Featured Movies

Inglourious Basterds (2009) Director : Quentin Tarantino Writer(s) : Quentin Tarantino Genre : Drama, Thriller, War Cast : Brad Pitt, Mélanie Laurent, Christoph Waltz, Eli Roth,...

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The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (2010) Director : David Slade Writer(s) : Stephenie Meyer (novel), Melissa Rosenberg (screenplay) Genre : Fantasy, Horror, Romance, Thriller Cast : Kristen Stewart,...

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Avatar (2009) Director : James Cameron Writer(s) : James Cameron Genre : Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi Cast : Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, Sigourney Weaver, Stephen Lang,...

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Scarface (1983) Director : Brian De Palma Writer(s) : Oliver Stone Genre : Crime, Drama Cast : Al Pacino, Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Robert...

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Slumdog Millionaire (2008) Director : Danny Boyle, Loveleen Tandan Writer(s) : Simon Beaufoy, Vikas Swarup Genre : Crime, Drama, Romance Cast : Dev Patel, Anil Kapoor, Saurabh Shukla, Rajendranath...

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Added a new top movie information in animation category. "Up (2009)"

It Happened One Night (1934)

Posted on : 20-02-2010 | By : admin | In : Comedy, Drama, Romance

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Director : Frank Capra

Writer(s) :
Samuel Hopkins Adams, Robert Riskin

Genre :
Comedy, Drama, Romance

Cast :
Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert, Walter Connolly, Roscoe Karns, Jameson Thomas, Alan Hale, Arthur Hoyt, Blanche Friderici, Charles C. Wilson

Summary :
Frank Capra’s seminal screwball comedy, which won all five major Academy Awards for 1934, is still as breezy and beguiling today. Claudette Colbert plays Ellie Andrews, a spoiled heiress who has married fortune-hunting aviator King Westley (Jameson Thomas), despite her father (Walter Connolly)’s objections. To keep Ellie from marrying this lothario, her father has been holding her prisoner aboard his yacht. But Ellie bolts from the yacht, swims ashore in her clothes, and eventually slips onto a Greyhound bus bound for New York. Aboard the bus is newspaper reporter Peter Warne (Clark Gable), who has recently been fired for drinking on the job. Peter gets the last seat on the bus — but when he gets up to argue with the bus driver, Ellie takes his seat. Since it is the last seat on the bus, they have to share it. When Ellie has her purse stolen and she refuses to report it, Peter begins to suspect something. The next morning, they both miss the bus after a leisurely breakfast, and Peter reveals that he knows her identity. She makes a deal with him: if he helps her get to New York, he can write a scoop about her for his paper. Peter thinks she is a spoiled brat, however, and refuses a monetary bribe: “I’m not interested in your money or your problem. You, King Westley, your father — you’re all a lot of hooey to me!” But as they travel northward and engage in a series of misadventures, the gruff newspaperman and the spoiled rich girl, thrown together by circumstances, fall in love with each other. This movie set the pace for the “screwball” comedy, the witty and romantic clash of temperaments between a man and a woman mismatched in both personality and social position, a type of movie often associated with Katherine Hepburn in such classics as Bringing Up Baby (1938), The Philadelphia Story (1940), and, with Spencer Tracy, Adam’s Rib (1949), Pat and Mike (1952), and Desk Set (1957), among others. The only other movies to win all five major Academy Awards (Best Picture, Actor, Actress, Director, and Screenplay) were One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) and The Silence of the Lambs (1991).

Some Like It Hot (1959)

Posted on : 13-02-2010 | By : admin | In : Action, Comedy, Crime, Music, Romance, Thriller

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Director : Billy Wilder

Writer(s) :
Robert Thoeren, Michael Logan

Genre :
Action, Comedy, Crime, Music, Romance, Thriller

Cast :
Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, George Raft, Pat O’Brien, Joe E. Brown, Nehemiah Persoff, Joan Shawlee, Billy Gray, George E. Stone, Dave Barry, Mike Mazurki, Harry Wilson, Beverly Wills, Barbara Drew

Summary :
The launching pad for Billy Wilder’s comedy classic was a rusty old German farce, Fanfares of Love, whose two main characters were male musicians so desperate to get a job that they disguise themselves as women and play with an all-girl band in gangster-dominated 1929 Chicago. In this version, musicians Joe (Tony Curtis) and Jerry (Jack Lemmon) lose their jobs when a speakeasy owned by mob boss Spats Columbo (George Raft) is raided by prohibition agent Mulligan (Pat O’Brien). Several weeks later, on February 14th, Joe and Jerry get a job perfroming in Urbana and end up witnessing a gangland massacre in a parking garage. Fearing that they will be next on the mobsters’ hit lists, Joe devises an ingenious plan for disguising their identities. Soon they are all dolled up and performing as Josephine and Daphne in Sweet Sue’s all-girl orchestra. En route to Florida by train with Sweet Sue’s band, the boys (girls?) make the acquaintance of Sue’s lead singer Sugar Kane (Marilyn Monroe, in what may be her best performance). Joe and Jerry immediately fall in love, though of course their new feminine identities prevent them from acting on their desires. Still, they are determined to woo her, and they enact an elaborate series of gender-bending ruses complicated by the fact that flirtatious millionaire Osgood Fielding (Joe E. Brown) has fallen in love with “Daphne.” The plot gets even thicker when Spats Columbo and his boys show up in Florida. Nominated for several Oscars, Some Like It Hot ended up the biggest moneymaking comedy up to 1959. Full of hilarious set pieces and movie in-jokes, it has not tarnished with time and in fact seems to get better with each passing year, as its cross-dressing humor keeps it only more and more up-to-date.