Friday, September 30, 2011

When I Turned Nine Movie Poster (11 x 17 Inches - 28cm x 44cm) (2004) Korean Style A -(Seok Kim)(Se-yeong Lee)(Myeong-jae Kim)(Ah-hyeon Na)(Baek-ri Park)(Seon-kyeong Jeong)

  • When I Turned Nine Poster Mini Promo (11 x 17 Inches - 28cm x 44cm) Korean Style A
  • The Amazon image is how the poster will look; If you see imperfections they will also be in the poster
  • Mini Posters are ideal for customizing small spaces; Same exact image as a full size poster at half the cost
  • Size is provided by the manufacturer and may not be exact
  • Packaged with care and shipped in sturdy reinforced packing material
When I Turned Nine Poster (11 x 17 Inches - 28cm x 44cm) (2004) Korean Style A reproduction poster print

CAST: Seok Kim,Se-yeong Lee,Myeong-jae Kim,Ah-hyeon Na,Baek-ri Park,Seon-kyeong Jeong,Dae-han Ji,Ae-Yeon Jeong,Hyeon-jeong No; DIRECTED BY: In-ho Yun;

Lying

  • LYING (DVD MOVIE)
BROWN BUNNY - DVD MovieAfter its scandalous screening at the 2004 Cannes film festival, Vincent Gallo's The Brown Bunny was cut from 118 to 92 minutes, and that made all the difference. The film that critic and long-time Cannes attendee Roger Ebert originally called "the worst film in the history of the festival" was transformed, by Gallo's judicious editing, into a perfectly acceptable if not universally respected art-house curio, widely criticized yet ripe for cult status, able to stand beside Gallo's Buffalo 66 as the work of a genuine artist with a singular vision. Yes, that vision is self-indulgent, narcissistic, and likely to turn off a majority of viewers with its glacial pace and endless shots of Gallo driving, driving, and driving some more. But in portraying a melancholy motorcycle racer who drives cross-country while mourning a private loss that rema! ins secret until the final scenes, Gallo gives us a character, and a film, that feels spiritually akin to such early '70s classics as Five Easy Pieces and Two-Lane Blacktop. It's a flawed yet ultimately moving example of maverick, unconventional cinema, and while Chloe Sevigny's explicit oral sex scene with Gallo is completely unnecessary, it's just one more element that places The Brown Bunny firmly, and refreshingly, out of the mainstream. --Jeff ShannonWhen a long weekend brings four women together in the countryside, each of them is forced to navigate the depths of social interaction as virtual strangers. How well do we really know the friends we make in adulthood? And in an age of lies, what can be made of the person who tells untruths so small they serve no obvious purpose?

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