Monday, September 19, 2011

Fat Pizza (Uncut) [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.4 Import - Australia ]

  • THIS DVD WILL NOT WORK ON STANDARD US DVD PLAYER
Australia released, PAL/Region 4 DVD: it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada: LANGUAGES: English ( Dolby Digital 2.0 ), English ( Dolby Digital 5.1 ), English ( Subtitles ), WIDESCREEN (1.78:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Deleted Scenes, Featurette, Interactive Menu, Production Notes, Scene Access, Short Film, Uncut, SYNOPSIS: Australian director Paul Fenech leaves virtually no topic of Australian interest unsatirized in his scatologically-laden 2003 gross-out comedy, Fat Pizza. Pizza delivery guys Pauly (Fenech), Sleek (Paul Nakad), and Davo (Jabba) all go about their daily business while getting caught up in a series of misadventures. Pauly manages to get into fights with a rival fast food outlet's mascot while incurring the wrath of a gang of midgets miffed about his usage! of a handicapped stall in a restroom. Sleek is a Lebanese rapper who simultaneously hides from the various women he's slighted and from racist cops who are just interested in roughing him up for being Middle Eastern. New delivery man Davo's mission is much simpler: he's a druggie in search of a new high. Meanwhile, their violent boss Bobo Gigliotti (Johnny Boxer) attempts to divert the brow-beating he regularly gets from his mother due to his being a middle-aged virgin and signs up for a mail-order bride from Vietnam. Based on an Australian television series of the same name, Fat Pizza premiered in Australia in 2003 with decidedly mixed reviews.Australia released, PAL/Region 4 DVD: it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada: LANGUAGES: English ( Dolby Digital 2.0 ), English ( Dolby Digital 5.1 ), English ( Subtitles ), WIDESCREEN (1.78:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Deleted Scenes, Featurette, Interactive Menu, ! Production Notes, Scene Access, Short Film, Uncut, SYNOPSI! S: Austr alian director Paul Fenech leaves virtually no topic of Australian interest unsatirized in his scatologically-laden 2003 gross-out comedy, Fat Pizza. Pizza delivery guys Pauly (Fenech), Sleek (Paul Nakad), and Davo (Jabba) all go about their daily business while getting caught up in a series of misadventures. Pauly manages to get into fights with a rival fast food outlet's mascot while incurring the wrath of a gang of midgets miffed about his usage of a handicapped stall in a restroom. Sleek is a Lebanese rapper who simultaneously hides from the various women he's slighted and from racist cops who are just interested in roughing him up for being Middle Eastern. New delivery man Davo's mission is much simpler: he's a druggie in search of a new high. Meanwhile, their violent boss Bobo Gigliotti (Johnny Boxer) attempts to divert the brow-beating he regularly gets from his mother due to his being a middle-aged virgin and signs up for a mail-order bride from Vietnam. Based on an ! Australian television series of the same name, Fat Pizza premiered in Australia in 2003 with decidedly mixed reviews.

Havoc (Unrated Version)

  • A group of wealthy Los Angeles teenagers try to become part of the "gangsta" lifestyle but soon run into trouble when they come face to face with a real gang of Latino drug dealers.Running Time: 92 min. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR Age: 794043843228 UPC: 794043843228 Manufacturer No: N8432
When things get tough for Carys Reitman (Bijou Phillips) she goes to strangers' funerals to unwind. But after a funeral service mix-up, Carys unexpectedly finds herself in possession of a dead woman’s engagement ring and in love with the grieving fiancé (Ian Somerholder). Also starring Jane Seymour and Danny Masterson.Welcome to the Blues and mystery of Dark Streets. Chaz Davenport (Gabriel Mann) is a dashing playboy who has it all: a hot nightclub, two glamorous singers (Bijou Phillips, Izabella Miko) and the most seductive music ever created playing from his stage. But when he ! enlists help to look into the sinister circumstances surrounding his father's death, Davenport's life spirals out of control. Dark, sexy and sensuous, this music-driven journey smolders with a smoking hot score and a soundtrack that includes 9 original songs with vocal performances by Solomon Burke, Natalie Cole, Etta James, Dr. John, Aaron Neville, Bijou Phillips, Richie Sambora, Toledo and More!If she is very, very lucky, the first album by Papa John Phillips's other singing daughter will be remembered as a camp classic, the ultimate document of the 1990s' veneration of supermodel/hellions. Backed by bland, anonymous alternawhatever, with the occasional piano ballad thrown in, she spends the entire disc attempting to emote like Alanis--exactly like Alanis. It doesn't work: Bijou's vocal tone is even thinner than she is, and though every song but the one she wrote at 13 has been buffed up by tune doctors, the lyrics stumble from one howler to another ("You jo! ker, you soaker / She's sleeping with your chauffeur"). A coll! aboratio n with Luscious Jackson's Jill Cunniff has a sweet, sunny vibe, but there's not much else but novelty value to recommend this. --Douglas WolkTART - DVD MovieA group of wealthy Los Angeles teenagers try to become part of the "gangsta" lifestyle but soon run into trouble when they come face to face with a real gang of Latino drug dealers.After making her name in The Princess Diaries, Anne Hathaway takes a radical detour with this edgy independent drama. As Allie, a wealthy gangsta wannabe, she makes no excuses for her delinquent behavior: "We're just teenagers and we're bored." When her Pacific Palisades posse, including pal Emily (Bully's Bijou Phillips), starts hanging out with a Latino gang (including Six Feet Under's Freddy Rodríguez), they learn what thug life is really about. Hathaway couldn't be more game: She swears, she fights--she disrobes (several times). Written and directed by Oscar winners Stephen Gaghan (Traffic) and Barbara K! opple (American Dream), Havoc plays like a B movie, in the vein of the superior crazy/beautiful, and was released straight to video. For Hathaway fans, it's a chance to see this young talent in a very different light, but for Gaghan and Kopple followers, this lurid morality tale is sure to come as a letdown. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

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