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            Babak Jalilian Kuala lampur,       

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Gandhi (Movie)

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Gandhi (1982) - DVDRip - RoSubbed

iMDB : http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083987/

Gandhi is a 1982  biographical film based on the life of Mahatma Gandhi, who led the nonviolent resistance movement against British colonial rule in India during the first half of the 20th century. The film was directed by Richard Attenborough and stars Ben Kingsley as Gandhi. They both won Academy Awards for their work on the film. The film was also given the Academy Award for Best Picture  and won eight Academy Awards in total.

It was an international co-production between production companies in India and the UK. The film premiered in New Delhi on 30 November 1982.

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Gandhi_(1982)_Ben_Kingsley_(Optional_MULTISUBS)_Kuth.avi

Last Updated ( Thursday, 22 April 2010 13:56 )
 

The Road

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 06 February 2010 09:03 )
 

Alvin and the Chipmunks

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Last Updated ( Saturday, 06 February 2010 09:04 )
 

Surrogates

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Some science fiction films take us to different worlds or alternate realities, or offer visions of the future. In each of these new worlds, certain new rules apply. Sometimes the rules are pretty simple and can be easily and clearly established, as in Star Trek or District 9. Other times the rules are exceedingly complex and raise a million questions, as in the new Surrogates, which is based on a comic book by Robert Venditti and Brett Weldele. In this future world, humans can strap themselves into a chair, plug themselves into a bunch of sensors and have complete control of an artificial being, including movement, speech and senses. This artificial being can then go out into the world to perform daily tasks, while the real person is safe at home, never risking getting hit by a car or falling down a manhole.

From there, things get sticky. A narrator explains to us that 98% of the population uses the surrogates, and later a character says something about a "billion" users. Last time I checked, a billion was only about 20% (or less) of the population. Plus, how much do these surrogates cost? Can all the poor people of the world afford them? We do get to see a few things like a surrogate bringing home food for its owner to eat, and other points in which surrogates freeze up while their owners use the bathroom, but just how do people go about their daily lives? Some of the users look like they're in pretty bad shape, sitting in their chairs. Is using a surrogate physically or emotionally addicting? Do their muscles atrophy? Do they take showers? Do they ever get together to have sex? Has the population gone down because of too much surrogate sex and not enough human sex?

 

This is it (Michael Jackson)

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As I watched Michael Jackson's This Is It, I found myself wondering exactly what I was supposed to be reviewing. It's nearly impossible to separate the context of the film from the film itself -- that it was supposedly never meant to be a documentary and is only now being seen by public eyes because of Michael Jackson's death in June as he was preparing for his last tour. And, as difficult as it is, I'm obviously not reviewing the person himself. Was I reviewing his performances? That's not it, either, because they're rehearsals and Jackson was saving his voice and strength for the tour. The documentary itself is a strange, confusing look into Michael Jackson's world, or at least the version of it that his friends, family, and/or estate wanted us to see.

Producer Randy Phillips is quoted in the production notes as follows: "What makes this footage so compelling is that Michael is so open and unguarded. From March 5 when we did the press conference [announcing Jackson's tour] to June 25 when Michael died – we had a three-person crew with HD cameras." The production notes also say they shot "more than 100 hours of rehearsal footage shot in Los Angeles." Why were three people shooting with HD cameras, producing over 100 hours of footage that "was never intended for wide release"? And if it was eventually going to be part of a behind-the-scenes doc, then why did it often look blurry or shaky, and why, if there was so much more footage to choose from, are we seeing rehearsals that seemed to be from a handful of different days, judging by the different clothes Jackson wore?

Last Updated ( Monday, 21 December 2009 16:20 )
 

Pat & Mat (First batch)

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"Pat & Mat" is the highly acclaimed and hugely popular creation of Czech cartoonists Lubomir Benes and Vladimir Jiranek. Born in 1976, Pat & Mat have gone on to star in 77 hilarious episodes spanning 27 years.

 

Last Updated ( Monday, 21 December 2009 16:20 )
 

Law Abilding Citizen

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The film doesn’t take itself too seriously and there are enough cool deaths and thrills to entertain despite the ridiculous premise. Overall, I loved it.....

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All About Steve 2009

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Packaged as a romantic comedy but devoid of comedy or romance, this baffling train wreck stars Sandra Bullock as a tediously kooky constructor of crossword puzzles for a Sacramento newspaper.

 

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G I Joe The Rise of Cobra 2009

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Light entertainment with little to call memorable ... but at least therein exists some detectable evidence that the filmmakers had a soft spot for G.I. Joe and simply wanted to deliver its essence to the screen.

 

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 17 December 2009 09:44 )
 

Gamer

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What kind of film is Gamer? Well, first of all, it’s not really a film: it’s a computer game masquerading as a film. Jerk, twitch, shoot. Wham, bam, slam. Everything about Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor’s creation - its look, sound, dynamics – is precision-tooled to appeal to Xbox obsessives. 

It does so with such blunt and fundamentalist conviction that it begs a question: why would its target audience of arrested adolescents and twitchy man-boys want to schlep all the way to a movie theatre and pay extra quids to watch a non-interactive version of a form of entertainment they already have at home?

There were other questions I wanted to pose to the makers of Gamer as I left the screening in a state of, well, not concussion, but rather borderline comatization: can I get my money back? Can I get back the ninety minutes of my life that I squandered sitting through this miasmic upchuck of techno sludge? What was the story again?

Fortunately, for I couldn’t remember a single detail of anything that had just happened, I had scribbled quite a few notes. Partly because I’m a film critic and that’s what film critics do. And partly because the pleasure derived from moving a pen across paper far exceeded that to be had from the moronic inferno on screen.

 

Year One

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One knows going into this film that the comedy will be broad. That being said, Harold Ramis doesn't seem to be able to hit the broad side of the comedy barn. I might have expected at least some pithy and quotable dialogue, a la Judd Apatow (who produces), but alas, I can't remember a single phrase from this film. The jokes are stale (foreskin humor! Jews being bad athletes!) and the scenes are poorly edited. Some scenes don't even resolve themselves before moving on to the next. An early scene involving Michael Cera and a snake cuts to the next scene without any explanation as to what became of either. The actors display all the self-indulgence of a Judd Apatow film, without any of the comic rewards. If only the film makers had taken a bite from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, they might have known how bad this movie was destined to be.

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 10 December 2009 16:37 )
 

2012

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Gleefully over-the-top, this film takes the disaster movie pretty much as far as it can go...

 

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