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- Bringing characters like Spider-Man and Captain Marvel to life on screen requires some real-life superheroes off-screen. Specialized teams and experts carefully plan and carry out the stunts, costumes, and special effects that make iconic films like the Avengers the impressive spectacle audiences love. From actual bus crashes in "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings" (2021) to detailed makeup and training in "Black Panther" (2018), here's what Marvel movies look like behind the scenes.
- A mother-less boy and his older sister are forced to move to a big town when their father's farming enterprise fails, and they are not happy about it. Almost immediately, on their doorstep, they get caught up in a major jewel theft.
- Jane Austen is one of the most celebrated and renowned English language novelists of all time, her novels which have been adapted into countless successful movies, plays, and other books, with the Jane Austen brand spawning a range of merchandise and well attended events by her legion of fans. Among those who counts himself as definitely not a fan is journalist and restaurant critic Giles Coren - an English Literature graduate himself - who sees the works of Austen as fluff for primarily a young female audience, the novels indistinguishable from one another. In rereading the six novels in the order they were written and published, Giles, in addition to attending some Austen related events and visiting Austen related sites, speaks to fans, ranging from academics to fellow authors to filmmakers to regular Janes and Joes (and in the process runs into a few Austen haters like himself), who try to convince him of the greatness of Austen and why the renown is so well deserved.
- Deleted scenes from 'Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back'.
- Hailing from the Miyazaki countryside, Hiroko (Misaki Ito) has been told since her youth that all she has is a beautiful face. Her brilliant younger brother Yutaro (Mirai Moriyama) who aims to become a doctor, is her only pride. For his sake, she is willing to put up with all sorts of hardships in a display of unconditional love.
- Adaptation of the best-selling 1998 autobiography of Somalian supermodel Waris Dirie.
- Bert Newton counts down the sexiest moments in movies and TV from 20 to 1.
- James Franco, Kelly Lynch and Dustin Lance Black map out the roads traveled by Gus Van Sant, a filmmaker whose artistic daring and understanding of marginalized lives redefined what could be done and who could be seen in American film.
- On a list of the train south, the story of Zhou Huan (Ji Jin Hee) and Crystal (Huang Shengyi) meet by chance, the two together have a good time, but at the moment their hearts are comforted each other.
- The fight scenes in "Everything Everywhere All at Once" put a fresh spin on classic kung fu movies. Insider spoke with stunt coordinator Timothy Eulich and fight choreographers Andy and Brian Le about how the movie's most impressive action sequences came together.
- Oscar winning composer Howard Shore reveals his creative process while composing the score of "Doubt", one of his most challenging and interesting works. We follow Shore during the sessions with his orchestra in action viewing the film and coming up with themes for the characters and situations, and he talks about his collaboration with the director.
- A short interview with the Sisters of Charity, veteran nuns who served as inspiration to John Patrick Shanley's characters from his Pulitzer winning play and Oscar nominated film "Doubt", and some of them helped as advisers for the actors. They talk about their tradition, their costumes and what has changed to them after the church modernization in the 1960's and the true story behind the "habit".
- The 54th NAACP Image Awards honoring film and television; Queen Latifah hosts.
- A lovely gathering with the main cast of "Doubt" (Philip Seymour Hoffman, Meryl Streep, Amy Adams and Viola Davis), sharing their different points of view about John Patrick Shanley's play and script, behind the scenes curiosities, the acting process and their thoughts on what audiences should expect from such an interesting and important project. A very informal and positive interview conducted by Dave Karger.
- Ginny agrees to be the face of a new hotel and a new drink. But soon she's found dead. Her ghost obligingly reappears and directs Yu, a staff member, to a house in the country where a lookalike replacement can be found is a twin named Fen.
- A jewel thief plans the last big heist, but does not count on the double cross to end all double crosses.
- Speaking without moving your lips is an ancient art, practiced very seriously already in ancient Egypt. Today's ventriloquists are mostly found in the entertainment world, although today's stand-up artists less often use a talking doll as a partner. Filmmaker Sandra Luckow, herself a ventriloquist from the United States, made a trip with her doll Juanito, who is from Mexico, to study the tradition and regrowth of the peculiar art.
- Julianne Moore, Kyle Chandler and Kelly Reichardt contemplate the visually rich, politically charged cinema of Todd Haynes, from his subversive indie films to the Oscar-nominated melodramas that made him the most acclaimed American director of his era.
- 1992– 26m7.0 (19)TV Episode
- The cast and crew reflect on the making of the movie, "Extract."
- A look at how they brought "Doubt" from the stage to the screen.
- In a two hour special, Bert Newton counts down cinema's most quotable quotes from 50 to 1.
- Samuel Jackson, Juliette Lewis and Eli Roth reflect on the shocking, provocative career of Quentin Tarantino, from his underdog beginnings and mainstream breakthrough to blockbuster revenge epics like Inglourious Basterds and Django Unchained.
- A unlucky in a local 7-11 releases two ghosts that screws with Yik (Joey Wang) and Tang (Jacky Cheung) putting a large sum of money when they are sleeping, but mistakenly resulting the two spend the money and thus the two ghosts forcing them to bring two fresh bodies to pay their consequences!
- The story behind the video in the documentary 'Deep Blue'.
- Roodaka discusses her past with a Visorak spider and wonders which one of the Toa Hordika will eventually succumb to their bestial side. Meanwhile, Whenua, Nuju, Bomonga and Kualus get into trouble in the ruins of the Archives.
- The camera focuses up close on a series of unnamed women as they talk to their men. In every case, even though we don't hear what the men are saying, we know exactly what line and lie they're pitching. The women, who are desperate for affection and a relationship, apologize, bend over backwards to accommodate, cooperate with every male fantasy, tolerate every male insecurity, ignore infidelities, and pick up the check.
- A series of still photographs taken by 'Linda McCartney' of the Grateful Dead at the Dead's house in Haight-Ashbury and at a concert in Central Park, both in the early days of the band. Panning, morphing, and other techniques are used to impart some motion. Excerpts from three Dead songs are played in the background.
- The music video for the movie "The Mighty."
- A musical film from the best of the Concerts for the People of Kampuchea. 4 nights of concerts in Hammersmith Odeon to raise money for Cambodia.
- Four kids witness an arsonist start a fire, but no one believes them.
- A look back at Neil Jordan's film The Crying Game.
- Two children on vacation in Egypt with their archaeologist parents expose the villainy of Arab workmen and help their father find the treasure he seeks.