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Review 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment  / The Empire Strikes Back - Special Edition [1980]
Actors & Directors
  • Anthony Daniels
  • Harrison Ford
  • Carrie Fisher
  • Irvin Kershner
  • Mark Hamill
  • Billy Dee Williams
Release date: 1997-10-06
Run time: 122 min.
RRP: £15.99
Price: £0.98

Review The Empire Strikes Back - Special Edition [1980] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:


Review MGM Entertainment  / Stargate SG-1 Vol. 1.6 - Missions 1.10 & 1.11 [1998]
Actors & Directors
  • Amanda Tapping
  • Richard Dean Anderson
  • Mario Azzopardi
  • Michael Shanks
  • Christopher Judge
  • Don S. Davis
Release date: 2000-02-01
Run time: 84 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £0.77

Review Stargate SG-1 Vol. 1.6 - Missions 1.10 & 1.11 [1998] / MGM Entertainment:

The 1994 movie Stargate was originally intended as the start of a franchise, but creators Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin were distracted celebrating their Independence Day. Episodic TV treatment was the natural next step. Replacing the Kurt Russell and James Spader roles of Colonel Jack O'Neill and Dr. Daniel Jackson respectively are Richard Dean Anderson and Michael Shanks. They are joined by Captain Samantha Carter (Amanda Tapping) and guilt-stricken former alien baddie Teal'c (Christopher Judge) to form the teacher's pet primary unit SG-1. With a seemingly endless network of Stargates found to exist on planets all across the known universe, their mission is to make first contact with as many friendly races as possible. Chasing their heels at almost every turn are the "overlord" pharaohnic Goa'uld-the ancient Egyptian Gods who are none too chummy after the events of the original film. The welcome notion of a continued plot thread sees offshoots that follow the reincarnation of Daniel's wife, Sam's father literally joining a renegade faction of the Goa'uld, and Jack in an unending quest to out-sarcasm everyone. There's something of The Time Tunnel to the show's premise, but amid a dearth of derivative look-a-likes, Stargate has held its own with stories that put the science fiction back into TV sci-fi. The episodes are not always properly sequenced on the tapes, making the order of events potentially confusing, something that ought to be taken into account when viewing. [+]
It's one year after the events of the original motion picture. We find that Colonel O'Neill (Richard Dean Anderson replacing Kurt Russell) has retired from the military, thinking he can forget about the Stargate and those who were left behind. Events conspire to re-commission him alongside old faces and new when it's discovered there's more than one Gate in the galaxy. A lot more! Although it assumes familiarity with the preceding movie, "Children of the Gods" is still an excellent pilot show. Characters are introduced sensibly, the expanded premise is engaging, and there's clearly a healthy sense of never taking itself too seriously. -Paul Tonks The 1994 movie Stargate was originally intended as the start of a franchise, but creators Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin were distracted celebrating their Independence Day. Episodic TV treatment was the natural next step. Replacing the Kurt Russell and James Spader roles of Colonel Jack O'Neill and Dr Daniel Jackson respectively are Richard Dean Anderson and Michael Shanks. They are joined by Captain Samantha Carter (Amanda Tapping) and guilt-stricken former alien baddie Teal'c (Christopher Judge) to form the teacher's pet primary unit SG-1 With a seemingly endless network of Stargates found to exist on planets all across the known universe, their mission is to make first contact with as many friendly races as possible. Chasing their heels at almost every turn are the "overlord" pharaoh-like Goa'uld-the ancient Egyptian Gods who are none too chummy after the events of the original film. The welcome notion of a continued plot thread sees offshoots that follow the reincarnation of Daniel's wife; Sam's father literally joining a renegade faction of the Goa'uld; and Jack in an unending quest to out-sarcasm everyone. There's something of The Time Tunnel to the show's premise, but amid a dearth of derivative look-a-likes, Stargate has held its own with stories that put the science fiction back into TV sci-fi. The episodes are not always properly sequenced on the tapes, making the order of events potentially confusing, something that ought to be taken into account when viewing. This is possibly one of the best pairings of episodes, despite being the eleventh and seventh chronologically speaking. A fantastic link back to the original film leads the team to Professor Ernest Littlefield who has been trapped on a planet for 40 years unable to get the Gate working at his end. "The Torment of Tantalus" is a real showcase for Michael Shanks as Dr Jackson who is enthralled by the knowledge Littlefield has become privy to. The spotlight then shifts to O'Neill who has never come to terms with the death of his son. "Cold Lazarus" is another terrific piece of science fiction, as the team riddles the mystery of the planet of blue crystals. -Paul Tonks.

Review Warner Home Video  / Outland [1981]
Actors & Directors
  • Frances Sternhagen
  • Kika Markham
  • Sean Connery
  • Peter Boyle
  • James Sikking
  • Peter Hyams
Run time: 104 min.
RRP: £4.99
Price: £0.64

Review Outland [1981] / Warner Home Video:

Outland is another in a long line of Westerns retooled for science fiction. Writer-director Peter Hyams (Capricorn One, 2010, Timecop) re-stages High Noon in outer space, with Sean Connery as O'Neil, the marshal for a settlement on one of Jupiter's moons. While investigating the deaths of some miners, O'Neil discovers that mine boss Peter Boyle has been giving his workers an amphetamine-like, work-enhancing drug that keeps them productive for months-until they finally snap and go berserk. When Boyle sends killer henchmen to neutralize the lawman, O'Neil is unable to get the miners to back him up. Outland is no classic but it offers solid suspense in an otherworldly atmosphere. It also stars Frances Sternhagen, James B. Sikking (Howard on television's Hill Street Blues) and John Ratzenberger (later to become famous as Cliff on the sitcom Cheers). -Jim Emerson.

Review Paramount Home Entertainment  / Star Trek Voyager - Vol. 7.2 [1996]
Actors & Directors
  • Winrich Kolbe
  • Kate Mulgrew
  • Robert Beltran
  • Roxann Dawson
Release date: 2001-05-07
Run time: 88 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £0.39

Review Star Trek Voyager - Vol. 7.2 [1996] / Paramount Home Entertainment:

Star Trek: Voyager, the first Trek spin-off to be made without any input at all from Gene Roddenberry, made its debut in 1995 and quickly established itself both as markedly different from cosmic cousin Deep Space Nine and as the successor to The Next Generation. Despite a lack of originality in its premise (Lost in Space anyone?), Voyager has none the less often been a bigger ratings success than any of its predecessors. Catapulted unwittingly to the far-flung Delta Quadrant, the crew of the Federation vessel Voyager must try somehow to get back home. The ghost of Katherine Hepburn lives on in Kate Mulgrew's forceful Captain Janeway, who has an equivocal (does she, doesn't she fancy him?) relationship with first officer and Native American-lite Chakotay (Robert Beltran). Tim Russ gives possibly the franchises' first fully realistic (yawn) portrayal of a Vulcan, and to enhance the alien quotient there's cuddly chef Neelix (Ethan Phillips). Garret Wang must have drawn the short straw for character development, since his Harry Kim is never imbued with any of the drama of rebellious pilot chum Tom Paris (Robert Duncan McNeill), who even gets the series' only romance with the seemingly inescapable resident half-breed B'Elanna Torres (Roxann Dawson). Until the fourth season, the fan favourite was the straight-funny man role of Robert Picardo's nameless Doctor. Then, with the brave Borg storyline "Scorpion Part 2", a serious improvement in the show's behind-the-scenes thinking introduced actress Jeri Ryan as 7 of 9, who immediately upped sex appeal and viewing numbers. There have been some oddities and errors along the way, such as the disappearance of cast regular Kes, the appearance of semi-regular Naomi Wildman, and various Holodeck obssessions with Leonardo Da Vinci, a smoky bar, and an "irish" village. Flashes of brilliance still emerge, while Jerry Goldsmith's graceful theme always opens the show in style. [+]
-Paul Tonks.

Review Manga Entertainment  / The Guyver - Data 9 - Transformation Tragedy Release date: 1994-12-09
Run time: 25 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £9.95

Review The Guyver - Data 9 - Transformation Tragedy / Manga Entertainment:


Review Paramount Home Entertainment  / Star Trek The Next Generation: Unification - The Full Length TV Movie [1990]
Actors & Directors
  • Michael Dorn
  • Les Landau
  • Gates McFadden
  • Cliff Bole
  • LeVar Burton
  • Patrick Stewart
  • Jonathan Frakes
Release date: 1995-02-27
Run time: 84 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £24.99

Review Star Trek The Next Generation: Unification - The Full Length TV Movie [1990] / Paramount Home Entertainment:

In 1987, some 20 years after the original series had ended, Star Trek: The Next Generation was launched into a decade renowned for its materialistic greed, but also for its hesitant steps towards a more unified world order. Creator Gene Roddenberry revised his vision of humanity's future accordingly, shifting the Trek timeline 80 years on and reinventing the new Starship Enterprise as an Ark-like exploration vessel full of families, schools, soothing recreational facilities and a maternally pacifying computer voice (Roddenberry's wife, Majel Barrett). The Next Generation crew were not soldiers, but scientists and diplomats. Unlike the fiercely individualistic Captain Kirk, Patrick Stewart's patrician Captain Jean-Luc Picard was a model team leader: no matter how desperate the crisis, he ensured that everyone got to sit round the Conference Room table and talk it over. And in a true late-1980s touch, a key member of the Bridge crew was psychoanalyst Counsellor Troi, always on hand to discuss everyone's feelings. Season Two saw the welcome introduction of the cybernetic horror that was the Borg. Originally a powerful symbol of technological misuse in an otherwise technologically utopian universe, ultimately their hive-like existence served to reinforce the message that everyone would be much happier as a team player. Even renegade super-entity Q (John De Lancie) relied on Picard as much as his fellow god-like playmates; Data followed Pinocchio and Spock in a quest to discard what made him an individual; and there was even an episode that rationalised why all aliens basically looked alike (we're all one big family). Even the slogan change to "Where no one has gone before" acknowledges that there's no "one" in a team. But for all its earnest political correctness and an over-reliance on "technobabble", good stories played by an appealing ensemble cast were at the heart of the show's success. [+]
After seven successful seasons, "All Good Things" finally came to an end. Until Deep Space Nine, Voyager and Enterprise, that is. -Paul Tonks.

Review Warner Home Video  / Blade Runner [1982]
Actors & Directors
  • Ridley Scott
  • Sean Young
  • Harrison Ford
  • M. Emmet Walsh
  • Edward James Olmos
  • Rutger Hauer
Release date: 1996-10-28
Run time: 112 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £0.98

Review Blade Runner [1982] / Warner Home Video:

When Ridley Scott's cut of Blade Runner was finally released in 1993, one had to wonder why the studio hadn't done it right the first time-11 years earlier. This version is so much better, mostly because of what's been eliminated (the ludicrous and redundant voice-over narration and the phoney happy ending) rather than what's been added (a bit more character development and a brief unicorn dream). Star Harrison Ford originally recorded the narration under duress at the insistence of Warner Bros. executives who thought the story needed further "explanation"; he later confessed that he thought if he did it badly they wouldn't use it. (Moral: Never overestimate the taste of movie executives. ) The movie's spectacular futuristic vision of Los Angeles-a perpetually dark and rainy metropolis that's the nightmare antithesis of "Sunny Southern California"-is still its most seductive feature, another worldly atmosphere in which you can immerse yourself. The movie's shadowy visual style, along with its classic private-detective/murder-mystery plot line (with Ford on the trail of a murderous android, or "replicant"), makes Blade Runner one of the few science fiction pictures to legitimately claim a place in the film noir tradition. And, as in the best noir, the sleuth discovers a whole lot more (about himself and the people he encounters) than he anticipates. The cast also includes Sean Young, Edward James Olmos, Daryl Hannah Rutger Hauer and M. Emmet Walsh. [+]
-Jim Emerson.

Review Manga Entertainment  / The Guyver - Data 12 - Reactivation
Actors & Directors
  • Masahiro Otani
  • Naoto Hashimoto
Release date: 1995-03-06
Run time: 25 min.
Price: £5.99

Review The Guyver - Data 12 - Reactivation / Manga Entertainment:


Review Entertainment in Video  / Lost In Space [1998]
Actors & Directors
  • Stephen Hopkins
  • Lacey Chabert
  • Heather Graham
  • Jack Johnson (II)
  • Mimi Rogers
  • William Hurt
Release date: 1999-03-15
Run time: 130 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £0.01

Review Lost In Space [1998] / Entertainment in Video:

Packed with more than 750 dazzling visual effects, this US$70 million adventure does more (and less) than give the 1965-68 TV series a state-of-the-art face-lift. Aimed at an audience that wasn't born when the series originally aired, the sci-fi extravaganza doesn't even require familiarity, despite cameo appearances by several of the TV show's original cast members. Instead, Lost in Space is a high-tech hybrid of the original premise with enough sensory overload to qualify as a spectacular big-screen video game, supported by a time-travel premise that's adequately clever but hardly original. It's certainly never boring, and visually it's an occasionally awesome demonstration of special effects technology. But, in its attempt to be all things to all demographics, the movie's more of a marketing ploy than a satisfying adventure, thankfully dispensing with the TV show's cheesy camp but otherwise squandering a promising cast in favour of eye-candy and ephemeral storytelling. -Jeff Shannon.

Review Warner Home Video  / The Time Machine [1960]
Actors & Directors
  • Alan Young
  • Sebastian Cabot
  • Tom Helmore
  • Rod Taylor
  • George Pal
  • Yvette Mimieux
Release date: 1996-06-17
Run time: 98 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £9.45

Review The Time Machine [1960] / Warner Home Video:

In 1960 producer-director George Pal's The Time Machine reshaped HG Wells' thoughtful, ironic novel into a two-fisted action movie, but one that still appeals to children and adults immensely and deserves its classic status. Wells' themes of biological and social evolution are played down, but there is a surprisingly melancholy thread as Rod Taylor's Time Traveller keeps stopping off at future wars to find that human stupidity still persists. In the first week of 1900 a group of fussy Victorians gather in Taylor's chintzy, overstuffed parlour to hear him tell of his expedition to the future, where the world is divided between the surface-dwelling, childish, beautiful Eloi and the hideous, underground, cannibal Morlocks. Wells intended both factions to seem degenerate, the logical final evolution of the class system, but Pal has Taylor pull a Captain Kirk and side with the Eloi and teach them to fight against their oppressors. The time travel sequence remains a tour de force, with a shop window mannequin demonstrating a parade of fashions as the years fly by in seconds and charming but still-effective stop-motion effects. The future is a wonderfully coloured landscape with properly gruesome cave-dwelling monsters and a winning Eloi heroine in Yvette Mimieux. It may not be totally Wells, but it's a treat. On the DVD: The Time Machine arrives on disc in a lovely widescreen print which makes the film seem new all over again. The featurette "Time Machine: The Journey Back" combines some mild behind-the-scenes stuff about the film (and its star prop) with a moving mini-sequel reuniting stars Rod Taylor and Alan Young in a scene that actually addresses a plot point skipped over in the original. -Kim Newman.

Review ITV DVD  / Stranger, The - Vol. 1 - Summoned By Shadows / More Than A Messiah [1993]
Actors & Directors
  • Bill Baggs|Colin Baker|Nicola Bryant|Sophie Aldred
Release date: 1993-08-31
Run time: 80 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £9.99

Review Stranger, The - Vol. 1 - Summoned By Shadows / More Than A Messiah [1993] / ITV DVD:


Review 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment  / The X Files Movie [1998]
Actors & Directors
  • John Neville
  • Martin Landau
  • Gillian Anderson
  • David Duchovny
  • William B. Davis
  • Rob Bowman
Release date: 1999-03-29
Run time: 118 min.
RRP: £16.99
Price: £5.92

Review The X Files Movie [1998] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:

The definitive American television series of the 1990s. The X-Files comes to the big screen with an anticlimactic whimper. And how could it be otherwise? Why should material so perfectly realised in one medium necessarily translate well into another? The series is crisply and thoughtfully executed in just about every detail, but the heart of its appeal lies in the elegant handling of complicated and evolving ongoing story lines, which is not something movies are especially good at. The big-screen drive for closure cramps the creative style, though it may also help nonfans get a grip on the proceedings. We do get some invigorating thrills and chills, however, and a more satisfying sense of the scale of an all-enveloping human-alien conspiracy than ever before, but there's no more plot development here than in an average two-part season-ending. FBI black sheep Mulder and Scully have been temporarily transferred from the X-Files project to an anti-terrorist unit to investigate an Oklahoma City-style bombing. They uncover a new wrinkle in the Syndicate/Cancer Man conspiracy-basically an attempt to help one bunch of (benign?) aliens fight off another bunch who want to colonise Earth. A spectacular, ice-bound finale thrillingly staged by series-veteran director Rob Bowman offers Mulder (but not a conveniently unconscious Scully) his first clear look at a You Know What, which in some quarters qualifies as an epochal event. Martin Landau offers the agents some crucial clues, and several familiar TV faces (including the Lone Gunmen and Mitch Pileggi's indispensable Assistant Director Skinner) turn up briefly to wink knowingly at faithful fans. -David Chute.

Review Eureka Entertainment  / Metropolis [1927]
Actors & Directors
  • Gustav Fröhlich
  • Rudolf Klein-Rogge
  • Alfred Abel
  • Fritz Rasp
  • Fritz Lang
  • Theodor Loos
Release date: 2003-01-27
Run time: 118 min.
RRP: £15.99
Price: £11.98

Review Metropolis [1927] / Eureka Entertainment:

Fritz Lang's Expressionistic masterwork continues to exert its influence today, from Chaplin's Modern Times (1936) to Dr Strangelove (1963), and into the late 1990s with Dark City (1998). In the stratified society of the future (Y2K no less), the son of a capitalist discovers the atrocious conditions of the factory slaves, falling in love with the charismatic Maria in the bargain, who preaches nonviolence to the workers. But even the benevolent leadership of Maria is a challenge to the privileged class, so they have the mad-scientist Rotwang concoct a robot double to take her place and incite the workers to riot. The story is melodrama, but it's the powerful imagery that is so memorable. One of the most arresting images has legions of cowed workers filing listlessly into the great maw of the all-consuming machine-god Moloch. Unfortunately, the print used for this DVD is unfocused, scratchy, and five minutes short, altogether unworthy of a visionary masterpiece. It may be too much to hope for the complete film to be restored (only two hours of the original three-hour film are extant), but a clean transfer from a fine-grain negative ought to be possible. And why, when there are other possible future Metropolises to be had, should we downtrodden masses accept this junk? -Jim Gay If you think you know Fritz Lang's Metropolis backwards, this special edition will come as a revelation. Shortly after its premiere, the expensive epic-originally well over two hours-was pulled from distribution and re-edited against Lang's wishes, and this truncated, simplified form is what we have known ever since 1926. Though not quite as fully restored as the strapline claims, this 118-minute version is the closest we are likely to get to Lang's original vision, complete with tactful linking titles to fill in the scenes that are irretrievably missing. [+]
Not only does this version add many scenes unseen for decades, but it restores their order in the original version. Until now, Metropolis has usually been rated as a spectacular but simplistic science fiction film, but this version reveals that the futuristic setting is not so much prophetic as mythical, with elements of 1920s architecture, industry, design and politics mingled with the mediaeval and the Biblical to produce images of striking strangeness: a futuristic robot burned at the stake, a steel-handed mad scientist who is also a 15th Century alchemist, the trudging workers of a vast factory plodding into the jaws of a machine that is also the ancient God Moloch. Gustav Frohlich's performance as the hero who represents the heart is still wildly overdone, but Rudolf Klein-Rogge's engineer Rotwang, Alfred Abel's Master of Metropolis and, especially, Brigitte Helm in the dual role of saintly saviour and metal femme fatale are astonishing. By restoring a great deal of story delving into the mixed motivations of the characters, the wild plot now makes more sense, and we can see that it is as much a twisted family drama as epic of repression, revolution and reconciliation. A masterpiece, and an essential purchase. On the DVD: Metropolis has been saddled with all manner of scores over the years, ranging from jazz through electronica to prog-rock, but here it is sensibly accompanied by the orchestral music Gottfried Huppertz wrote for it in the first place. An enormous amount of work has been done with damaged or incomplete elements to spruce the image up digitally, and so even the scenes that were in the film all along shine with a wealth of new detail and afford a far greater appreciation for the brilliance of art direction, special effects and Helm's clockwork sexbomb. A commentary written but not delivered by historian Ennio Patalas covers the symbolism of the film and annotates its images, but the production information is left to a measured but unchallenging 45-minute documentary on the second disc (little is made of the astounding parallel between the screen story in which Klein-Rogge's character tries to destroy the city because the Master stole his wife and the fact that Lang married the actor's wife Thea von Harbou, authoress of the Metropolis novel and screenplay!). There are galleries of production photographs and sketches; biographies of all the principals; and an illustrated lecture on the restoration process which uses before and after clips to reveal just how huge a task has been accomplished in this important work. -Kim Newman.

Review Manga Entertainment  / The Guyver - Data 10 - Haunted Village Release date: 1995-01-09
Run time: 26 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £4.49

Review The Guyver - Data 10 - Haunted Village / Manga Entertainment:


Review 4 Front Video  / First Men In The Moon [1964]
Actors & Directors
  • Miles Malleson
  • Norman Bird
  • Nathan Juran
  • Lionel Jeffries
  • Edward Judd
  • Martha Hyer
Release date: 2002-07-01
Run time: 99 min.
Price: £5.99

Review First Men In The Moon [1964] / 4 Front Video:


Review Manga Entertainment  / The Guyver - Data 7 - The Battle Begins Release date: 1994-10-10
Run time: 25 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £3.75

Review The Guyver - Data 7 - The Battle Begins / Manga Entertainment:


Review Manga Entertainment  / The Guyver - Data 8 - The Lost Unit Release date: 1994-11-07
Run time: 30 min.
Price: £5.99

Review The Guyver - Data 8 - The Lost Unit / Manga Entertainment:


Review Paramount Home Entertainment  / Star Trek : Deep Space Nine - Vol. 7.6 - Prodigal Daughters / The Emperor's New Cloak [1999]
Actors & Directors
  • LeVar Burton
  • Avery Brooks
  • Rene Auberjonois
  • Michael Dorn
  • Victor Lobl
Release date: 1999-06-21
Run time: 88 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £1.95

Review Star Trek : Deep Space Nine - Vol. 7.6 - Prodigal Daughters / The Emperor's New Cloak [1999] / Paramount Home Entertainment:

From the outset, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine was about conflict. Producers Rick Berman and Michael Piller challenged the utopian ideals of Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek universe to create something totally different from its predecessors. That meant no familial camaraderie, squeaky-clean Federation diplomacy, or beige décor. Instead they wanted inter-personal friction, ruthless enemies (Gamma Quadrant Imperialists-The Dominion) and rebellion at every turn. The DS9 concept was originally facilitated by introducing the Cardassian/Bajoran war during The Next Generation's final days. After a muted first reception fans gradually came to accept the new look, but no-one liked Star Trek without a starship and eventually the producers capitulated to viewers' wishes by introducing the USS Defiant (an apt name) in Season 3. Relying far less on technobabble than TNG, DS9 was unafraid to focus on matters of the spirit instead, demonstrating a gutsy independence from its parent shows. Taking up the gauntlet thrown down by Babylon 5, improved CGI space battles also became a fan favourite. Throughout the increasingly serialised story arc there were rebellious factions within the different establishments: Kira had belonged to the Shakaar resistance cell; The Maquis was Starfleet vs Cardassians; Section 31 was a secret Starfleet group; The True Way was a Bajoran group opposed to peace; the Cardassians had their Obsidian Order and the Romulans their Gestapo-like Tal Shiar. Yet for all its constant bickering and espionage (even Bashir got to be James Bond!), there was always some contemporary social commentary lurking: the Ferengi were used as a comedic foil to frown on materialistic greed; drugs were looked at via the Jem'Hadar foot soldiers' addiction to Ketracel White. [+]
Perhaps Sisko summed up the real heart of things: "Bajor doesn't need a man, it needs a legend". A future vision that retains a place for religion and spirituality turned out to be Deep Space Nine's first best destiny. -Paul Tonks.

Review Playback  / Earth: The Final Conflict - Vol. 3 - Float Like A Butterfly / Resurrection / Horizon Hero [1997]
Actors & Directors
  • Kulbhushan Kharbanda
  • Deepa Mehta
  • Nandita Das
  • Kitu Gidwani
  • Maia Sethna
  • Babby Singh
Release date: 2000-09-04
Run time: 120 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £8.50

Review Earth: The Final Conflict - Vol. 3 - Float Like A Butterfly / Resurrection / Horizon Hero [1997] / Playback:


Review Manga Entertainment  / The Guyver - Data 5 - Death Of The Guyver Release date: 1994-08-08
Run time: 30 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £3.75

Review The Guyver - Data 5 - Death Of The Guyver / Manga Entertainment:


Models & Brands:
The Empire Strikes Back - Special Edition [1980], Stargate SG-1 Vol. 1.6 - Missions 1.10 & 1.11 [1998], Outland [1981], Star Trek Voyager - Vol. 7.2 [1996], The Guyver - Data 9 - Transformation Tragedy, Star Trek The Next Generation: Unification - The Full Length TV Movie [1990], Blade Runner [1982], The Guyver - Data 12 - Reactivation, Lost In Space [1998], The Time Machine [1960], Stranger, The - Vol. 1 - Summoned By Shadows / More Than A Messiah [1993], The X Files Movie [1998], Metropolis [1927], The Guyver - Data 10 - Haunted Village, First Men In The Moon [1964], The Guyver - Data 7 - The Battle Begins, The Guyver - Data 8 - The Lost Unit, Star Trek : Deep Space Nine - Vol. 7.6 - Prodigal Daughters / The Emperor's New Cloak [1999], Earth: The Final Conflict - Vol. 3 - Float Like A Butterfly / Resurrection / Horizon Hero [1997], The Guyver - Data 5 - Death Of The Guyver

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