Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Open Water Framed Poster Movie D 11 x 17 Inches - 28cm x 44cm Blanchard Ryan Daniel Travis Saul Stein Estelle Lau

  • Quality frame moldings are custom cut to the exact size of the poster
  • We use special non glare Plexiglas so your poster will look its best from any angle even in highly lit areas
  • Custom frame is hand crafted with care by our highly experienced staff
  • Protected with heavy bubble wrap and shipped in a sturdy corrugated box.
  • Approximate 11 x 17 Inches - 28cm x 44cm Open Water Style D Framed Poster
OPEN WATER - DVD MovieTwo scuba divers fight for their lives in the open waters of the ocean when their tour boat strands them in shark-infested waters. Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 02/14/2006 Starring: Blanchard Ryan Daniel Travis Run time: 81 minutes Rating: RShot on digital video with a pair of unknown actors (Blanchard Ryan and Daniel Travis) who tread water for most of the film's brisk 79-minute running time, Open Water is a fact-based e! xercise in primal fear that will scare the socks off anyone who dreads death from the deep, but it's familiar stuff if you've ever watched "Shark Week" on the Discovery Channel (which is mentioned in writer-director Chris Kentis's economical screenplay). If you can't accept that a trendy young couple could be accidentally abandoned during an open-sea diving excursion (but hey, it really happened!), then you'll surely be hooked by the intense what's-gonna-happen anxiety that escalates when the horrified vacationers realize they've got unwanted company. It's too easy to call Open Water a poor man's Jaws, and the movie's too realistically frightening to be compared to the popcorn thrills of Deep Blue Sea, so what you've got here is a shark movie that creates its own little low-budget niche. Before placing his actors in actual proximity to sharks, Kentis betrays them with some silly, bickering dialogue, but with adequate realism in its favor, Open Water offers a perfect excuse to stay on the beach. --Jeff Sh! annonGranddaddy of the Hollywood studios, Paramount Pictures is rightfully proud of its century of contributions to both American cinema and the art of film scoring. But the first disc of this 43-track double-CD anthology merely hints at the studio's musical peaks, blithely skipping through its first seven decades in just 17 tracks. Indeed, the package as a whole seems more interested in marketing its post-'70s catalog of hits and blockbusters than it does in paying real homage to history and roots. Even rarities like Double Indemnity and The Lost Weekend are served up via modern budget-line rerecordings, as is Ennio Morricone's epochal Once upon a Time in the West). Contemporary recordings of Aaron Copland's rare score to The Heiress and Franz Waxman's great Sunset Blvd. fare better, but soundtrack fans may miss the originals. The studio's rich pop-crossover successes in the '60s are documented via Breakfast at Tiffany's "Moon River" an! d excerpts from Romeo and Juliet and Love Story, while successful franchises like Star Trek and Raiders also get their due. Too often the '90s-focused second disc only underscores some uncomfortable trends in contemporary scoring--orchestral nervous tics punctuated by booming crescendos, treacly piano Muzak--and makes one wonder if the music of The Rugrats Movie and Lara Croft: Tomb Raider are really film music milestones. --Jerry McCulleyApproximate 11 x 17 Inches - 28cm x 44cm Open Water Style D

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We use special non glare Plexiglas so your poster will look its best from any angle even in highly lit areas.