Romantic comedy is a great genre with a reputation, slightly tarnished by soulless crafts made in... After all, it only seems as if to make a funny movie more
Romantic comedy is a great genre with a reputation, slightly tarnished by soulless crafts made in... After all, it only seems as if to make a funny movie pro love with a happy ending is easy. Many are taken, it turns out from the chosen ones. A collection of eight romantic comedies of America and Europe restores justice: only flawless samples of romcoms, invented with fantasy, fresh humor, a healthy portion of erotica and harmless hooliganism. The eternal and rather shabby theme of the relationship between men and women before gives scope to wit and gives surprises. Easy, fun, original! close
A descent into the maelstrom of anguish that tormented Arthur Lipsett, a famed Canadian experimental filmmaker who died at 49. A diary transmuted into more
A descent into the maelstrom of anguish that tormented Arthur Lipsett, a famed Canadian experimental filmmaker who died at 49. A diary transmuted into a clash of images and sounds charting a prodigious frenzy of creation, a tableau depicting an artist’s dizzying descent into depression and madness: with LIPSETT DIARIES, Theodore Ushev renews his filmmaking aesthetic and explores what happens when genius is on a first-name basis with madness. close
Ex Con Armstrong Cane (Ving Rhames) returns to home a changed man looking to take over his father's old church and congregation. The neighborhood though more
Ex Con Armstrong Cane (Ving Rhames) returns to home a changed man looking to take over his father's old church and congregation. The neighborhood though is full of drugs and gangs. Those who are able are leaving for more prosperous areas and falling in with a slick preacher (Ricardo Chivara). Even with a dangerous gang leader (Dean McDermott) threatening his flock, Armstrong won't give up. close
Leonard (Martin Starr - 'Freaks & Geeks', 'Knocked Up', and 'Party Down'), exists in slow motion but lives in a regular speed world. When he discovers more
Leonard (Martin Starr - 'Freaks & Geeks', 'Knocked Up', and 'Party Down'), exists in slow motion but lives in a regular speed world. When he discovers his office crush is getting transferred to Florida, Leonard decides he must somehow become regular speed to win her heart before she leaves town for good. close
The story of the world-famous British rock band The Rolling Stones formed the basis of the plot of the biographical film Rolling Stones: Live at the Max. more
The story of the world-famous British rock band The Rolling Stones formed the basis of the plot of the biographical film Rolling Stones: Live at the Max. The formation of the collective began in the distant 60s, the time of the action of the picture is the early 70s, when the Rolling Stones predict the future of the greatest rock and roll band. Surprisingly, she managed to maintain her status to this day.
Genre of the picture: documentary, biography
The Rolling Stones: Live at the Max
The backstory of the film is this. Despite its popularity, the group goes bankrupt due to the frenzied taxes in Britain, his contribution to this process has made the team manager. In the future, the musicians decide to get rid of the stupid director, but this step is given to them very hard. In 1971, the band went to France, where he rented a basement in Villa Nellecott, in this very place and born the iconic collection Exile on Main St.
The Steel Wheels/Urban Jungle tour was a stunning success, the best in the history of the band, which performed 117 concerts in 60 cities on 3 continents.
The daily work of the group brought stunning success, which in the end was appreciated even by critics. In August of the 90th tour came to an end, by this time more than six million people had purchased tickets and visited concerts. After that, the organizers conceived another grandiose project – to make the film “The Rolling Stones”. What happened, and what other musicians had adventures on the way to fame – just look in this film.
Interesting facts
Mick Jagger wrote another hit Sympathy for the Devil (1968) under the impression of Mikhail Bulgakov’s book The Master and Margarita. close
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