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April May June
List Price: $15.00
Sale Price: $15.00
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Seventeen years after its original release, Subterraneans' debut album April May June remains their most difficult customer. Recorded in desperate limbo at the tail end it's chief instigator's serious drug problem, there is nowhere to hide from the existential nihilism therein. Awkward and painful, this is nevertheless a record with real guts. Jude Rawlins' unwillingness to go quietly, aged just twenty but with a shockingly intense five year rollercoaster of a musical career already behind him, is caught on the fascinating cusp of artistic maturity; somewhere within these grooves death was outrun, teen angst replaced with a defiant will to live, and all of it captured on vinyl. Frequently devastating upon the first listen, those with the strength to return will hear hope emerging with every renewed appreciation. This is the sound of battle being done, music being made as some pretty hefty demons are wrestled and, thankfully, defeated. Not for the faint hearted, this is music for the Orwellian nightmare. With hindsight, it rocks and is ultimately a force for good, Subterraneans continued existence and development is testament to that. They won the battle and the war, but when they made April May June that outcome was still far from certain. As such, this album is a magnificent curiosity, noisy and compassionate. Subterraneans have never patronised their audience, so if you want instant karma and rockin' larks, this is probably not the record for you. But if you're looking for a violent and demanding existential workout, look no further.This product is manufactured on demand using CD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.
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![The Name of the Rose [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21QPB3PM5GL._SL160_.jpg) |
The Name of the Rose [VHS]
List Price: $14.99
Sale Price: $16.78
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Jean-Jacques Annaud's The Name of the Rose is a flawed attempt to adapt Umberto Eco's highly convoluted medieval bestseller for the screen, necessarily excising much of the esoterica that made the book so compelling. Still, what's left is a riveting whodunit set in a grimly and grimily realistic 14th-century Benedictine monastery populated by a parade of grotesque characters, all of whom spend their time lurking in dark places or scuttling, half-unseen, in the omnipresent gloom. A series of mysterious and gruesome deaths are somehow tied up with the unwelcome attention of the Inquisition, sent to root out suspected heretical behavior among the monastic scribes whose lives are dedicated to transcribing ancient manuscripts for their famous library, access to which is prevented by an ingenious maze-like layout. Enter Sean Connery as investigator-monk William of Baskerville (the Sherlock Holmes connection made explicit in his name) and his naive young assistant Adso (a youthful Christian Slater). The Grand Inquisitor Bernado Gui (F. Murray Abraham) suspects devilry; but William and Adso, using Holmesian forensic techniques, uncover a much more human cause: the secrets of the library are being protected at a terrible cost. A fine international cast and the splendidly evocative location compensate for a screenplay that struggles to present Eco's multifaceted story even partially intact; Annaud's idiosyncratic direction complements the sinister, unsettling aura of the tale ideally. --Mark Walker
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![La Belle Noiseuse [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5145HF7V22L._SL160_.jpg) |
La Belle Noiseuse [VHS]
List Price: $29.95
Sale Price: $32.90
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La Belle Noiseuse is a thrilling and unconventional drama about the responsibility of an artist to his vision and the conflicts that arise when such responsibility is perceived as a threat to others. Michel Piccoli (Le Doulos) delivers one of his finest, most lived-in performances as Edouard Frenhofer, a famous painter living with his artist wife Liz (Jane Birkin) on a spacious estate in the French countryside. Frenhofer has lacked inspiration for a decade and has given up on painting. The idea behind his unfinished masterpiece, La Belle Noiseuse ("The Beautiful Troublemaker"), has been seemingly unattainable for a decade; Liz was the original model for it, and Frenhofer's exhaustion with the project has an emotional parallel to his dispassionate relationship with her. Along comes a rising artist, Nicolas (David Bursztein), who suggests that his girlfriend, Marianne (Emmanuelle Béart), a writer, could help Frenhofer jumpstart the painting's completion. From this point, most of La Belle Noiseuse becomes a remarkable, seemingly unedited and privileged look at the development of a bond between artist and muse. Béart, fiercely brilliant, spends the majority of the film nude and continually molded into sometimes-painful positions as Frenhofer struggles--sketch after sketch, paint upon paint--to find something beyond the obviousness of Marianne's body. As the two struggle to meet each other halfway, Liz and Nicolas feel marginalized and jealous, putting pressure on Frenhofer to disregard such personal concerns or give in to them. Adapted by French New Wave master Jacques Rivette from a story by Honore de Balzac, the lengthy La Belle Noiseuse is fascinated by the artistic process; it is itself a patient process of watching ideas and aesthetic courage reveal themselves in the face of extraneous aversion. --Tom Keogh
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![Name of the Rose [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51KH4947H5L._SL160_.jpg) |
Name of the Rose [VHS]
List Price: $14.95
Sale Price: $12.99
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Jean-Jacques Annaud's The Name of the Rose is a flawed attempt to adapt Umberto Eco's highly convoluted medieval bestseller for the screen, necessarily excising much of the esoterica that made the book so compelling. Still, what's left is a riveting whodunit set in a grimly and grimily realistic 14th-century Benedictine monastery populated by a parade of grotesque characters, all of whom spend their time lurking in dark places or scuttling, half-unseen, in the omnipresent gloom. A series of mysterious and gruesome deaths are somehow tied up with the unwelcome attention of the Inquisition, sent to root out suspected heretical behavior among the monastic scribes whose lives are dedicated to transcribing ancient manuscripts for their famous library, access to which is prevented by an ingenious maze-like layout. Enter Sean Connery as investigator-monk William of Baskerville (the Sherlock Holmes connection made explicit in his name) and his naive young assistant Adso (a youthful Christian Slater). The Grand Inquisitor Bernado Gui (F. Murray Abraham) suspects devilry; but William and Adso, using Holmesian forensic techniques, uncover a much more human cause: the secrets of the library are being protected at a terrible cost. A fine international cast and the splendidly evocative location compensate for a screenplay that struggles to present Eco's multifaceted story even partially intact; Annaud's idiosyncratic direction complements the sinister, unsettling aura of the tale ideally. --Mark Walker
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The Name of the Rose
List Price: $12.98
Sale Price: $17.68
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Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 09/27/2005
Jean-Jacques Annaud's The Name of the Rose is a flawed attempt to adapt Umberto Eco's highly convoluted medieval bestseller for the screen, necessarily excising much of the esoterica that made the book so compelling. Still, what's left is a riveting whodunit set in a grimly and grimily realistic 14th-century Benedictine monastery populated by a parade of grotesque characters, all of whom spend their time lurking in dark places or scuttling, half-unseen, in the omnipresent gloom. A series of mysterious and gruesome deaths are somehow tied up with the unwelcome attention of the Inquisition, sent to root out suspected heretical behavior among the monastic scribes whose lives are dedicated to transcribing ancient manuscripts for their famous library, access to which is prevented by an ingenious maze-like layout. Enter Sean Connery as investigator-monk William of Baskerville (the Sherlock Holmes connection made explicit in his name) and his naive young assistant Adso (a youthful Christian Slater). The Grand Inquisitor Bernado Gui (F. Murray Abraham) suspects devilry; but William and Adso, using Holmesian forensic techniques, uncover a much more human cause: the secrets of the library are being protected at a terrible cost. A fine international cast and the splendidly evocative location compensate for a screenplay that struggles to present Eco's multifaceted story even partially intact; Annaud's idiosyncratic direction complements the sinister, unsettling aura of the tale ideally. --Mark Walker
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King David
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $35.99
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Gere stars as the lowly shepherd boy whose bravery led him to the throne of Israel.Genre: Feature Film-DramaRating: PG13Release Date: 7-MAR-2006Media Type: DVD
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William Birkin and Sherry
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Character figures Sherry and William Biakin. "A bizarre incident that occurred at a research facility in the outskirts of Raccoon City was revealed to have been caused by the release of the T-Virus, a mutagenetic toxin created by the international enterprise known as the Umbrella Corporation." :-)
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Bringing Home the Birkin: My Life in Hot Pursuit of the World's Most Coveted Handbag
List Price: $14.99
Sale Price: $5.49
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For more than twenty years, the HermÈs Birkin bag has been the iconic symbol of fashion, luxury, and wealth. With a fabled waiting list of more than two years to purchase one, the average fashionista has a better chance of climbing Mount Everest in Prada pumps than of possessing this coveted carryall. Unless, of course, she happens to know Michael Tonello. . . . With down-to-earth wit, Michael Tonello chronicles the unusual ventures that took him to nearly every continentand from eBay to Paris auction houses and into the lives of celebrities and poseurs alikeon the road to becoming a successful entrepreneur and Robin Hood to thousands of desperate rich women.
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Amazon.Com
Here are some more information for William Birkin:

The Name of the Rose
Starring Sean Connery, F. Murray Abraham, Christian Slater, Elya Baskin, Feodor Chaliapin, Jr., and William Hickey.
Directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud
Screenplay by Andrew Birkin, Gerard Brach, Howard Franklin, and Alain Godard. Based on the novel by Umberto Eco.
I felt like poisoning a monk.
- Umberto Eco, on why he wrote The Name of the Rose
With his bestselling book, Umberto Eco poisoned enough monks to keep both heaven and hell busy awhile. Director Jean-Jacques Annaud (Quest for Fire) kills them all again in his film adaptation of The Name of the Rose.
Where the novel was a satisfying and complex mystery that inspired the intellect, the film is a satisfying and complex mystery that inspires indigestion.
Annaud had sense enough to keep most of the plot - and even manages to create much of the mood - of the original, but those who've read Eco's work know his concerns went beyond plot and mood. The novel was as much a treatise on the history of the Church and the philosophies of Aristotle, Aquinas, and Bacon as it was a homicidal thriller. A rich and multi-layered piece of pop entertainment, it was spared from didactical oblivion by its convincing portrait of life in the intriguing 14th century Italian abbey that served as the story's cornerstone.
Sean Connery plays William of Baskerville (an obvious reference to Sherlock Holmes, William's literary progenitor), a Franciscan monk who travels with his novice, Adso of Melk (Christian Slater), to the abbey for an upcoming debate with delegates of the Papacy over the issue of poverty in the Church. He soon discovers a series of murders in the abbey, mysteries aptly suited to his humanist philosophies and cunning logic.
A central problem with this film is that William's logic is too cunning. In condensing Eco's massive 600-page novel, Annaud and his writers removed the thrill of the chase.
Eco's William was a model of medieval intelligentsia, yes - but one that made mistakes. The novel was peppered with mental cul-de-sacs and frequent frustration. Annaud's William isn't given the time to make mistakes. At two and a quarter hours, there's barely enough time to kill off everyone, set the clues, and wrap up the whole fiasco with one fell swoop of Aristotelian logic.
It's all too damn pat.
There are other problems with Annaud's film. The casting, for one. While Sean Connery is very good here - freeing himself of the Bond-age of his earlier work - much of the cast seems disappointing. Slater, as the novice, is required to show little more than terror, which quickly wears thin. F. Murray Abraham (who won an Academy Award as Salieri in Amadeus) is properly evil as the Inquisitor Bernardo Gui - pronounced "Gooey" by his detractors - but his is an obviously truncated performance.
And the casting of the bit players is downright intrusive. Instead of developing believable characters, Annaud substitutes character faces, turning the abbey into a circus sideshow. It all plays like something out of a P.T. Barnum nightmare.
Annaud changes the feel of Eco's work in subtler ways, too, as when Adso is seduced by a village peasant girl (Valentina Vargas). Eco used this scene to good effect, showing a young celibate monk's necessary reconciliation of his love for the Virgin Mary with his fleshly desires. For Adso, it was the ultimate Madonna-whore syndrome, and a major turning point in his quest for personal spirituality.
In the book, it worked wonderfully, but Annaud doesn't give this moral dilemma the time it requires to play effectively onscreen. Instead, he gives us a racy love scene and then glosses over Adso's moral anguish and confusion.
The best thing in this film is the abbey itself. Production designer Dante Feretti (who has collaborated with Fredrico Fellini in such films as And the Ship Sails On and Ginger and Fred) supervised the construction of a massive monastery on a mountaintop just outside of Rome, and the filmmakers reportedly looked at more than 300 abbeys before settling on Kloster Eberbach, near Frankfort in West Germany, for the interior scenes. All this attention to detail pays off visually, and Tonino Delli Colli's photography beautifully captures the remarkable scenery.
And there's no denying that the film's climax - as the burning of heretics is juxtaposed with the burning of the abbey itself - is breathtaking.
Still, The Name of the Rose is destined to disappoint those who read the novel. Annaud seems to have realized this, and terms this film a palimpsest of Umberto Eco's novel. Like a palimpsest, you can almost see the original beneath Annaud's cinematic overly.
The Name of the Rose should have been a thrilling and enlightening experience. What we get instead is Arthur Canon Doyle.
David Wisehart is the editor of The Wisehart Review - movies, books, and more! Visit http://www.wisehartreview.com/
Tricks Of A&f To Be Survived In Economic Crisis
The economic crisis was a big change. After finishing the change, what was left will be the industrial core of the luxury goods which the scale was relatively smaller and the strength was stronger. The latest survey shows that you want to survive the depression, about the brand - you can make use of small profits policy, or insist on superior quality and brand image, rely on the support of loyal customers, tide over the crisis.Top 5 Spring/Summer 2010 abercrombie Trend
Because the price factors were more sensitive during the recession, most brands would weather the storm with reducing their price. 5 Hot abercrombie Trend for July However, there were still a few brands chose the firmly position, refusing to compromise the precarious situation. Hey Buddy!! abercrombie & fitch is Soundest for Grandma in 2009 The representatives are Chanel, Louis Vuitton and Hermès. The price of Chanel famous diamond-type lattice hand bag remain high, and rise in fierce circumstance. Louis Vuitton has been maintaining a steady profitable trend insisting on not discounting, having created a high-quality image, by its own superiority in the Asian market. The high prices of Hermès help it to get rid of a large portion of, while a tradition of limited and customized services helps it save unnecessary upfront investment. Fashion blog Bagsnob.com said: [I believe that true luxury consumers are not subject to the economic crisis, because their income is not likely to be calculated as monthly salary." The wife of Beckham is a good proof who is crazy to buy Birkin bags.Have a Look at the Reasons of the Popularity of abercrombie and fitch
Conversely, as middle-class consumers turned to look for inexpensive alternatives, such as mid-range brands like Coach Daoshi won their own spring. The "W Score" report, Coach with a score of 92.7 won first place in the competitiveness of the throne. Williams said:"On the basis of high priced products, aiming at consumers' minds in the recession, Coach launches some products more price friendly. Such a measure is very effective. I think the key of the company's success is that it follows consumers' needs closely."
Of course, even profitable brands can not avoid the impact of economic environment in the same market. When Chanel lay off 200 employees earlier This Year, Hermès CEO Patrick Thomas clearly said: [We are faced with crisis, the entire luxury industry can not turn a blind eye to this situation. It is impossible of Hermès to keep out of the affair." Under this situation, the brand must use every little money. Chanel did not cut off its "Paris-Moscow" advanted handwork series and "Paris-Venice" early spring holiday series to cut down expensees. Moreover, the two films reflect the life of Coco Chanel, "the young Chanel" (Coco avant Chanel) and the "Chanel and Stravinsky" (Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky) was also released in 2009. Chanel has always maintained a high media exposure, its acquisition of seven workshops will provide customers with hand implies that the superb quality of their products.
Brands which insist on non-discount policy are not limited to high-end luxury products. Outdoor brand-Timberland still decided to expand its high-end line of Timberland Boot Co .under the grim situation. This brand relies on its years of accumulated loyal customers. Yet Abercrombie & Fitch pesists in non-discount in peril of losing money. According to a report, net loss of this company reached highly to 26.8 million dollars at one time, and sales volumn in May reduced 23.5 percent comparing to same period of last year. "We spent a lot of years to build the brand, and our competitiveness was in quality, style and shopping experience, rather than price. "A&F CEO Mike Jeffries said. GaryWilliams gave a positive assessment about the measures of A & F: "Although their situation became critical, from the perspective of the brand image, they still had the strong competitiveness."
About the Author
Do you know who that Strange, Insane looking scientist guy is in the resident evil 5 video game?
He looks like "William Birkin" and you can see what I'm refering to if you look in the newest trailer which recently came out for Resident Evil 5.
i didnt konw either, i went online and searched for hours, he is either: william birkin, new character, or the guy who was arrested in resident evil degeneration. thats what i found. good luck dude.
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