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![Eye for an Eye [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41FZN7PT92L._SL160_.jpg) |
Eye for an Eye [VHS]
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $4.95
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Sally Field stars in this well-crafted revenge thriller. Eye for an Eye follows Karen McCann (Field) after her teenage daughter is raped and murdered. At first, she sinks into depression and paranoia; but, when the killer (Kiefer Sutherland) is caught, then released on a technicality, she becomes obsessed and begins to track him in his neighborhood. Her single-mindedness begins to distance her from her husband (Ed Harris). Finally, when the killer threatens her younger daughter, she decides to take matters into her own hands. Eye for an Eye is not exactly a balanced examination of justice and revenge--Sutherland's killer is a relentless monster--but it does approach the conflict from many points of view, articulated by a superb supporting cast, including Joe Mantegna, Beverly D'Angelo, Charlayne Woodard, Philip Baker Hall, Keith David, and Donal Logue. It's directed with professional skill by John Schlesinger (Midnight Cowboy, Marathon Man). --Bret Fetzer
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![Cowboy Way [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5156DGQ5TPL._SL160_.jpg) |
Cowboy Way [VHS]
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $3.16
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Somebody in Hollywood thought there was some fish-out-of-water potential in this teaming of wild man Woody Harrelson and slow-burning Kiefer Sutherland as a pair of New Mexico cowboys who go to New York to tame the wild, wild, uh ... East. Well, they were mistaken, because this 1994 action-comedy is little more than a tiresome reworking of Crocodile Dundee. Woody and Kiefer head for the Big Apple to rescue the illegal-immigrant daughter of one of their rodeo buddies (who has mysteriously disappeared), and what they discover is a sweatshop operation run by a hot-tempered thug (Dylan McDermott, before his role on TV's The Practice). That's when the boys start using their ropin' and shootin' skills to foil the bad guys. One measure of this film's credibility is the inevitable scene of the boys riding on horseback through the gridlocked streets of Manhattan. Uh huh. You know how it goes... you just have to go with it or marvel at the sheer stupidity of it all. Of course, forget all the sniping if you're a fan of Harrelson or Sutherland--they're both doing their best under the burden of disadvantage. --Jeff Shannon
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![The Vanishing [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51HKZWGTHNL._SL160_.jpg) |
The Vanishing [VHS]
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $1.97
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It's not unusual for Hollywood to remake European hits. What is unusual is the director of the original getting the chance to helm the new version with an American cast, which is what happened with this film based on an intensely creepy Dutch film of the same name (both directed by George Sluizer). Kiefer Sutherland and Sandra Bullock are on vacation when, while stopped at a crowded rest area, she disappears. He devotes the next several years to discovering what happened to her, ruining his life in the process. When he does get a clue, it leads him to Jeff Bridges, who plays a bizarre and highly organized individual whose motives are almost as strange as he is. Bridges is spooky, but Sluizer ultimately is undone by Hollywood's demand for a happy ending, which makes this film affecting but far less unsettling than the original. --Marshall Fine
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24: The Complete Eighth Season
List Price: $59.98
Sale Price: $21.95
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Network television's most exciting series ends with a bang--a lot of bangs, in fact, along with multiple bams, whams, and booms---as 24 bows out with this six-disc set of episodes from its eighth and final season. As the action begins in New York City, Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland), now a grandfather, has retired from his gig at the Counter Terrorist Unit (CTU) and plans to move to California to be with his family. Yeah, right. When he learns of a plot to assassinate President Omar Hassan (Anil Kapoor) of the mythical Islamic Republic of Kamistan--who's set to join the U.S. president, Allison Taylor (Cherry Jones), and the Russian leader at the United Nations, where they will sign a historic agreement that will end Kamistan's nuclear program and bring lasting peace to the Middle East--Jack leaps right back into the fray. Needless to say, the plot thickens faster than the pools of congealed blood he inevitably leaves in his deadly wake. Who's behind the assassination scheme? Is it Hassan's power-hungry brother, who has no desire to give up his country's nukes, or is he in cahoots with bigger, more sinister forces? Are there even CTU operatives involved in these dastardly machinations? Can Jack trust a single soul other than himself? That he will get to the bottom of all of this (or the top, as a central conspiracy reaches to the very highest government levels) is a given. That he will indulge in some questionable tactics to do so, including cynically using his allies and brutally torturing his enemies (depicted in some intense and rather graphic scenes), is also expected, especially as his relationship with a disgraced former FBI agent (Annie Wersching) ups the personal ante for him to the point of near-madness. Whether he will survive this particular day intact, however, is another matter entirely. The makers of 24 have already shown that they're willing to go way over the top to preserve the central conceit (an entire season takes place in a single day, with each episode consuming one hour of that day), and the eighth season is no different. Plot twists that defy all credibility are not uncommon; there's no time to track down rumors or verify information, so the action tends to proceed in almost cartoon-like fashion. Many characters make cardboard look sturdy, especially the bad guys (a bunch of arrogant fools, craven traitors, and murderous louses). But that's what has made the show so addictive; it simply hurtles along, leaving no time to ask questions. And while the adventures of Jack Bauer, the ultimate one-man army, appear to be over for good, this season makes us wish that a day were just a bit longer then 24 hours. Bonus features include some extended episodes, "scenemakers" (detailed looks at certain scenes) for the majority of episodes, deleted scenes, and more. --Sam Graham
Studio: Tcfhe Release Date: 12/14/2010 Run time: 1197 minutes Rating: Nr
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The Three Musketeers
List Price: $14.99
Sale Price: $5.97
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A disney-ized retelling of dumas classic swashbuckling story of three swordsmen plus one of the disbanded french kings guard who seek to save their king from the scheming of the cardinal richelieu. Studio: Buena Vista Home Video Release Date: 09/03/2002 Starring: Charlie Sheen Tim Curry Run time: 105 minutes Rating: Pg Director: Stephen Herek
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24: Season Seven
List Price: $49.98
Sale Price: $19.99
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Stills from 24: Season Seven [Blu-ray] (Click for larger image)
Genre: Television: Fox TVRating: TV14Release Date: 19-MAY-2009Media Type: DVD
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24: Season 2: Minimates Box Sest
List Price: $14.99
Sale Price: $5.99
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Featuring Jack Bauer, Tony Almeda, Michelle Dessler, and George Mason, this all-star line-up brings another hit property into the Minimates Universe! Sculpted and designed by Art Asylum, each 2.5" Minimate features 14 points of articulation.
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Diamond Select Toys 24 9:00 PM Jack Bauer 12" Figure
List Price: $39.99
Sale Price: $49.91
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From the hit series 24 comes this all-new Jack Bauer limited action figure. Figure features a cloth outfit based on the decorated CTU agent's appearances during his first season "Day 1" adventures. Bauer wears a black uniform complete with "bullet-proof" vest and is sculpted by Bill Mancuso. Includes 25 points of articulation plus accessories. Measures 12" tall.
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Spider-Man Ultimate Power Game
List Price: $9.99
Sale Price: $10.94
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Eight seriously sinister villains are wrecking havoc on the streets of New York City. Help Spider-Man capture them and achieve the Ultimate Power. Includes eight Villian Cards, 22 Power-Up Spider Cards, 18 Daily Bugle Cards, four Spidey Chips, a card mat and game rules. For 2-4 players.
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2004 Jaime Pressly Playboy magazine
Sale Price: $14.95
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Table of Contents
COVER STORY
In the big-screen action flick Torque, Jaime Pressly revs engines as a motorcycle-riding villainess. Famed photographer Patrick Demarchelier had Jaime step away from the bike, onto the beach and out of her clothes. She rode the waves in her lingerie with our Rabbit.
FEATURES
60 THE PEOPLE VS. ROBERT BLAKE
Prep for the biggest celebrity murder trial since Of .'s with an exclusive look at the prosecution's case file: a day-by-day account of the lead detective's investigation, including peeks at victim Bonny Lee Bakley's shady connections, the bizarre police interviews with Blake and the damning "Kill Bonny" list. BY MILES CORWIN
72 DESTINATION MARS
Enthusiasm for space exploration has plummeted. Now the author of The Martian Chronicles argues for a renewed push toward the final frontier. BY RAY BRADBURY
INTERVIEW
55 KIEFER SUTHERLAND
PICTORIALS
66 THE YEAR IN SEX
Britney and Madonna played tongue tag, athletes played sexy games and protesters played naked peace games.
86 PLAYMATE: ALIYA WOLF
This Lone Star beauty is living proof that it can be fun to mess with Texas.
122 JAIME PRESSLY
Torque's torch reveals her simple side (and naked backside).
NOTES AND NEWS
11 A 50TH ANNIVERSARY FETE AT HEF'S
Jenny McCarthy, Pamela Anderson and other beauties toast the magazine that made them famous.
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Kiefer Sutherland: The Biography
List Price: $32.95
Sale Price: $2.72
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Kiefer Sutherland has not always led the pampered life of a son of celebrity parents. He has carved his own path, made his own mistakes, as well as some unusual and surprising life decisions along the way. "Kiefer Sutherland: The Biography" traces the actor's life from his childhood, through his parents' divorce to his struggle to break into acting and the success he has achieved today. He has appeared in almost 60 films but his role as Jack Bauer in 24 has given him a new, international audience. This biography explores his versatility as an actor, his involvement with the Brat Pack when he became known as a hellraiser, and the years when he turned his back on Hollywood to travel on the rodeo circuit. In this first biography of the notorious actor, the author will explore the relationships in Kiefer's life: the unique and enduring bond with his father, Donald Sutherland, and his chequered love life including the cancellation of his wedding to Julia Roberts. Bestselling writer Laura Jackson examines closely the many aspects of the actor's life revealing his true story for the first time.
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Kiefer Sutherland: Living Dangerously
List Price: $25.00
Sale Price: $10.55
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Television views know Kiefer Sutherland as the no-hold barred U.S. counter-terrorist agent Jack Bauer. However, the life of this colorful Canadian actor has also been filled with action, danger, and trouble. His long-time friend, Christopher Heard documents Kiefer's dramatic story.
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Tommy Douglas: The Road to Jerusalem (A Western Canadian Classic)
List Price: $24.95
Sale Price: $15.68
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2004 marks the 100th anniversary of Tommy Douglas's birth, and the beginning of production of a CBC mini-series about his life Tommy Douglas was a Baptist preacher who organized his church as a relief centre for the poor in the hungry 1930s and rose to become a political legend in Saskatchewan, winning five straight majority governments and transforming the province. This acclaimed biography, written by a longtime friend and associate, closely follows his life through his working-class childhood and his boxing and political careers on the prairies to his years of national prominence as an advocate for peace, human rights, and Canadian independence. Douglas chose a hard road: in provincial government and federal opposition, he faced continuing hostility from mainstream institutions and the media. Often, though, his seemingly radical proposals simply anticipated later events. The Saskatchewan governments medicare program provoked a bitter doctors strike and continent-wide controversy in 1961, but the program proved to be a success, and medicare was soon introduced across Canada with the support of all political parties. Tommy Douglas is still remembered as one of the countrys most eloquent orators and as a critic of the status quo. He was passionate in opposition to corporate power and in defence of Canadian nationalism; his refusal to support the War Measures Act during the terrorist scare of 1970 earned widespread condemnation, but is also considered by some to have been his finest hour.
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Amazon.Com
Here are some more information for Keifer Sutherland:

The Big Fish, On Fire: Rumblefish CEO Paul Anthony Turns Catastrophe Into Opportunity
It’s a pretty safe bet that Paul Anthony is the only chief executive in America who commutes to work in a fish, a three-wheeled single-seat electric car customized into a rolling corporate logo. And he’s probably the only CEO in Portland, Oregon, with a mohawk. Actually, it’s more of a fauxhawk, a tuft of brightly dyed red-orange atop his crown that, standing on end, frozen en mousse, suggests a tongue of flame. Which is ironic, given that Anthony’s business, Rumblefish—a “sonic branding” and music marketing company that has achieved national fame by licensing the work of Oregon musicians to Hollywood studios, video-game manufacturers, banks, shoe stores, beer companies and what have you—was gutted by fire one summer morning in 2004.
Weeks after the conflagration, the charred smell of his corporate headquarters still reeked like a freshly doused campfire, the charcoal smell overpowering, eye-watering and almost unbearable. In the middle of the recording studio (or rather, what was left of it), Anthony sat atop an electric organ—its fused plastic keys resembling chunks of melted mozzarella—considering a nearby stack of singed drums leaning as precipitously as the Tower of Pisa. “That was the first new drum set I bought since I was a kid,” said Anthony, then 27, dressed in a black motorcycle tee and jeans, and whose profile suggests a young Keifer Sutherland.
The Big Fish—his official title at the company—was in a bit of a funk. Not only had his HQ been burned to a crisp, but his pride and joy and surefire head-turner, the Fishmobile, a one-seater electric car masquerading as a chubby gray shark, with side-view mirrors for eyebrows rumbling down the road with the percussive force of a howitzer-like subwoofer, also had been out of commission for weeks, languishing in a repair shop in Eugene, awaiting new batteries. It was a day before demolition, and rebuilding. Again.
Earlier that year, Anthony and his ten employees, along with the company’s attorney and board of directors, had closed the business for a top-to-bottom remodel, bolting stainless-steel diamond plate onto the walls and stairs, enlisting a team of graffiti artists to add a bit of color to the concrete floors (“TAKE ME TO YOUR MUSIC”). All told, the makeover had taken nearly a month, at a cost of $50,000. Up in smoke.
Anthony had incorporated Rumblefish (then Alcala Entertainment) in 1995, when he was a freshman music major at the University of Oregon, selling classroom compositions to independent filmmakers and licensing the work of his fellow students. Now he represents more than 250 artists from 17 countries (most are local unknowns), and his company supplies music (tens of thousands of titles) to marketing departments at Adidas, Pabst Blue Ribbon and Umpqua Bank (deploying a fleet of Umpqua-branded ice-cream trucks blaring Rumblefish music through the streets of Portland and Arcata, Calif.), as well as background music used in television shows like The Shield and The Sopranos. A day before the fire, Rumblefish had been poised to finish the most profitable quarter in its nine-year history.
That night, Anthony had worked until midnight, helping a young vocalist polish songs for her debut album. She had wanted to work on another track, and he wanted to call it a day, so he told her to lock up and didn’t think twice about the candles burning on the sill of the control-room window. The phone rang in his downtown Portland home at 6:30 in the morning—the alarm company, reporting that a motion sensor had been triggered by the recording studio door, aflame and falling off its hinges. Several minutes later, peering through the plate-glass storefront window, Anthony had assumed the blinds had been drawn. Then he unlocked the door and discovered a chest-high curtain of smoke inside. He dialed 911 on his cell phone, ran into the building and yelled, but nobody was there. He grabbed the fire extinguisher and emptied it in one burst, to no effect. He was just about to dash into the control room to retrieve computer hard drives, the digitized métier of every Rumblefish artist, when a police officer pulled him, screaming, from the building. “You don’t understand! This is my business!”
Anthony just stood there at the curb as one fire truck after another—seven in all, he recalls—arrived, closing off the street. Firefighters in respirators bearing chainsaws, picks and axes climbed onto the roof while others rushed inside pulling hoses. They doused the flames, then paraded out of the building with scorched and melted guitars, amplifiers and drums, which were dumped onto the pavement.
“It was a huge pile of burnt Rumblefish, a smoking heap on the street,” recalls Anthony, who convened an emergency meeting that morning at a nearby pub, first to take roll call and make sure the building had indeed been empty (it had), then to reassure his employees that all had not been lost. True to form, opened the session by establishing an anthem for his own disaster, singing the refrain from Bill Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” (that summer, the song was No. 1 on Rumblefish’s “Fire of ’04 Playlist”).
“It was terrifying, but one thing I realized is that when things go wrong, all heads look at you,” says Anthony. “That’s how entrepreneurship works. I was telling everybody: The stuff in that building, it’s just stuff. That’s all it is. You don’t need stuff to be a successful business. I started this company in a dorm room with $400 and an idea. How could a fire possibly stop me?”
About the Author
Written by: tkatauskas (for uwemp.com)
Your favorite Keifer Sutherland or Denzel Washington Movie?
lol, i know it's a weird combo...
mine: Lost boys and Out of Time
lol..okay, it doesn't have to be your abs favorite...but one that you saw and you fancy it.
Keifer~~Lost Boys, Young Guns
Denzel~~Training Day. Totally different character than he normally plays.
Movies - Corning, NY - The Corning Leader
Oscar parties have been around for years, but for those without invitations — or those of us who’d rather not don tuxes and create themed potluck dishes (steak “Avatar”-tar, anyone?) — missed out on the fun.
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