 (TIE) The Matrix sequels: The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions

 

 

 

Ever since I witnessed the Wachowski brothers VR trip into our collective unconsciousness (also known as The Matrix), I've been waiting to see where these guys would take us next. There's a ton of unresolved questions that first film left dangling that readers in our Matrix message forum have been wondering about, and have been guessing about whether we'll see the answers, in the two back-to- back sequels due out in May and November. However, those readers have also had a leg up for the past year ever since a scriptment for The Matrix Reloaded surfaced on the site, revealing key moments from the second film and leaving those few individuals who read it aware of the titanic cliffhanger we'll be treated to at the climax of Reloaded. While the scriptment may be gone (at the request of Warner Bros. and the Wachowskis), the anticipation of waiting to see how these events will unfold for our Matrix heroes and villains have me counting the days left until the sequel opens. While I might now know some of the big secrets that the Wachowskis will reveal in Reloaded, those answers that we'll see resolved only lead to bigger questions I'm now wondering about what will happen -- and who will live and die -- in Revolutions. Everything I've read and heard about these two films has me convinced that not only will the Matrix sequels make $300 million each at the box office, but they'll deliver the promise blowing everyone's expectations completely away. After seeing what the Wachowskis plan on doing to the real world and the Matrix world, by this time next year these two shy fellas from Chicago will be proven to be the James Camerons of the 21st century. Just remember you read it here, folks.

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epidi den elege na anoikso allo topic tha grapso edo

katevasa xtes to vradi 300 mb trailers apo to site tou quicktime kai apo to jurrasic punk......

 

exoume kai leme

 

bad boys 2: entiposiakotato opos kai to proto...cant wait to see it :)

anger management: adam sandler kai o megalos jack....meta to sovaro punch drunk love o agapimenos mou komikos epistrefei se kati pou kserei na kanei poli kala...enas gorilanthropos jack vgazei gelio opos evgaze kai sto as good as it gets....

equilibrium:to poster thimizei matrix alla to ergo einai san mia metafora tou deus ex sto cinema....me amerikanous pou milisa legane krima pou eixe limited release stin ameriki....

charlies angels 2:ntaksi...den perimeno kati parapano apo 2 efxaristes ores sto cinema opos kai sto proto..krima pou lipei o bill murray

the recruit:al pacino ,collin furrel.....o collin furrel (elpizo na min to doume se 21203212 tainies to 2003)pezei enan ekpedevomeno praktora tis cia pou aristevei kai stratologite apo ton al pacino se mia special thesi stin cia....fenete kali peripetioula..

they:kati me fantasmata i terata pezei pou kapia pedia ta vlepane mikra kai ta ksanavlepoune otan megalonoune..thimizei ligo it i fasi alla to trailer dixnei kaloutsiko

just married: meta apo 3 xronia peripou vlepoune ton Ashton Kutcher tou dude where is my car kai tin Brittany Murphy tou 8 mile se mia erotiki komodia.....vgazei gelio to trailer an kai nomizo oti to dude seriously where is my car tha einai kalitero

terminator 3:ntaksi....den exo logia ;p

daredevil:enas apo tous agapimenous mou iroes epitelous stin megali othoni....an kai oi fanatikoi ton comix tha vroune merikes anakrivies sto senario sxetika me tin electra to apotelesma enthousiazei..

kill bill:i 4i tainia tou quentin tarantino kai fisika tha doume diasindeseis me tis ipolipes tou....thimizei ligo charlies angels me samurai to trailer alla fenete teleio...uma thurman lycy liu david caradine kai o adikimenos michael mudsen.....fenete entiposiako...

cradle to the grave:dmx kai jet li se mia peripetia pou psilo thimizei ligo to rush hour alla apo tin alli plevra tou nomou..den tha mas xalasei omos to ksiliki tou jet li

dream catcher:stephen king...aliens pou pernoune tin morfi tou allou kai xionia..nai thimizei ligo to the thing tou carpenter (tainiara)alla pistevo o king na mas dikaiosei..toulaxiston kseroume apo tin arxi pos to teras einai alien ;p

 

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