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1-50 of 59
- A kidnapper has to settle a personal score with an influential businessman whose daughter he has kidnapped.
- Wishing to dispose of his wife, psychiatrist Doctor Elliott makes his patient Nina think that she suffers from a compulsion to kill. He drugs Nina, murders his wife and leaves evidence that points to Nina. The latter, pre-conditioned by Elliott, also thinks she is guilty.
- Kimmy slips his way to a sunroof
- This piece focuses on where the Gwen Stacy character goes in the film with her relationship with Peter Parker.
- This piece offers a closer examination of the film's core cast and the characters they portray, including some emphasis on the real people on whom they are based.
- A closer look at the film's two most critical characters and the actors who portray them.
- A brief catch-all in which cast and crew discuss the pluses of working with Ridley Scott, shooting locales, narrative details, research and the real history behind the story, cast and performances, costumes, score, cinematography, and more.
- An exploration of the film's villain, Teddy: the character's background, the character's complexity and unpredictability, Marton Csokas' performance, and more.
- Denzel Washington suggested Antoine Fuqua to direct the film. The piece looks at Washington's work to discover the character beyond action, the nuance and detail of his performance, Washington's trust in his director, crafting the "Equalizer Vision" moments, and more.
- A well-spoken piece that looks at the film project's origins, the questions the films asks, the deeper themes that run through the movie, shooting in Canada, depicting Heaven, casting and characters, the film's inspirational notes, and more. It includes comments from writer/director Randall Wallace, producers TD Jakes and Joe Roth, Todd and Sonja Burpo, production designer Arv Grewal, Columbia Pictures Senior VP of Production DeVon Franklin, and actors Greg Kinnear, Kelly Reilly, Margo Martindale and Thomas Haden Church.
- This is a three-part documentary (i.e. Spirit of Vengeance, Spirit of Adventure and Spirit of Execution) which mixes behind the scenes materials and interviews. The program opens with info about bringing Ghost Rider to the big screen, the script and story, cast and Nicolas Cage's interest in the project, the flick's tone and its motorcycles. From there it digs into sets, characters, costumes and makeup, music, shooting in Australia, cinematography, and stunts. In addition, it looks at visual effects, editing, score, and other aspects of post-production. It essentially follows the production in chronological order. It detours for related issues but stays connected to the shooting schedule. For instance, a scene that highlights Roxanne offers our introduction to Mendes. Part Three of the program mostly drops the interviews to completely follow the "fly on the wall" approach. We watch the various post-production stages without any commentary and just see them as they happen. Though this means we lose many overall thoughts on those issues, we get a nice sense of immediacy.
- The cast and crew of acclaimed TV series "Better Call Saul" offer up their predictions for how the show will end.
- A closer look at the main cast's work, including Denzel Washington, Chloë Grace Moretz, and Marton Csokas.
- Foy discusses her connection to the character, how portraying Queen Elizabeth helped her with this part, piercings and tattoos, and more. Cast and crew further discuss her credentials, capabilities, performance, physical work, and fun on the set.
- Writer-Director David Ayer goes inside the human carnage with the make-up and prosthetics team on FURY to see how they did it. and hear why Ayer thought it was so crucial to show the ugly truth on film.
- A quick exploration of Andrew Garfield's casting and performance, additional characters, story details, and more.
- How the movie's unique music reflects the blind man's and the house's personalities.
- This includes info from veterans Evans, Smilanich, Anderts and Stewart as well as Ayer. Mostly we learn of the veterans' experiences during WWII.
- A discussion of the importance of shooting in New York and the qualities the film's locations bring to the movie.
- A brief exploration of making a first-person POV scene and key 3D shots.
- This piece deals with the 8-day re-shoot to replace Kevin Spacey, including cast and crew response and the technical details and challenges of the process.
- This piece offers a look at a few of the movie's biggest stunts.
- A quick, closer look at McCall, including the good inside the character and his willingness to dole out punishment to evildoers.
- A short exploration of Electro's costume, including the lengthy design process and changes from the original comic design.
- This short presents info from Smith, Ayer, Pitt, Bernthal, Pena, tank supervisor Jim Dowdall, production designer Andrew Menzies, tank production assistant Thomas Turner, and Bovington Tank Museum curator David Willey as they examine the tanks used in the film as well as how the actors worked in them.
- A history lesson on the Allies' capture of a Tiger tank during the war and shooting with an authentic Tiger tank in filming the movie.
- This piece explores the movie's starting point following the first film, Parker's relationship with Gwen Stacy, key character qualities that define the film's villains, large-scale action sequences, and locations and production design.
- Dylan Minnette and Ryan Lee share a few thoughts on Jumanji.
- A look at how the city plays within the movie and how it is depicted in it. It explores geography and location details as well.
- A piece exploring Sony's and the production's commitment to the environment.
- A short piece that explores the movie's web-slinging and action scenes.
- We find statements from cast and crew as a production diary that highlights footage from the set.
- A quick look at the clash between hero and villain.
- A look back at the Fincher film, "resetting" with Spider's Web, remaining faithful to the characters, the film's settings, Alvarez's direction, the picture's visuals and tone, production design, score, and more.
- Creating the "hyper real" and "grounded" action and Denzel's performance thereof. It also briefly explores the tools and advantages the hardware store brings to his violent repertoire.
- features a glimpse into the segment of the film shot at the famed Volkswagen location.
- Here we find remarks from cast and crew on the look at the various locations found in the film as well as the production design and visual choices.
- A discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of Tiger and Sherman tanks on the battlefield. It also explores battlefield tactics.
- A quick exploration of the blending of in-camera and digital effects and the positives each bring to the movie.