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Date: 4 Nov 1999 14:25:02 -0000
From: nana36@tomail.com.tw
Subject: Re: [MV] American Pie?
That's right! I have the same feeling with you! I also laughed at entire movie when I saw it at movie theater. That's really a funny film I have never seen before.
ówów ÑHñU¼░¡∞⌐l½HÑ≤ ówów
>With all the talk about good and bad movies, I'm curious to know what
>everyone thought about it. As of yet, nobody has even put it on their top
>five best/worst lists. I laughed throughout the entire movie. Nothing like
Bid and sell for free at http://auctions.yahoo.com
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Date: Thu, 4 Nov 1999 11:08:41 -0600 (CST)
From: Mark Waelterman <torq@mo.net>
Subject: Re: [MV] Asian martial arts films
On Thu, 4 Nov 1999, Wade Snider wrote:
> That's very funny, but it would be funny to know what movies these came from
> or what the original quotes were.
>
>
> >7. Take my advice, or I'll spank you without pants.
i have never seen the movies that any of the other quotes come from (or,
atleast i dont recall any of them - and some of those are pretty memorable
quotes), but i want to say that the above quote is from "master killer" -
i seem to recall this line being said by one particular bad guy in that
movie.
my life will now be complete once i see the movie with the evil spider
woman being captured by the "short rabbits". i didnt think i'd come
across anything better than "utter gobshite", but sure enough, i
have.
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Date: Thu, 4 Nov 1999 12:11:42 -0700
From: "The Reporter" <gregorys@xmission.com>
Subject: [MV] Sci-Fi Movie News - 11/04/99
In a recent interview with Science Fiction Weekly, film
producer Joel Silver explained how writer/directors
Larry and Andy Wachowski plan to expand their hit SF
movie The Matrix. "Other sequels I've been involved in,
we've had to sit down and figure out a story. But in this
movie, the story is continuing.
"Essentially, the boys intended to make Matrix because
they wanted to find a way to make a superhero movie
today where the audience would accept superheroes in a
way that wouldn't feel to them like Saturday morning
television," Silver explained. "They made the first movie to
set up that world. In the sequels, you're going to see that
Neo has superhuman powers, and they can really do what
they've always wanted to do."
Plans are to shoot The Matrix II and III back to back,
though Silver was tight-lipped about the plots. He did say
that fans will finally get to see the fabled city of Zion, and
that the story is "going to be incredible."
Silver added that The Matrix stars Keanu Reeves,
Carrie-Anne Moss and Laurence Fishburne would all be
returning for the sequels.
-=> * <=-
End of Days director Peter Hyams is in final talks to
take on the new Paramount Pictures SF film The Core.
According to Variety, the movie tells the story of a
group of "terranauts" who travel deep underground to fix a
flaw in the Earth's core.
Hyams is coming off a recent stint behind the camera on
the upcoming Arnold Schwarzenegger supernatural thriller
End of Days. He will work on The Core with producer
David Foster and co-producers/screenwriters Sean Bailey
and Cooper Lane.
The Core is competing with two other film projects about
underground adventures, Fox's Inner Earth and the
Kennedy/Marshall Co. remake of Journey to the Center of
the Earth.
-=> * <=-
After lowering his asking price to $0, Michael Crichton
was finally able to sell the film rights to his new SF
novel Timeline. According to Variety, Paramount
picked up Timeline for no money down, although the
studio had to guarantee that Crichton and his
representatives would get 15 percent of the film's
first-dollar gross.
As part of the unusual bargain, Paramount has to keep
the picture "in active development," and if the studio
decides not to shoot the film, it must pay Crichton a $1
million termination fee. Lethal Weapon helmer Richard
Donner is attached to direct the movie, though it's not
clear if his paycheck is covered in the percentage deal.
Crichton made headlines earlier this month when he was
unable to sell Timeline to any film studio, which prompted
him to waive his upfront fee in favor of the back-end
participation. The film rights to Airframe--the novel
Crichton penned before writing Timeline--sold to Disney
for $10 million.
-=> * <=-
Columbia Pictures paid $400,000 for Stephen Cornwell's
untitled film pitch about an alien entity that gets
loose during the 19th century. According to The
Hollywood Reporter, the picture will be produced by Stan
Winston along with the husband-and-wife team of
Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall.
Columbia is said to be interested in turning the project
into a major feature even though there is no script yet.
Academy Award-winning makeup/effects designer Winston
will create the creatures for the movie.
Kennedy, Marshall and Winston have previously worked
together on both Jurassic Park movies as well as the film
Congo.
-=> * <=-
Columbia Pictures has ponied up between $1 million and
$2 million for the movie rights to the Japanese comic
strip Astro Boy. According to The Hollywood Reporter,
the studio is planning to bring Astro Boy to the big screen
as a major event film in the summer of 2001.
Antz scribe Todd Alcott will write the screenplay for the
movie, while Don Murphy and Jim Henson Pictures will
produce. The story centers around a scientist who
creates a robot in the likeness of his own son, who was
tragically killed.
Osamu Tezuka created Astro Boy in 1951, and the strip
went on to run for 18 years. It became the first animated
series to appear on Japanese television, and word is that
Sony Pictures Entertainment and Tezuka Productions are
at work on another small-screen version of the property.
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Date: Thu, 4 Nov 1999 12:15:08 -0700
From: "The Reporter" <gregorys@xmission.com>
Subject: [MV] Movie News - 11/04/99
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - The makers and distributors of the film "What
Dreams May Come" have settled a $2 million lawsuit by a painter who
claimed they stole his visions of heaven. The copyright infringement
lawsuit accused producers of the movie starring Robin Williams of
using four of Louis Jones' landscape paintings without credit. The
works had appeared on the covers of four books. Terms of the
settlement reached last week were confidential. The lawsuit had been
scheduled to go to trial in December in U.S. District Court. The suit
named Polygram Filmed Entertainment Distribution Inc. and Interscope
Communications Inc. as defendants. "They made a very generous
settlement, and I'm pleased with that," Jones, 47, said Monday.
The allegedly stolen images were central to the 1998 film, in which
Williams played a character who dies and realizes that heaven is a
scene from one of his wife's paintings. The movie won an Oscar for
visual effects. Jones originally sued in November 1998, seeking $1
million over the alleged use of two of his paintings. At the time,
Jones said he just wanted to get credit for his work. He said he
believed the producers saw his paintings on the covers of books
dealing with some of the same themes as the film - love, marriage and
the afterlife - and then copied or used the paintings.
-=> * <=-
BERLIN (Billboard) - The German-language Holocaust love story "Aimee
& Jaguar," which opened this year's Berlin Film Festival, has been
chosen for submission to next year's Oscar nominations for best
foreign film. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences decides
on the nominees on February 15 next year, "Aimee & Jaguar," directed
by Max Faerberboeck, tells the true story of a love affair between
the German wife of a Nazi officer and a Jewish woman. The two leading
actresses, Maria Schrader and Juliane Koehler, received Golden Bear
awards at this year's Berlin Film Festival. The film does not yet
have an American distributor.
-=> * <=-
LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - William H. Macy and Anne Heche are set to
star in the Persistent Pictures/Franchise Pictures drama "Auggie
Rose" for first-time feature director Matt Tabak. Jamie Lee Curtis,
Timothy Olyphant ("Go") and Richard T. Jones ("The Wood") round out
the cast, which is scheduled to go before the cameras for five weeks
starting Nov. 15 in Los Angeles. Written by Tabak, "Rose" tells the
story of an insurance salesman (Macy) whose humdrum existence takes a
turn when a stranger unexpectedly dies in his arms. Assuming the
identity of the dead man, ex-con Auggie Rose, the salesman embarks on
a double life but keeps it secret from his live-in girlfriend
(Curtis). Complications arise when a woman (Heche) Rose had been
corresponding romantically with while in prison arrives to meet him
for the first time. Olyphant plays Rose's former prison buddy who
threatens to expose the salesman's new identity, while Jones' role is
that of a police officer investigating Rose's death.
-=> * <=-
NEW YORK (Billboard) - Following the release of its hockey film
"Mystery, Alaska," Baldwin/Cohen Prods. has teed up to option Troon
McAllister's golf novel "The Green." Producers Howard Baldwin and
Richard Cohen are sinking low- against mid-six figures into the book,
a comic yarn described as "The Hustler" on the links. Published in
April by Doubleday, the novel centers on the captain of the U.S.
Ryder Cup team, which has zero chance of beating the European team -
until a seedy Florida golf hustler named Eddie Caminetti is lured
through bribery into joining the squad.
-=> * <=-
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Harrison Ford, who once grew so discouraged about
his acting career that he dropped out to be a professional carpenter,
will become the 28th recipient of the American Film Institute's
prestigious Life Achievement Award. Ford will receive the honor at a
Feb. 17 banquet at the Beverly Hilton. "It's fitting that AFI begin
the new millennium by honoring Harrison Ford - the most popularly
acclaimed actor of our day," AFI board chairman Tom Pollack said
Monday. "To movie audiences around the world, Harrison represents the
quintessential American film hero, and when the history of the 20th
century art form is written, Harrison will play a leading role."
Ford, most recently seen in "Random Hearts," played Indiana Jones in
Steven Spielberg's trilogy of adventure films modeled on 1930s movie
serials, and CIA whiz Jack Ryan in the films "Patriot Games" and
"Clear and Present Danger." But his most memorable role was given to
him be George Lucas, who cast him as Han Solo, the captain of a
pirate starship in his space opera "Star Wars." The AFI award,
created by the board of trustees in 1973, honors a distinguished
career in film that has in a fundamental way advanced the film art.
Past recipients include John Ford, James Cagney, Orson Welles, Bette
Davis, Alfred Hitchcock, John Huston, Lillian Gish, David Lean, Jack
Nicholson, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese and Dustin Hoffman.
-=> * <=-
LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - MGM has been successful in getting the
trial in a lawsuit related to the James Bond franchise moved back
from the unfortunate timing of the morning after Monday's world
premiere of the new 007 movie "The World Is Not Enough." The new
trial date for the lawsuit brought by "Thunderball" producer Kevin
McClory has been moved to Feb. 22. McClory's attorney Tom Girardi
said Tuesday he is pleased with the delay because by that time "The
World Is Not Enough" should be yet another successful installment in
the Bond franchise. McClory claims that he is entitled to certain
rights and profits relating to the entire 37-year-old Bond movie
franchise because he collaborated with 007 author-creator Ian Fleming
in translating Bond from books to cinema. Girardi said he was also
pleased by the court's decision not to hold a separate trial on the
issue of whether McClory waited too long to sue, regardless of
whether there is merit to McClory's claim.
"The World Is Not Enough" opens in theaters Nov. 19. A settlement of
McClory's original suit against Fleming in 1963 resulted in McClory
getting rights to "Thunderball," which was remade as "Never Say Never
Again" in 1983 with original 007 Sean Connery after another court
battle. That film was distributed by Warner Bros. A pretrial hearing
in the pending lawsuit has been set for Feb. 14.
-=> * <=-
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A chance to win tickets to the Pokemon movie
premiere here flooded Warner Bros. telephone lines with up to 70,000
calls per minute, forcing the studio to shut down its voice mail
system. The calls started Monday morning after the contest was
announced on a local television station, KTLA Channel 5. "Pokemon:
The First Movie" debuts Saturday. "This is absolutely without
precedent," said Brad Ball, Warner Bros. Pictures' president of
domestic marketing. "That one announcement on the local morning news
could provoke such an enormous response is an incredibly exciting
indicator of Pokemon's appeal." The calls were still coming in at
midafternoon Monday at 40,000 per minute, enough to force the studio
to shut down its voice mail system until 7 p.m. Monday.
The movie was originally scheduled to debut nationally on Nov. 12,
but Warner Bros. moved it up two days to "give kids an earlier jump
on the film but also allow parents more flexibility in getting them
there," said the company's president of domestic distribution, Dan
Fellman. Pokemon is an inexpensive card game that debuted as a
low-tech video game and burgeoned into an empire. It was started in
Japan by Nintendo as a Game Boy video game in which players find,
capture, collect and train 150 pet monsters. Versions of the Pokemon
game have been consistent best sellers since debuting in the United
States in the fall of 1998.
-=> * <=-
LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - The cumulative domestic box office for Buena
Vista's "The Sixth Sense" reached $260.1 million Monday evening,
surpassing Universal's "Jaws" as the 12th highest-grossing film of
all time in North America. The supernatural thriller has far
surpassed even the most optimistic projections for the film before
its release. "Just before its debut weekend, `Sixth Sense' was
tracking to land in the third spot," Buena Vista Pictures
Distribution president Chuck Viane said. "At that time, nobody had
any idea it would end up doing the kind of business it has." "Jaws"
debuted in June 1975 and took in $260 million in North America.
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Date: Thu, 4 Nov 1999 13:18:43 -0600
From: Diane Christy <dchristy10@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: [MV] SORRY:-{
On 11/4/99, 10:09 AM -0600, Eldridge, Carla said so nicely:
>Can I firstly say a huge sorry to all people who where
>offended by my disgraceful messages... the reason for
>such behaviour was ... that I am undertaking a PhD in
>the behaviour pattens of people on Mailing list....
huh??
~~~~~
Diane Christy (Samantha and Joshua's Mom)
Jefferson, LA
http://www.geocities.com/~dchristy10/
mailto:dchristy10@earthlink.net
ICQ #12904700 <dkbc10> on Instant Messenger
~~~~~
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Date: Thu, 4 Nov 1999 13:30:00 -0600
From: "Eldridge, Carla" <CEldridge@sandc.com>
Subject: [MV] RE: (MV) SORRY:-{
That was an apology sent by Guy Singh BSc Hon Business Information
Technology, LLB Hons, M.Chol. He was the guy that had sent out the
e-mail saying that another receipant wasn't woth listening to.
Carla
______________________________ Reply Separator
_________________________________
Subject: Re: (MV) SORRY:-{
Author: "Diane Christy" <SMTP:dchristy10@earthlink.net> at chicago1
Date: 11/04/1999 1:18 PM
On 11/4/99, 10:09 AM -0600, Eldridge, Carla said so nicely:
>Can I firstly say a huge sorry to all people who where
>offended by my disgraceful messages... the reason for
>such behaviour was ... that I am undertaking a PhD in
>the behaviour pattens of people on Mailing list....
huh??
~~~~~
Diane Christy (Samantha and Joshua's Mom)
Jefferson, LA
http://www.geocities.com/~dchristy10/
mailto:dchristy10@earthlink.net
ICQ #12904700 <dkbc10> on Instant Messenger
~~~~~
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Date: Fri, 5 Nov 1999 11:49:30 -0700
From: "The Reporter" <gregorys@xmission.com>
Subject: [MV] Movie News - 11/05/99
MIAMI (AP) - The jurors in a multibillion-dollar lawsuit against the
tobacco industry were ordered Thursday not to see the new movie "The
Insider," about a cigarette company executive who becomes a
whistle-blower. The movie, starring Al Pacino, is based on the true
story of former Brown & Williamson executive Jeffry Wigand, who
agreed to go on "60 Minutes" in 1995 and say the company knew of the
dangers of smoking. B&W attorney Ben Reid asked the judge to bar
jurors from seeing the movie. He said the movie, which portrays
Wigand as a hero, is a "fictionalized" account.
The class-action lawsuit against the nation's top cigarette
manufacturers was filed on behalf of an estimated 500,000 sick
Florida smokers. The six-member jury ruled in July that cigarettes
are deadly and that the industry had engaged in "extreme and
outrageous conduct." The jury now must determine how much the tobacco
companies should pay in damages. The industry has warned that it
could be hit with a ruinous verdict of perhaps $300 billion.
-=> * <=-
SINGAPORE (Billboard) - The new James Bond film, "The World Is Not
Enough," will open in Singapore and Malaysia ahead of the rest of the
world. The Nov. 18 release in the Asian countries beats the United
States launch by a day in an effort to forestall piracy in the
region. The Arnold Schwarzenegger action-thriller "End of Days"
arrives Nov. 25. Compact disc piracy has grown increasingly rampant
in this region, in a way benefiting moviegoers, as distributors rush
out their releases at the earliest possible moment. Many Hollywood
blockbusters are being released here concurrently with the United
States, or even earlier, as was the case with "The Matrix" and
"Entrapment."
-=> * <=-
LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - Although there are three separate Muhammad
Ali biopics in development, only the production from Columbia
Pictures, "Ali," and the film's star, Will Smith, have the
endorsement of its heavyweight subject matter. "This is the only film
that will tell it like it is," said the charismatic boxer in a
statement released by Columbia. "I'm the only one that knows the real
story of my life, and Will Smith is the only person I want and trust
to bring that story to the screen. I stand by Will, and his film is
the only one that I am supporting." The news might come as a swift
uppercut to two small-screen Ali biopics - Fox's "Ali" and ABC's
"King of the World," both targeted for the February 2000 sweep.
Columbia's "Ali" is being produced by Jon Peters from a script by
Oscar-nominated writers Stephen Rivele and Christopher Wilkinson
("Nixon"). Those involved in the project are talking to a number of
A-list directors, following the exit of Barry Sonnenfeld. Still, a
blessing from The Greatest can only help spur things forward. "This
project has always been a high priority for us," said Columbia
president Amy Pascal. "We are moving forward as quickly as possible
with the production and we hope that this will be Will's next film."
-=> * <=-
NEW YORK (Billboard) - Even though Disney-owned Miramax Films will
not be the company releasing "Dogma" next week, Disney is still
feeling the heat over Kevin Smith's controversial satire of
Catholicism. The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights said
it has collected nearly 300,000 signatures as part of its crusade
against what it terms anti-Catholic depictions in the media. The
league this week began shipping Disney chairman and CEO Michael
Eisner the results of its four-month petition drive calling on the
studio to sever its ties with Miramax. Disney spokesman John Dreyer
said, "We plan to keep Miramax." "There has never been any intent on
the part of the company to denigrate any individual or organization,"
Dreyer added. Representatives for Miramax declined comment. "Dogma,"
starring Ben Affleck and Matt Damon as fallen angels, is slated for
release by Lions Gate on Nov. 12.
-=> * <=-
LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - Jeanne Tripplehorn, Kyle MacLachlan, Julian
Sands and Stellan Skarsgard have signed on to join Salma Hayek as
part of the ensemble cast for Mike Figgis' "Time Code: 2000." Laurie
Metcalf, Stephen Weber, Saffron Burrows, Mia Maestro ("Tango"),
Alessandro Nivola ("Mansfield Park"), Richard Edson ("Do the Right
Thing"), Leslie Mann ("Big Daddy"), Danny Huston ("Leaving Las
Vegas"), Aimee Graham ("Brokedown Palace"), Xander Berkeley ("One
Night Stand"), Viveka Davis ("Cast Away") and Golden Brooks also have
been cast in the film. "Time Code: 2000," which is a working title,
is described as an intense psychodrama set during one day in Los
Angeles. The project started shooting this week using improvisational
techniques and digital cameras. Figgis' credits include "Leaving Las
Vegas," "One Night Stand" and "The Loss of Sexual Innocence."
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Date: Sun, 7 Nov 1999 15:11:10 -0500 (EST)
From: maillist@moviejuice.com
Subject: [MV] MovieJuice! - THE BONE COLLECTOR - Dull and Crossbones
THE BONE COLLECTOR û Dull and Crossbones
by Mark Ramsey
<a href="http://www.moviejuice.com/1999/bonecollector.htm">Click here for the full review!</a>
http://www.moviejuice.com/1999/bonecollector.htm
November 7, 1999
"The Bone Collector joins Silence of the Lambs and Seven as one of the great thrillers of the decade," reads one of the hyperbolic fluff-architect critical reviews, which goes on to say "it's the best movie I've seen since that useless chunk of my brain was surgically removed. I can't stop drooling over it - in fact, I can't stop drooling!"
The Bone Collector is not a movie for folks with finger phobias, unless we're talking your middle finger, which is the one this movie most deserves.
This flick is the latest chapter in the grisly serial murder genre, but these aren't just murders folks, they're murders bundled with obscure clues. So fiendishly obscure, only one man can decode them: Denzel "Sherlock Homey" Washington.
What's with all these clues? Just kill the suckers and let it be! What is this, the Serial Murder $20,000 Pyramid? Who produced this flick, Dick Clark or Merv Griffin? Is Denzel partnered with Detective Lt. Alex Trebek? Should Angie be turning letters while the victims spin the wheel? I don't know about you, but I'll take Whoopi to block.
Every year, it seems, there's more Son of Seven, and The Bone Collector is this year's contestant, buzzer in hand, ready to answer in the form of a question. Each entry features ever more creative and colorful ways to display dead and decaying bodies, when what we really need are more creative and colorful ways to display Angelina Jolie's body.
Victims in this movie are buried, steamed, filleted, and drowned. By now, we've seen enough of these flicks to see folks dispatched in every way imaginable. What's next? Rumor has it the sequel will toss victims in a bag of Shake-and-Bake and pop them into an oven at 425 degrees for 15 minutes. It's deadly, but healthier than frying.
The Bone Collector is a story adapted from any episode of Batman which featured The Riddler. "Riddle me this, Cop crusader!" You can easily spot the killer, thanks to his green suit stamped with question-marks. Unfortunately, Denzel's a quadriplegic and can't access his Bat-a-rang or do the Bat-dance.
Now I love Angie Jolie, but one look at her in that oversized NYPD boys-in-blue uniform, and I'm expecting a pole and a lap-dance. Angie is the hottest, with that bikini area tattoo and the fullest lips this side of an inner-tube. If this babe were a vacuum she could suck up every member of the NYPD, and I do mean every "member."
Angie has what Denzel calls "a natural instinct for forensics," which, unfortunately, beats her instinct for spotting a decaying, putrid script.
Queen Latifah is "Alfred the Butler," who plays puzzles while Commissioner Gordon and Chief O'Hara move their entire base of operations into Denzel's digs because, I'm guessing, fewer sets allow for a trimmer budget.
Pity Married With Children vet Ed O'Neil, who gets the plum lines like "If you were any more wound up, you'd be a Timex." To which I say, "If only you had express return and a Number One club, you'd be Hertz!"
Invariably and against all natural laws of probability, Denzel and Angie begin to fall in love. If a guy with no arms or legs can get Angelina Jolie, then what's your excuse, pal?
You won't guess who the bad guy is because the identity of the killer is absolutely random. It's as if the cast drew straws on the last day of shooting, and the writers just took it from there. Denzel and Angie didn't get the short straw; they just settled for the short end of the stick.
Sticks and stones may break my bones, but lame-ass clones of Seven will not impress me.
As Denzel said to Angie: "To the Batcave, old chum!"
Copyright 1999 Mark Ramsey. All rights reserved. NO PORTION MAY BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN PERMISSION OF THE AUTHOR.
********************
WAY TO GO, LIONÆS GATE
LionÆs Gate doesnÆt know a good thing when they have it. Have you seen their TV spot for Kevin SmithÆs upcoming comedy/satire DOGMA?
In two words: It sucks.
For some reason, the Einsteins in the LionÆs Gate marketing department spend their precious 30 seconds summarizing oblique plot-points resulting in a non-compelling mish-mash which is unlikely to help the movieÆs cause.
At no charge to them, I will do what LionÆs Gate rocket scientists find impossible: Motivate you to see this movie. Listen up:
ôFrom the director of æClerksÆ and æChasing AmyÆ: Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, Janeane Garofalo, George Carlin, Chris Rock, and Alanis Morrisette in a very funny movie: DOGMA.ö
What else do you need to know? Nice work, LionÆs Gate.
********************
BUY ôTHE BLAIR WITCH PROJECTö ON VHS/DVD FROM THE MOVIEJUICE.COM STORE
Everybody else is selling it, why not me?
<a href="http://www.bmvs.com/sites/mramsey1/videos/qsearch.asp?startat=0&keywords=blair+witch&by=title">Buy The Blair Witch Project Here!</a>
Visit http://www.bmvs.com/sites/mramsey1/videos/qsearch.asp?startat=0&keywords=blair+witch&by=title for all the details.
********************
DONÆT FORGET TO VISIT MOVIEJUICE.COM!
Hey, kids, don't forget to visit the MovieJuice! Site at http://www.moviejuice.com. The pictures are half the fun (and sometimes more than half the laughs)!
********************
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End of movies-digest V2 #251
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