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| Jay Chou - Curse of the Golden Flower (EP+DVD) |
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Product Title : Curse of the Golden Flower (EP+DVD) Artist Name(s) : Jay Chou Language : CHINESE , Mandarin Product Format : DVD Release Date : Dec 11, 2006 Format : Video: XVID 720x480 29.97fps 1736Kbps Audio: Dolby AC3 48000Hz stereo 448Kbps Curse of the Golden Flower not only teams up such super stars as Chow Yun Fat and Gong Li, it also features Jay Chou in period costume for the first time. The Asian pop star, apart from taking up an important role alongside the internationally famed actor and actress, also sings the theme song and composes the music for this blockbuster. While fans will have to wait a bit longer to appreciate Jay Chou's performance in the movie, his theme song for the movie, "Chrysanthemum Platform", is already available in Curse of the Golden Flower (EP+DVD). This release also contains his brand new song, "Golden Armor". The DVD in this set contains 10 music videos for the songs from Jay Chou's widely circulated Still Fantasy and the music video for "Golden Armor", offering much visual pleasure and quality music. |
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| High School Musical Live Concer |
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High School Musical is a made-for-TV musical. Released on January 20, 2006, it was one of the most successful Disney Channel Original Movies produced, with a television sequel soon to be released and a feature film sequel in the planning process. The film's soundtrack was the best-selling album of 2006. The film was shot almost entirely in the Wasatch Front region of Utah (namely Salt Lake City and Murray). With a plot described as a modern retelling of Romeo and Juliet, (although many reviewers and fans saw the film as very similar to Grease) High School Musical is a story of two high school students from rival cliques: Troy Bolton (Zac Efron), captain of the basketball team, and Gabriella Montez (Vanessa Hudgens), a shy transfer student who excels in math and science. Together, they try out for the lead parts in their high school musical, and as a result, divide the school. Despite other students' attempts to thwart their dreams, Troy and Gabriella resist peer pressure and rivalry, inspiring others along the way not to "stick with the status quo." This was Disney Channel's most successful movie at its time with 7.7 million viewers in its premiere broadcast in the US. In the UK, the cable premiere received around 835,000 viewers for its first run, making the film the most watched program for the Disney Channel (UK) of 2006. |
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Synopsis Go-nee has lost his entire savings, saved over a period of 5 years, at a gambling joint. While Go-nee drinks heavily, determined to throw away his life, he discovers that he was swindled by professional fraudulent gamblers, so-called ?slickers?. To regain his sister?s money, Go-nee begins training to be the best slicker under a master of gambling, Mr. PYEONG. Go-nee becomes famous, wandering about different gambling places throughout the country with PYEONG. Moreover, Madam JUNG who has never gotten along with Mr. PYEONG, begins to show interest in Go-nee? Use FFSJ to join file |
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| Flash CS3 Professional Essential Training |
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Adobe Creative Suite is a collection of graphic design, video editing, and web development applications made by Adobe Systems. The latest version, Adobe Creative Suite 3 (CS3), was announced on March 27, 2007; it introduced Universal binaries for all programs for the Apple Macintosh.[1] Adobe sells CS3 applications in six different combinations called "editions." Some editions began shipping on April 16, 2007, and Production Premium and Master Collection editions began shipping on July 2, 2007. CS3 includes several programs, including Dreamweaver, Flash, and Fireworks that were developed by Macromedia, a former rival acquired by Adobe in 2005. Movie training, easy to make flash! |
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| The Legend of Seven Cutter |
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The Legend of Seven Cutter kicks things off with a rain soaked, Matrix-inspired action sequence, as described by a hyperactive, rumormongering student at Seonggji High School. The young man tells the story of Jung Han-Soo, a legendary badass in black, who bravely faced off against a group of notorious street thugs and lived to fight another day. Outnumbered thirty to one, Han-Soo easily decimates the competition, leaving the worst punishment for the gang's leader, giving him a seven centimeter slice courtesy of his particular weapon of choice: a boxcutter. Nicknamed "Seven Cutter" thereafter, Han-Soo becomes a celebrity of sorts, one who just so happens to be transferring to Seonggji High School this semester. Or is he? Thanks to a Three's Company-style misunderstanding between school principals, a misbehaving, but righteous (and rather silly) young man who also happens to be named Jung Han-Soo (Ahn Jae-Mo) is mistakenly believed by the entire school system to be the aforementioned delinquent from hell. The principal, the teachers, and even the students are all wary of Han-Soo, and he has a tough time making friends. In one corner, there's Sung-Gi (Lee Jeong), the Seonggji High's top dog, who's itching for a fight, but not without the help of his deluded, skinny henchmen. And if that weren't enough, Han-Soo also runs afoul of the school's resident tomboy, Min-Joo (Yun Eun-Hye), who's not only an ace boxer but a physical knockout to boot. After a few run-ins with Min-Joo that make him look like a pervert, Han-Soo resolves their conflict by pretending to have a crush on her, even though he actually likes the snotty "pretty girl" of the school, who - it should be noted - has next to no personality nor any substantial allure whatsoever. Added tension ensues when the thirty thugs who took a beating from the real Han-Soo come looking for our hero in an attempt to settle the score. Just as Han-Soo falls for Min-Joo, the bad guys kidnap her. But are they trying to exact revenge on the wrong man? While watching The Legend of Seven Cutter, I was immediately struck by how very few of the main cast members look even remotely like teenagers. Perhaps that's meant to be part of the joke as was the case with the thirtysomething teenagers in Cromartie High School, but here, the contrast doesn't elicit any laughs. Instead, it just comes across as a terribly distracting case of miscasting. As a result, Ahn Jae-Mo makes for a less than stellar lead, partially due to the fact that he looks considerably older than his teenager role, but mostly because of his inability to overcome the film's spotty characterization of Han-Soo. Ahn has practically zero charisma when playing the goofy comic lead (the personality seen mostly in the film's first half), yet is surprisingly compelling as the more traditional leading man - as evidenced when his character grows a backbone to defend a kid who's been picked on at school. But these moments are few and far between early in the film, which makes the transition seem jarring and out of character. Worse, the script calls for Han-Soo to unnecessarily deceive the good-hearted Min-Joo (simply for cheap romantic drama), which basically makes his character come across as an unlikable cad. Someone like Stephen Chow could have easily handled these abrupt transitions of character without losing the audience's support, but needless to say, Ahn Jae-Mo is no Stephen Chow. The plot and overall tone of the film are haphazard to say the least. Literal toilet humor involving a cell phone and a bowel movement as well as a shoehorned plotline between an unattainably sexy teacher (Hyun Young) and the interminably ugly and moronic PE teacher, Mr. Koh, seem gratuitous and slapped together. Sometimes, it's unclear what kind of movie the filmmakers wanted The Legend of Seven Cutter to be. Gross-out farce? Romantic comedy? Action flick? School drama? While many films easily synthesize all of these various genres, The Legend of Seven Cutter comes across as a somewhat poorly constructed mishmash. And yet somehow, IT STILL WORKS. Confusing, I know. When the film is going for comedy, the lowbrow humor hits more often than it misses, including such memorable bits as a hilarious pants zipper/fishhook scene, an out-of-nowhere men in drag sequence, Han-Soo's scene-stealing Sailor Moon cosplaying brother and a "What the hell?" live octopus in a man's boxer shorts prank. Despite EVERYTHING woefully lackluster about this film, there's a certain charm on display. Han-Soo's evolution into a "defender of the little guy" at his school tugs at all the right heart strings, Yun Eun-Hye is intensely likable thanks to her My Sassy Girl-inspired shenanigans, and the unexpected camaraderie that emerges among Han-Soo, Sung-GI, and his two mindless minions is surprisingly endearing. The Legend of Seven Cutter is by no means a great film - and I've probably mentioned more bad than good in this review - but somehow, someway, it does manage to entertain despite its huge flaws. For those who like these sorts of Korean films, this film would probably make for a good double feature with the similarly-themed, but superior comedy, See You After School. (Sanjuro 2006) |
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| Live free or die hard |
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Live Free or Die Hard (released as Die Hard 4.0 or Die Hard 4 outside North America) is the fourth installment in the Die Hard film series. It stars Bruce Willis as John McClane, the protagonist of the first three films. The film takes place some 19 years after the first film, and sees McClane face a gang of virtual terrorists. The film's American and Canadian release date was June 27, 2007.[2] The film was based on the 1997 article A Farewell to Arms written for Wired magazine by John Carlin.[3] At the start of the film, a terrorist begins as an attempted security breach on an FBI facility system is successful, and computer hackers are assassinated by the terrorist mastermind Thomas Gabriel (Timothy Olyphant) instead of being paid for their collaboration. The FBI, unaware of the killings, dispatches NYPD Police Detective John McClane (Bruce Willis) to visit a known hacker, Matthew Farrell (Justin Long), as part of their investigation regarding the breach. Gabriel's henchmen attempt to assassinate McClane and Farrell, but their targets escape. McClane transports Farrell to the FBI's Washington DC headquarters and its head, Assistant Director Bowman (Cliff Curtis), in the midst of a shutdown of the traffic system in DC. The stock market is manipulated shortly afterward, causing it to crash. McClane is ordered to take Farrell into protective custody, and Gabriel sends more henchmen to kill the pair. McClane and Farrell evade their assassins again, and as the country's infrastructure is threatened with a major break down, Farrell tells McClane the terrorists are initiating a fire sale and that major utilities would be next. The detective and the hacker travel to a power hub in West Virginia to defend it, finding that the terrorists are already there. McClane battles terrorists while Farrell undoes the damage done to the computer system. They are contacted by Gabriel, who finds out that McClane has killed his lover Mai Linh (Maggie Q) and angrily re-routes gas lines to destroy the hub in a gas explosion. The McClane and Farrell escape once more, and on Farrell's advice, the pair visit his hacker friend the Warlock (Kevin Smith) for help. At the Warlock's home, they find out about Gabriel's background and attempt to hack into the terrorist's systems. Gabriel contacts the detective at the Warlock's home via webcam, and he shows that he has McClane's daughter Lucy (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) as a hostage. While McClane distracts Gabriel in conversation, the Warlock determines Gabriel's location, at a hijacked NSA building. McClane and Farrell travel to the NSA building, and the detective combats terrorists while Farrell discovers and tries to undo Gabriel's plan to steal backup financial information from servers in the building. Farrell is able to lock the terrorists out of their server hack, rendering the task incomplete, and the he is taken hostage by the terrorists. With McClane after them, Gabriel and his henchmen flee the building with their hostages. McClane manages to hijack one of the escaping trucks and pursues Gabriel and the hostages. Gabriel renders a hack to deceive the pilot of a F-35 Lightning II jet to attack McClane's truck. The jet engages McClane, but the detective is able to escape. He tracks Gabriel to a warehouse, where the terrorist is forcing Farrell to undo the encryption at gunpoint. McClane is shot upon arrival and Gabriel says that he will kill them when it's over. Proding McClane's wound with a gun, Gabriel taunts "on your tombstone will read, always in the wrong place at the wrong time". McClane then delivers the classic catchphrase, "how about, Yippee-Ki-Yay, motherfucker", and squeezes the trigger, firing a bullet through his shoulder and into Gabriel's heart, killing Gabriel instantly. Farrel jumps up and shoots the thug holding Lucy just as backup arrives along with paramedics who tend to their wounds. |
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