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Kill Bill Lunchbox
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $18.99
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Kill Bill Quentin Tarantino Movie Metal Lunchbox With ThermosBRAND NEW ITEM!Officially LicensedLunchbox comes with a matching thermos!Lunchbox Size: 8.5" x 6.75" x 3.75"Thermos Size: 6.25" tall, 3.25" diameter.
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Charlie's Angels Barrymore, Diaz & Liu 16x20 Photo
Sale Price: $29.95
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Show support for your favorite celebrity or athlete with a high quality photo! This 16x20 will look great displayed in any fan's home or office. Many other photos available, including movie stills, actors & actresses, musicians, athletes, and more!
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House of Flying Daggers
List Price: $14.94
Sale Price: $5.49
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No one uses color like Chinese director Zhang Yimou--movies like Raise the Red Lantern or Hero, though different in tone and subject matter, are drenched in rich, luscious shades of red, blue, yellow, and green. House of Flying Daggers is no exception; if they weren't choreographed with such vigorous imagination, the spectacular action sequences would seem little more than an excuse for vivid hues rippling across the screen. Government officers Leo and Jin (Asian superstars Andy Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro) set out to destroy an underground rebellion called the House of Flying Daggers (named for their weapon of choice, a curved blade that swoops through the air like a boomerang). Their only chance to find the rebels is a blind women named Mei (Ziyi Zhang, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) who has some lethal kung fu moves of her own. In the guise of an aspiring rebel, Jin escorts Mei through gorgeous forests and fields that become bloody battlegrounds as soldiers try to kill them both. While arrows and spears of bamboo fly through the air, Mei, Jin, and Leo turn against each other in surprising ways, driven by passion and honor. Zhang's previous action/art film, Hero, sometimes sacrificed momentum for sheer visual beauty; House of Flying Daggers finds a more muscular balance of aesthetic splendor and dazzling swordplay. --Bret Fetzer
A pair of police deputies at the end of China's Tang Dynasty attempt to save a beautiful dancer, with revolutionary ties, from capture.Genre: Feature Film-Action/AdventureRating: PG13Release Date: 1-JAN-2007Media Type: DVD
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The Forbidden Kingdom
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $2.50
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Individually, they've starred in the most adrenaline-pumping martial-arts adventures ever. Together for the first time, Jet Li and Jackie Chan join forces to create the greatest epic of them all - THE FORBIDDEN KINGDOM. As ancient Chinese warriors, they must train and mentor a 21st Century kung-fu fanatic who's been summoned to fight a centuries-old battle and free the imprisoned Monkey King. If you're a fighting fan, the wait is over. The team is ready. The Kingdom has arrived.
Getting martial-arts superstars Jet Li and Jackie Chan together in the same action film is like a fantasy come true, even if The Forbidden Kingdom is more of a children's movie than an instant kung-fu classic. Yes, Li and Chan square off in a lengthy, acrobatic fight scene that is a lot of fun, though it can't be what such a scene might have been even a decade ago: careful editing now compensates for the 54-year-old Chan's slower moves and reflexes. Still, Chan doesn't disappoint as Lu Yan, a drunken immortal in ancient China who mentors a modern-day American kid, Jason (Michael Angarano), the latter having slipped into the past while in possession of a magical staff that belongs to the imprisoned Monkey King (Li). In order to get back to his own time and help an old friend (also Chan) wounded by thugs, Jason accompanies Lu Yan and a lovely warrior, Golden Sparrow (Liu Yifei), on a journey to return the staff. Along the way, a (mostly) silent monk (Li, again), who has spent his life in search of the staff, joins their mission. He helps Lu Yan train Jason in fighting and adding more muscle to the party as it comes under siege from a violent witch (Li Bing Bing) and pathological warlord (Collin Chou). Screenwriter John Fusco (Hidalgo) and director Rob Minkoff (The Haunted Mansion) have made a slightly chintzy, Western version of a Chinese swords-and-sorcery tale. The gravity-defying, flying-through-the-air-while-fighting choreography looks pretty choppy and graceless compared to, say, the martial arts films of Zhang Yimou. But The Forbidden Kingdom is really aimed at kids, not aficionados of epic fight movies. On that score, the movie aims to please and does so for the right audience. -- Tom Keogh Beyond The Forbidden Kingdom on DVD The Forbidden Kingdom Soundtrack Stills from The Forbidden Kingdom (click for larger image)
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Afro Samurai: Resurrection - Director's Cut
List Price: $19.98
Sale Price: $5.25
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The feature film Resurrection amps up the adventures of Afro Samurai, the Black warrior who debuted on Spike TV in 2007. Taciturn and deadly, Afro (voiced by Samuel L. Jackson) wanders through an anachronistic, post-apocalyptic world, accompanied by motor-mouth Ninja-Ninja (also Jackson). This time, his nemesis is not the maniacal Justice from the series, but Sio (Lucy Liu), an embittered beauty who hates Afro for nearly killing her brother Jinno. She has Professor Dharman (S. Scott Bullock) recreate Afro's father from a jawbone stolen from his grave, a scheme that leads to the ultimate Oedipal showdown. The original series was rendered primarily in brooding grays, accented by spatters of red blood; Resurrection uses brilliant blues, oranges, and reds to underscore the conflicts. Hiphop artist RZA contributes another eclectic, moody score. But the over-the-top action can't disguise that the icy, silent Afro is a very limited character: he lacks the humanity that redeems the equally deadly swordsman Kenshin Himura in Rurouni Kenshin. Resurrection is clearly intended as an installment in a ongoing franchise. Afro kills the warrior Shichigoro (Liam O'Brien) in front of Kotaro (Zachary Gordon), his adopted son. At the end of the film, Afro sees Kotaro clutching his father's sword, tells him, "Anytime you're ready," and walks into the distance. Although the many extras stress that Afro-Samurai: Resurrection was a Japanese-American co- production, the film is presented only in English. (Unrated, suitable for ages 17 and older: graphic violence, violence against women, profanity, sexual activity, grotesque imagery, nudity, risqué humor, alcohol and tobacco use) --Charles Solomon
Studio: Funimation Prod Inc Release Date: 02/03/2009
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Liv Fashion Doll - Alexis with Bichonfrise
List Price: $21.99
Sale Price: $15.49
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LIV Fashion Alexis Doll come with a detailed outfit; a long wig and a short wig. She even has a bag; boots and red brush. Alexis is poseable and has real eyes. Every doll comes with a unique code that allows girls to enter the LIV world online.Introducing the sensational NEW world of LIV dolls! Real girls. Real life. Join Katie; Daniela; Sophie and Alexis on their teen adventures in fun and fashion! Each girl has a unique personality and comes with a code that allows you to enter the LIV world on line; where there's even more fun with your new BFFs! Outrageous makeovers; talking about boys; getting dolled up at the boutique or just chillin' and laughing with your girls; you'll never get bored in LIV world! LIV in our world! www.LIVworld.com
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![Erector Radio Control Tuning Street Racer Set, 368 Pieces]() |
Erector Radio Control Tuning Street Racer Set, 368 Pieces
List Price: $69.99
Sale Price: $59.95
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This radio controlled 3 model Tuner Motorized Street Racer Set includes a 6v motor with 368 parts. It includes light and music system, transmitter and full function chassis. It builds 3 different full function RC vehicles a car, a cab and a truck to tune up you.
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Armored Core: Silent Line
List Price: $39.99
Sale Price: $34.98
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Expansion to Armored Core 3, with several new enhancements over the previous game; the most compelling of which is the long-awaited analog control.
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China, Portrait of a Country
List Price: $59.99
Sale Price: $32.54
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The People's Republic seen by Chinese photographers. This book brings together a vast selection of images by Chinese photographers since 1949, giving readers a visual journey across the great People's Republic; edited by esteemed photojournalist Liu Heung Shing, longtime Associated Press correspondent and Time magazine contributor. In post-Mao China, late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping urged his one billion countrymen to "seek truth from facts." Taking its cue from Deng's overture, China today is the leading economic story of the 21st century. The process by which China navigated the path from periphery to a central position in world affairs dominates the debate about Asia and China's relationship to the western world. Pulitzer-winning photojournalist Liu Heung Shing charts the visual history of sixty years of the People's Republic (1949 to 2008), and along the way aims to illustrate the humanistic course.
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The Alberta High School Math Competitions 1957-2006: A Canadian Problem Book
List Price: $61.50
Sale Price: $55.95
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Although there were some older contests in the Maritime region and in Lower and Upper Canada, the Alberta High School Mathematics Competition was the first and oldest in Canada to be run on a provincial scale. Started in 1957, the competition recently celebrated its fiftieth anniversary. These fifty years can be broken down to three periods, Ancient (1957-1966), Medieval (1967-1983) and Modern (1984-2006), with very distinctive flavors which reflect what was taught in the schools of the day. The first two periods are primarily of historical interest. During the Modern period, the talented problem committee was led by the world renown problemist Murray Klamkin, and composed many innovative and challenging problems.In this book you will find all the problems and answers for the first fifty years of the competition, up to 2005/2006 and full solutions are provided to those from the Modern period, often supplemented with multiple solutions or additional commentaries. Taken together, this unique collection of problems represent an interesting and valuable resource for students today preparing for these types of mathematics contests. The Alberta High School Mathematics Competitions 1957-2006: A Canadian Problem Book is published by the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) in collaboration with the Canadian Mathematical Society (CMS). It is the second volume in The Canadian Collection.
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The Olympics and Political Games
With news stories focusing on human rights abuse, terrorism, air pollution and doping, it seems that the Olympics are not what they once were. The long-awaited Beijing Olympic Games finally begin this Friday but can they transcend the politics? Can we still be touched by the Olympic spirit?
Growing up in the 1980s, my Olympic heroes were Coe, Ovett and Cram, Carl Lewis, Daley Thompson, and Torvill and Dean. I loved the story of Jesse Owens versus the Nazis and even our feeble Eddie the Eagle pulled at the heartstrings. Into the 1990s and beyond, Redgrave, Pinsent and Co were proper Olympians with Kelly Holmes and Amir Khan providing some inspirational Olympic stories in 2004.
Over the next few weeks, I'll be looking out for our men's fours rowing team and little Tom Daley, diving for team GB at just 14 years old. But repression of political activists, detention without trial - featuring the scary Re-education Through Labour (RTL) scheme - and censorship in China are unfortunately overshadowing the competition for me and many others at the moment.
This is a great shame for the athletes involved but actually nothing new. Politics have been prominent in the Olympic Games since 1936 when Hitler hijacked them as a piece of Nazi propaganda. Happily, black athletes like the American Jesse Owens were there to dispel the myth of Aryan supremacy.
The 1956 Olympics held in Melbourne, Australia were boycotted by various nations for numerous reasons and 1968 saw the volatile Mexico City games. Two black American medallists, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, gave the black power salute during the United States anthem and were subsequently expelled from the games. Student protesters also tried to use the Olympics to raise awareness of the authoritarian Mexican government.
Tragically, this ultimately culminated in the gunning down of more than 200 protesters by government forces in October 1968, just days before the games began. It emerged many years later that the US government had supported the Mexican authorities with weapons, ammunition, radios and riot control training in an attempt to prevent disruption to the Olympic Games.
The Munich games in 1972 were hijacked by Palestinian terrorists, with eleven Israeli athletes being kidnapped and eventually killed. Hard to imagine how the Olympics could recover from such a shocking event.
In 1976 the Olympics in Montreal were riddled with boycotts, drug allegations and debts. The 1980 Olympics saw the largest boycott ever with the United States and 61 other countries refusing to enter the games in protest against the USSR's invasion of Afghanistan. In response, the USSR, East Germany, Cuba and 14 other nations boycotted the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984. Incidentally, this was the first Olympic games for the People's Republic of China.
Numerous countries around the world have been close to boycotting the Beijing Games, but so far it does not look like this will happen. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) granted Beijing the games in July 2001 under the proviso that human rights in China would improve. Many people believe that the Olympics can be used as a positive political force, citing the banning of South Africa between 1964 and 1992. They believe that this was instrumental in forcing the country to allow black and white athletes to participate together in national sport, a significant step towards equal rights and the end of the oppressive apartheid regime.
According to Amnesty International's website, Liu Jingmin, Vice-President of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Bid Committee said in April 2001:
"By allowing Beijing to host the Games you will help the development of human rights."
Jacques Rogge, President of the IOC declared at the time:
"We are convinced that the Olympic Games will improve the human rights record in China."
In April 2008 Rogge had to remind the Chinese government of their commitment to human rights and ask them to respect it. Only time will tell if they do so.
Over the last twenty years or so, scandals involving perfomance-enhancing drugs have probably eclipsed the political Olympic storms. This has added to the negativity surrounding the Olympic Games and perhaps means that the audience is now more cynical and less impressed than in the old days.
But the majority of the athletes participating in the Olympics have legitimately reached the pinnacle of their sport and deserve our respect. Why not put aside our concerns and cynicism once the opening ceremony starts and just enjoy the thing? Accept that politics are part and parcel of any event involving the nations of the world, and ignore it. Why not let the Chinese people be proud of their athletes and their culture? Why not celebrate outstanding human achievement? Why not let the Olympics bring us together, just for a few weeks?
About the Author
Max Clarke is a copywriter for holiday services company, Holiday Extras, currently writing about Gatwick airport parking,Manchester airport hotels and Heathrow airport parking.
Liu Xiang Tyson gay Olympic schedule
can someone give me the schedule of when liu Xiang and Tyson gay will be performing in the Olympics and some things that are a must see in the olympics. p.s. ( im already watching the basketball games during the olympics)
/ Must see:
USA Men's basketball
USA Men's Swim (Michael Phelps)
Mens 26 Mile Race
Men's Gymnastics (Rings: Iron Cross)
Amico Games Corp. Commences Development of New JAVA(TM) Game "Journey to the West Online II"
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - March 18, 2010) - Amico Games Corp. ( OTCBB : AMCG ), an information technology company specializing in developing and operating mobile phone multiplayer networked games, today announces that the Company has commenced development of a new JAVAT mobile phone game, Journey to the West Online II . Preliminary work began in October 2009 and the finished product ...
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