Bionicle 2 - Legends of Metru Nui - What Everybody Ought to Know About Online Movie Downloading
Wow! I really loved the movie Bionicle 2 - Legends of Metru Nui. The movie is absolutely stunning with top-notch graphics and visuals while Christopher Gaze deliver some award-winning performances in this movie. I also think Michael Dobson was great! The visuals and graphics make for some very realistic on screen special-effects but that is the beauty of the movie.When the movie wants to be funny it is funny, the same is true for when the movie needs to deliver its scary aspects.
I think Christopher Gaze and Michael Dobson worked wonderful in Bionicle 2 - Legends of Metru Nui. The great supporting cast includes Christopher Gaze, Michael Dobson, Paul Dobson, Tabitha St. Germain, Brian Drummond.
You should see it, make no mistake this is a definite blockbuster!
I left some information, immages, and video previews of Bionicle 2 - Legends of Metru Nui below.
Summary of Bionicle 2 - Legends of Metru Nui: Experience the awesome action-packed adventure in BIONICLE 2: LEGENDS OF METRU NUI, the all-new, full-length CGI-animated movie that goes deeper into the legendary world of BIONICLE! When mysterious dark forces threaten the glorious city of Metru Nui, Toa Lhikan gives six Matoran the tools and responsibilities of new Toa. These guardians must quickly master their new powers, demonstrate their worth to their honorable leader Turaga Dume, retrieve the hidden Great Kanoka Disks, and rescue the inhabitants of their island city! Will they succeed before time runs out, or will darkness prevail? BIONICLE 2: LEGENDS OF METRU NUI features new allies and new adversaries -- including ruthless Vahki Enforcers and mysterious Dark Hunters! Experience the nonstop action and adventure as Vakama and his five courageous companions set out to prove they are heroes worthy of their own legends!
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World War I Films of the Silent Era - As Good As The Show
World War I Films of the Silent Era A unique, one-of-a-kind movie! Both Sessue Hayakawa and Jack Holt has earned overwhelmingly positive reviews and is considered by many to be one of the best films of the year! Maybe thats what makes the movie so good.The great cast includes Sessue Hayakawa, Jack Holt, Florence Vidor, Mayme Kelso, Raymond Hatton. The movie moves on like a dream and end leaving you wanting for more.
If you love watching Sessue Hayakawa or Jack Holt, you are deffinetly going to want to watch World War I Films of the Silent Era.
The astonishing films in this collection show and explain essential news and propaganda functions of the movies during the Great War of 1914-1918. In those days before television and even before radio, fiction films in movie theaters were the most widely shared public experience, while news films were the most potent and detailed public images of armament, military life and even front line action. Some news film was faked and much of it was censored, but some was authentic, obtained at great risk by daredevil combat cameramen. Films include: "Fighting the War" (1916) is the work of 26-year-old American adventurer Donald C. Thompson, who managed to get to France on Canadian credentials with English troops. He photographed some of the most amazing front line films of the entire war. "The Log of the U-35" (1917) is a totally authentic filmed account of sinkings on one Mediterranean cruise in April 1917 by a submarine commanded by Lothar von Arnauld de la Perriere, Germany's U-Boat Ace of Aces, during the period of unrestricted submarine warfare. "The Secret Game" (1917) directed by William C. de Mille and starring Sessue Hayawaka, Florence Vidor, Jack Holt and Charles Ogle. Reported when new as a "timely release," it's a detective story in which representatives of Japan (our ally in 1917-18) and the United States work hand-in-hand to frustrate German agents in their effort to get information about American transport sailings on the Pacific. "The Moving Picture Boys in the Great War" (1975) is a compilation documentary narrated by Lowell Thomas, illustrating changing attitudes toward the war and its participants, as well as toward the movies themselves. Winner, Gold Medal, 1975 Chicago Film Festival.