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- This summers hottest stars in the hottest films are interviewed by David Sheehan.
- Archival interview, produced by the Criterion Collection in 2001, with biographer Garner Simmons who wrote "Peckinpah: A Portrait in Montage."
- In a world of smoke and mirrors, we expose the movers, shakers and key players who puppeteer the brightest talent and engineer the most exclusive events during one of the biggest film festivals in the world.Votes8
- A history of the Cold War as seen through the eyes of U.S. Presidents and other world leaders.
- A New Zealand version of the popular US show of the same name. In this game show, contestants are shown a word or phrase with the letters covered. They must spin a wheel marked with prizes and penalties for chances to win money by guessing the missing letters. The winner is the one who can guess the complete answer to the hidden puzzle.
- A New Zealand version of the US TV show of the same name. In this quiz/game show, contestants had to answer relatively simple questions on general knowledge categories. Correct answers earned the contestants a few dollars. The show's gimmick was that the contestants could then exchange some of their money for expensive prizes which would be offered at extreme discounts. The contestant who finished the show with the most cash could then return to compete in the next show.
- Votes47
- Votes22
- Weird & Wonderful Hotels is an intrepid series from Sleepydog in conjunction with Chief Productions. In each episode we venture off the beaten track to uncover the most unique places in which to spend a night. Avoiding the well-trodden path of other TV travel shows, Weird & Wonderful Hotels takes you to some astonishing destinations. Prepare yourselves for a few surprises! Our quest for the strange and unusual takes us to all four corners of the globe: hotels in sewerage pipes, wine barrels, up trees, under water... whatever next? Along the way we also track down some of the world's most remote luxury retreats and eco hotels, where guests can get up close and personal with the surrounding wildlife and experience life a world away from home. You're guided around each hotel by one of the charismatic locals. Reporting in their own eccentric style, these memorable characters are as unique as the hotels themselves, adding to the show's stylish yet quirky flavour. Weird, wonderful and always extraordinary, these hotels will deliver surprise after surprise and provide eye opening entertainment for the whole family.
- Interview with the producer of the film 'Straw Dogs' (1971), directed by Sam Peckinpah.
- Unique, but short-lived game on ABC daytime. Two teams of 5 players, men vs. women, competed. In the main game, one member of the team would be given a secret word and would give a description of the word to the next teammate. Once he/she guessed it correctly, s/he would give the next teammate a description of the word, and so forth. This continued down the line, with 40 seconds given for all 4 "guessers" to name the secret word. The catch was, no "key words" could be duplicated in the various descriptions of the word or else scoring for that secret word would stop. Adding to the difficulty of this task was the fact that the guessers wore headphones that prevented them from hearing how the secret word was described by teammates earlier in the round. Each team had a chance to guess 3 words, and the team with the highest score at the end of the 3 rounds played the bonus round, which was an inverse of the main game. The bonus round was played in 3 rounds. In each round, a team captain was designated and given a word or topic. S/he would then pick 4 words/phrases s/he thought were most associated with the word. The other 4 members of the team wore headphones while the captain picked her 4 clues. The team would hear the topic and then have 20 seconds (5 seconds each) to try to guess the 4 clues that the captain had picked. The first two rounds earned money for a bonus bank each time one of the clues was guessed, while the final round was an all or nothing round that, if won, multiplied the bank earnings by five.Votes9
- A glimpse at Australia's longest running drama series; behind-the-scenes interviews and anecdotes from some of Australia's most well known actors as they guide the viewer through an average week in Ramsay Street.Votes12
- A Broadway-style musical adventure about the hilarious extremes a child will go to in order to get what she wants. Didi plots and schemes her way to save what matters to her most - family, friends and every animal in need. Didi Lightful is a musical and magical movie experience where anything is possible, and the imagination of a child knows no bounds.
- Votes12
- Intrigue, romance and suspense envelop the wealthy, glamorous Macarthur family, and those with whom they come into contact.
- Quiz show where contestants are asked 100 multiple choice questions. The contestant with the highest percentage is the winner.Votes69
- The Australian version of the popular and long-running American game show. The show presented a wide variety of contests and games, all with the same basic challenge: guess the prices of everyday (and some not-so-everyday) items. The contestants whose estimates were the closest would win the prizes and move on to more difficult games with even bigger prizes.Votes21
- Jason Boyer is a loose-cannon special agent brought in by a narcotics task force to bring down De La Cruz crime family lieutenant Bobby Leoni. A rising star in the criminal underworld, Leoni excels at drug trafficking, a skill offset only by his weakness for the fairer sex, most notably the trophy wife of his crime lord boss, Nick De La Cruz.Votes333
- Players must use their intuition to answer questions.Votes22
- Contestants compete to answer trivia questions about popular culture and recent history to win prizes.
- The Mystery Word Search game consisted of 5 contestants (4 Challengers & 1 Champion) are playing for points. In the Premilinary Round, Contestants will find a answer (from a 14x4=56 gridded game board) in one(1) of the four(4) lines and the fourteen(14) columns (positions) from a question that the host been asked. A correct line, position & a word will win 1 point; A wrong line & word that can led a team to find a correct line & word. Changing team members are assessived and then the team scores the most points wins and go to the Semi-Finals. The Semi-Final Round consists of 2 contestants of the disbanded winning team go to line by line in every position to position letter one (1) at a time before shown the last letter as one(1) of two(2) contestants will see & say the word answer to a question correctly wins 1 point and continues up to 4 points became the winner receives a prize package worth around $1500 and becomes the challenger to the Champion in the Finals. In The Championship Finals, Now the points are locating between the 4 word lines & the 14 letter positions. The lines are worth from 1 to 4 points & the columns are worth from 1 to 14 points (i.e.:"Waste"-2+3=5). The teams will find a word was located in the game board and that look different than the Premilinary Round and the contestant scores the most points wins becomes the New Champion or otherwise still being the champion. In Late 1974 The Teams of the Premilinaries write down the favorite word will become the bonus answer as it shown immediately wins 10 points to their score & also for the Championship Finals either his or her score the same thing. In Early 1975 and towards to the end of the period 2 Contestants playing for 5 points to win the game and an $1500 Prize Package and faces the champion in the Finals. At The Finals One(1) contestant scores 50 points and the game will continue and that make the point values are doubled (Lines: 2-8 pts. & Positions: 2-28 pts.) and the team reached 100 points wins the game and go to the "Solo Round!" The "Solo Round" has 10 words in the grid and the team has 1 minute to find all 10 words. Each word they found is worth $100 and 10 words they all found wins $5000, $1000 will added for tomorrow's show when they don't find all 10 words. Later in the program's period, Contestants are now following the pattern than 2 teams & 1 player. Contestants/Teams must compete before defeated.Votes47
- Votes67
- Daddy Warbucks has Annie at his huge estate with Sandy, her big dog...Warbucks takes on the role of a Scrooge-type character. His temper & tone has caused Annie & Sandy to take off...and so the adventure begins!Votes19
- Soap-style drama about a group of medical students all living in the same boarding house, planned as a successor to The Young Doctors (1976).
- Contestants tell stories about themselves, with certain parts of the stories left blank. Celebrity panelists try to fill in the blanks.
- An updated version of the classic game show, hosted by Michael Burger. A panel of celebrities would be given a sentence with a missing word, which they would then have to fill in. The contestants would then give their own answer, and scored points according to how many panelists gave the same answer.Votes36
- Erich von Stroheim was an director of silent movies, as well as an actor in both silents and talkies. Uncompromising and rigid, he battled the studio system for control over his pictures' content, and his career had many ups and downs as a result. Through interviews, photos, and archival footage, The Man You Loved to Hate explores von Stroheim's career. The title refers to von Stroheim's frequent casting as a German villain in films of the early 1940s. Von Stroheim's last famous acting role was in Billy Wilder's Sunset Blvd.Votes209
- For years, one of America's favorite board games was Scrabble, the Selchow & Righter-marketed game introduced in the 1930s. The game was revised and brought to television in 1984 by Reg Grundy Productions. Two contestants competed in the "crossword" round, played on a giant Scrabble board. Host Woolery announces a letter to build on, announces the number of letters in the word and reads a clue to said word (e.g., a seven letter word; "Experts really know how to pick them"; answer: "pockets"). The contestant chosen to go first draws two numbered tiles from the rack; the rack (positioned between the contestants) contained all the letters in the word, plus three "stoppers," or letters not in the puzzle. The contestant indicates which letter he wants to place in the word; if the letter fits, he/she may either attempt to guess the word or place another letter in the puzzle (the contestant draws two more tiles if he/she still doesn't attempt a guess). If the letter tried is a "stopper" or the contestant gives an incorrect solution, control passes to the opponent; letters landing on blue or pink squares were worth cash bonuses if they correctly guessed the word (#500 and #1,000 respectively, which the players kept regardless if they won the game). Play on the current word continues until all three "stoppers" are found (at which time a "speedword" format was used) or until one letter remained in the puzzle. The contestant who guesses the word correctly wins one point; all subsequent words were built on a letter in the previous word. The first player to win three points won the game, #500 and played the Sprint Round. In the Sprint Round, the contestant played vs. the returning champion to guess a given number of words in a shorter time period than the opponent. Either way, the "speedword" format was used, with Woolery giving the number of letters in the word and a clue. The contestant was shown two letters at a time; there were no "stoppers" in the Sprint Round, though a 10-second penalty was assessed for incorrect guesses. The winner of the Sprint Round received a cash bonus (usually #1,000), returns as champion and played the Bonus Sprint against the clock. In the Bonus Sprint, the contestant had to guess two words, again under the "speedword" format, within 10 seconds to win #5,000 (plus #1,000 for each day it was not won); an incorrect guess at any point stopped the game. Champions continued until their defeat or until winning 10 Sprint Rounds. The rules o both the crossword and Sprint rounds changed several times during the show's run, most commonly relating to bonuses and the Sprint Round formats and how returning champions were determined; the above plot summary indicates the most enduring format.Votes105
- Updated version of the classic NBC and CBS daytime game show, where two contestants compete to win cash and prizes by deciding whether the next card (in their own block of five) is higher or lower.Votes38
- Weekly syndicated revival of the classic CBS game show, where celebrity panelists try to guess secrets of in-studio contestants.Votes34
- Guests who have the same name as famous persons, fictional characters, or things, are quizzed by celebrity panelists who try to determine their name.Votes98
- The Revival of "NOW YOU SEE IT" in 1989 as follows... 2 Contestants played for "Round 1" as The Board is computerized than the regular flashy board in 1974-1975 played for 100 Points and deduct 15 seconds for every point to 25 points and as time runs out... The Points doubled into 200 Points all through 50 points and the 1st contestant scores 1000 Points wins and became the challenger. As the Challenger to play the Championship Round to face the Champion and the toss-up question is used for $200-The 1st Board, $300-The 2nd Board, $400-The 3rd Board, $500-The 4th Board & $600-The 5th & Last Board and the contestant will find 6 words on each & every board in 20 seconds. As time runs out for the Challenger or the Champion will find 1 word on the board and the Challenger or the Champion collects $1000 wins and plays the "Solo Round." The "Solo Round" for the Champion to find 10 words in 60 Seconds (1 Minute). The Champion find the solution to the clue and passing it can return the favor of the previous clue. Each word found is worth $100. 10 Words found on the board wins $5000 otherwise $5000 will be added when its lost the game. Champions must compete before defeated.
- This was a game based on word knowledge. A word would be presented to a contestant and a panel of three celebrities. One panelist would have the actual definition written out on a card while the other two merely had cards with the word "Bluff" printed on them. Each panelist would give their version of the definition of the word, and the contestant would have to determine who was correct and who was bluffing.Votes11
- Two contestants compete to build pots of merchandise by selecting items that will keep them within the prescribed limit.Votes11
- The story of a bizarre bequest of a wealthy late Canadian lawyer: the woman who birthed the most children in the City of Toronto within a certain time period would inherit a fortune in the midst of the Great Depression.Votes83
- In this quiz/game show, contestants had to answer relatively simple questions on general knowledge categories. Correct answers earned the contestants a few dollars. The show's gimmick was that the contestants could then exchange some of their money for expensive prizes which would be offered at extreme discounts. The contestant who finished the show with the most cash could then return to compete in the next show.Votes24
- Short-lived game show based on the popular home board game, wherein contestants listed words pertinent to a particular category.
- US version of the original British show of the same name.Votes922
- Votes26
- A short lived game show that brought isolation booth games up to another level.Votes86
- Dutch talent show in which amateur singers compete to determine who is the best.Votes102
- The true story of Stephanie Slater, a British estate agent who was kidnapped, raped, and held for ransom by Michael Sams, who imprisoned her in a coffin-like box for eight days.Votes73
- The angelic spirit of writer Jack Kerouac returns to Earth to change the life of a writer.Votes39
- A small-town film graduate lands his first gig in the adult film industry.Votes25
- Two contestants attempt to correctly guess words based on definitions given by children ages five to nine.Votes58
- The ozone is depleted and as a result of this all sorts things are happening like lethal insects flying around. A scientist tries to warn everybody about this but no one seems to believe him. When his predictions come true they now turn to him for help.Votes421
- The creators of "American Idol" brings a new Reality-TV series called "American Juniors", which also hosted by Ryan Seacrest. Instead of teenagers and young adults auditioning for a spot, it's up to kids, between the ages of 5-13 to perform. And instead of a solo career, five kids will join in a pop group. Throuhout the season, Gladys Knight and Debbie Gibson are judges while there is a guest judge. Also, Knight would fill in as host when Seacrest is absent.Votes192
- Memphis is set in the places where rock and roll was born in the 1950s: the seedy nightclubs, radio stations and recording studios of the musically-rich Tennessee city. With an original score, it tells the fictional story of DJ Huey Calhoun, a good ole' local boy with a passion for R&B music and Felicia Farrell, an up-and-coming black singer that he meets one fateful night on Beale Street. Despite the objections of their loved ones (Huey's close-minded mama and Felicia's cautious brother, a club owner), they embark on a dangerous affair. As their careers rise, the relationship is challenged by personal ambition and the pressures of an outside world unable to accept their love.Votes284