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The Best Of Hootenanny


The Best Of Hootenanny


$23.45


For the first-time on home video, a deluxe 3-DVD set of the hit ABC show that started the ’60s! In the pre-Beatlemania days of April 1963, a weekly folk music concert called Hootenanny found its way onto the American television airwaves. Originating from various college campuses, the show featured artists that were thriving on the coffee house and college circuit, like Judy Collins, Trini Lopez…

The Best of the New Kingston Trio


The Best of the New Kingston Trio


$8.99



In the Streets


In the Streets


$8.99



Moll Flanders (2pc) (Mobile Masterpiece Theatre) [VHS]


Moll Flanders (2pc) (Mobile Masterpiece Theatre) [VHS]


$8.90


This energetic, sardonic, and richly funny adaptation of Daniel Defoe’s classic novel is completely unlike what you might expect from genteel Masterpiece Theatre. The heroine, Moll Flanders (Alex Kingston), after being born in prison, wends her way through the top and bottom of 18th-century English society, has five husbands (including a roguish highwayman who becomes the love of her life), many l…

Red Riding Hood [VHS]


Red Riding Hood [VHS]


$14.95


Mikey Wolfe stand up comedy @ The Kingston

comedy kingston

Movie review – Marmaduke (2010)

For more reviews and watch free : CLICK HERE

As any filmmaker or enthusiast could tell you, it’s not a wise idea to book-end a movie with the same fart joke. Now, if only someone could pass that along to “Marmaduke” director Tom Dey.

“Marmaduke,” the latest in an insufferable subgenre of talking animal movies (”Babe” excluded), sets the tone for its movie in the first five minutes. The title Great Dane mix Marmaduke (voiced by Owen Wilson), drags his owner Phil Winslow (Lee Pace) around the house trying to avoid a bath. After much destruction and mayhem, Marmaduke makes a run for the doggy door and gets stuck. Looking at the audience — nothing more than a lame “Kangaroo Jack” looking effect — Marmaduke tells us this is a day in his life. Oozing with subcontext, I like to think of this as Marmaduke asking me, “Are you ready to endure 80 more minutes of this?”

Sorry, Marmaduke. The answer is no.

Phil gets a high-paying job offer from an organic dog food company in California, which is run by William H. Macy (who I feel most sorry for). The husband, father of three and pet owner, packs up his family and heads West, where we’re hit with “The O.C.” references ad nauesum. Why a movie aimed at 8-year-olds would dwell on a show canceled three years ago is beyond me. Nevertheless, it does so again and again.

Like a family film with no originality, the movie finds Phil working too hard and neglecting his family. His son skips soccer practice, his daughter wants to move back to Kansas and his wife pleads with him to work less. While the Winslows try to find their footing in California, Marmaduke has an equally difficult time adjusting. The dog park that Phil takes him to is structured like a high school, with cliques of airheads, “mushroom” heads, popular purebreds and misfit mutts.

Marmaduke falls in with the mutts, where he meets Mazie (voiced by Emma Stone), Giuseppe (Christopher Mintz-Plasse aka McLovin) and Raisin (Steeve Coogan). Not understanding the social order of his new world, Marmaduke talks with Jezebel (Fergie), the girlfriend of the purebred pack leader, Bosco (Kiefer Sutherland), who strives to embarrass and belittle Marmaduke around every corner. Marmaduke continues to make mistakes, falling out of favor with his family and his mutt friends. Perhaps Phil and Marmaduke could both learn something from each other?

Marmaduke stumbles through each frame gracelessly, dragging Phil and the film’s dignity down with him. The movie reaches its point of no return during a “Dance Dance Revolution” knock-off scene, where a computer-generated Marmaduke gets down to Sean Kingston and Justin Bieber’s “Eenie Meenie.” Of course, it ends with him knocking the machine over and breaking it — classic Marmaduke.

And if that doesn’t make you cringe, there’s another ensemble dance scene, a doggy surf competition, two references to “Who Let the Dogs Out,” and George Lopez providing the voice of the family’s Latino cat, which borders on racist.

Thankfully for Wilson and company, they get to hide behind the mask of adorable dogs and not worry about taking responsibility for their poor choices. Unfortunately, the animal’s voices contain so little liveliness that you would think the actors were rehearsing for pull-string doll recordings.

Previously, director Tom Dey made “Failure to Launch” and “Showtime,” the latter of which was one of the worst movies of 2002. Congratulations Tom, you’ve done it again in 2010 with “Marmaduke.”

For more reviews and watch free : CLICK HERE

About the Author

http://istarmovie.com/marmaduke-2010/

Many lies of DC impersonator
Washington social climber Nelson Lewis — recently arrested for wearing a congressional pin while claiming to be Georgia Rep. Jack Kingston — has tried other…
I can’t find the name of this song?

It’s a comedy remix of Sean Kingston’s ‘Beautiful Girls.’
I saw it on someone’s myspace but I forget whos…

The only lyrics I can remember are,
“Man I got boobs like a girls.”
(Damn all these beautiful girls.)

Does anyone know the name of this remix?
I love it more then the song because I dislike Sean Kingston’s songs.

could it be -
UGLY GIRLS (BEAUTIFUL GIRL REMIX) by j-black

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