Opening this Weekend
Share:
In
Abandon, Katie Holmes stars as a very stressed-out college senior who
keeps having pesky visions of her ex-boyfriend. The catch: her ex-boyfriend
mysteriously vanished two years earlier. A newly sober detective, played by
Benjamin Bratt, is called in – and some interesting tidbits are
uncovered.
Comic book lover Samuel L. Jackson stars as an illegal drug
chemist in Formula 51. Upon traveling to England to find a niche market
for his latest concoction, however, he runs into anti-American feelings, dirty
double-crossers and abundant shenanigans.
In The Ring, an
English-language remake of the Japanese blockbuster Ringu, Naomi Watts
stars as a journalist who happenstances upon a strange little videotape. So
strange, in fact, that everyone who has viewed it has died seven days later.
Shivers!
The story of Hogan’s Heroes’ star Bob Crane comes to life
in the new film Auto Focus. Starring Greg Kinnear, the film focuses on
the sexually deviant world Crane inhabited in the free-lovin’ ’60s – and the
disturbingly bleak consequences of that world. Willem Dafoe plays Crane’s
sleazy sidekick John Carpenter…and we thought the Green Goblin was
scary.
A kinder, gentler Adam Sandler stars in Punch-Drunk Love,
the latest tale from the wildly original mind of Paul Thomas Anderson. The film
features Sandler as a bit of an emotional basketcase and phone-sex maniac, who
finds himself falling hopelessly and unconditionally in love with Emily Watson’s
harmonium player. But “getting” her takes a little effort.
r.
Wheatley and John Staton did an excellent job converting the lush gray tones to
even more lush color, and it really enhances what was already a great
experience. <br></div>
</body>
</html>
so-8859-1”>
<title>.html</title>
</head>
<body >
<div>In <i>Scoop 10-4-02</i>, we took a look at the legal drama that played out
between DC Comics and the wayward accountant Victor Fox regarding similarities
between DC’s Superman and Fox’s Wonder Man. Today, we’d like to continue with a
look at an ultra-rare premium from the short-lived but historically significant
<i>Wonder Comics #1. </i><br><br>According to the cover of <i>Wonder Comics
#1</i>, there were to be 1,000 prizes given away for free. Strangely