Archive for November, 2007

The Queen (Blu-ray)

Friday, November 30th, 2007

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The Queen (Blu-ray)
A revealing, witty portrait of the British royal family in crisis immediately following the death of Princess Diana. The setting for this fictional account of real events is no less than the private chambers of the Royal Family and the British government in the wake of the sudden death of Princess Diana in August of 1997.In the immediate aftermath of the Princess’ passing, the tightly contained, tradition-bound world of The Queen of England clashes with the slick modernity of the country’s brand new, image-conscious Prime Minister, Tony Blair.The result is an intimate, yet thematically epic, battle between private and public, responsibility and emotion, custom and action - as a grieving nation waits to see what its leaders will do.

Creative Zen V Plus 2GB Digital Multimedia Device - Audio Player, Video Player, Audio Recorder, Voice Recorder, FM Tuner, Photo

Friday, November 30th, 2007

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Creative Zen V Plus 2GB Digital Multimedia Device - Audio Player, Video Player, Audio Recorder, Voice Recorder, FM Tuner, Photo Viewer - 1.5 OLED - 2GB Flash M
The ZEN V Plus player was designed for people like you - those who walk a step or two ahead of the pack. So don’t be surprised when people take notice of your cool, colorful music, photo and video player. Tell them you carry up to 1,000 songs with you. Tell them you can watch video on the go. Show them just a handful of the photos you’ve stored on the pocket sized powerhouse. And tell them there’s even more but they’ll have to get their own.

SanDisk Sansa C140 1GB MP3 Player - FM Tuner, FM Recorder, Voice Recorder, Photo Viewer - 1GB Flash Memory

Friday, November 30th, 2007

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SanDisk Sansa C140 1GB MP3 Player - FM Tuner, FM Recorder, Voice Recorder, Photo Viewer - 1GB Flash Memory
Sansa is the new and more advanced way to listen to music (and more) when you’re on-the-go! Be it MP3 or WMA or FM or Photos or other Data, the Sandisk Sansa c240 1GB Digital Player was created to be a sleek, convenient, and ultimately affordable digital player that’s tiny and extremely easy to carry with you anywhere. A convenient control allows you to access your favorite songs and navigate the menu with no hassles. The 1GB of storage offers ample space for up to 240 MP3 songs or 480 WMA songs. You can even listen to FM radio (this model lets you program up to 20 presets) for the times when you want to get the latest game scores or hear your local news. The Sansa c240 also allows you to upload your photos with support for JPEG, TIFF, BMP, PNG, and GIF. It’s a way to keep your loved ones and best memories with you at all times. Voice recording lets you make personal memos for yourself, so you can stay organized. The player connects quickly and easily to your PC via USB for song downloading and charging. It’s so tiny and, at only about 1-1/2 ounces, you can carry the c240 anywhere, in your hand or as a necklace. It’s perfect for practically any sport. Solid state memory means smaller size and virtually no moving parts for assured dependability. Supports Subscription Music Stores and is Microsoft PlaysForSure compatible Up to 32 hours of music at 64 Kbps or 16 hours at 128 Kbps (other bitrates also supported) System Requirements - Windows XP, Windows Media Player 10+, CD-ROM drive, USB 2.0 port required for hi-speed transfer Sandisk USA 1-Year Parts and Labor Warranty / Consider WAR ARMX100 as a replacement extension contract Unit Dimensions 3-3/16W x 1-3/8H x 5/8D; Weighs 1.6 ounce (with battery)

DXG 5 MP DIG CAMERA 4X DG ZM, 2.4 LCD

Friday, November 30th, 2007

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DXG 5 MP DIG CAMERA 4X DG ZM, 2.4 LCD
Portable, exceptional value and packed with features, the DXG-505V is a digital video camcorder that lets you capture near DVD quality video in MPEG-4 format and still pictures at a fraction of a price. DXG-505V has a flip out 2.5 LCD display and also function as an MP3 player, FM tuner and digital voice recorder. When connected to a PC, the camera act as a webcam or a storage device.

Selena - Greatest Hits (Bonus DVD)

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

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Selena - Greatest Hits (Bonus DVD)
Selena’s crossover dreams will never be fully realized, but the promise of what might have been is showcased on Greatest Hits, a 16-song collection of the late Tejano singer’s English-language recordings. The handsomely packaged tribute includes the native Texan’s biggest hits, the shimmering ballads “I Could Fall in Love” and “Dreaming of You.” However, it’s the lesser-known songs that make Greatest Hits a real keepsake. “Don’t Throw Away My Love” rides a pulsing freestyle groove; “A Million to One” is a lighthearted pop ditty; and the live “Disco Medley” showcases Selena at full throttle. Greatest Hits also features “Where Did the Feeling Go?” and “Is It The Beat,” two pop gems originally included on the Selena motion picture soundtrack. Best of all are “God’s Child (Baila Conmigo),” a flamenco-flavored duet with David Byrne, and Selena’s searing rendition of the West Side Story showstopper “A Boy Like That.” Those two recordings stand as some of Selena’s best work in any language. –Joey Guerra

Constantine (HD DVD)

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

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Constantine (HD DVD)
Based on the DC Comics/Vertigo Hellblazer graphic novels and written by Kevin Brodbin and Frank Cappello, Constantine tells the story of John Constantine (Keanu Reeves), a man who has literally been to hell and back. When he teams up with skeptical policewoman Angela Dodson (Rachel Weisz) to solve the mysterious suicide of her twin sister, their investigation takes them through the world of demons and angels that exists just beneath the landscape of contemporary Los Angeles. Caught in a catastrophic series of otherworldly events, the two become inextricably involved and seek to find their own peace at whatever cost. Running Time: 121 min. Format: HD DVD

Sopranos (Complete Season 1-5)

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

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Sopranos (Complete Season 1-5)
The Sopranos, writer-producer-director David Chase’s extraordinary television series, is nominally an urban gangster drama, but its true impact strikes closer to home, chronicling a dysfunctional, suburban American family in bold relief. And for protagonist Tony Soprano, there’s the added complexity posed by heading twin families, his collegial mob clan and his own, nouveau riche brood. The series’ brilliant first season is built around what Tony learns when, whipsawed between those two worlds, he finds himself plunged into depression and seeks psychotherapy–a gesture at odds with his midlevel capo’s machismo, yet instantly recognizable as a modern emotional test. With analysis built into the very spine of the show’s elaborate episodic structure, creator Chase and his formidable corps of directors, writers, and actors weave an unpredictable series of parallel and intersecting plot arcs that twist from tragedy to farce to social realism. While creating for a smaller screen, they enjoy a far larger canvas than a single movie would afford, and the results, like the very best episodic television, attain a richness and scope far closer to a novel than movies normally get. Alternately seductive, exasperated, fearful, and murderous, James Gandolfini’s Tony is utterly convincing even when executing brutal shifts between domestic comedy and dramatic violence. The first season’s other life force is Livia Soprano, Tony’s monstrous, meddlesome mother. As Livia, the late Nancy Marchand eclipses her long career of patrician performances to create an indelibly earthy, calculating matriarch who shakes up both families; Livia also serves as foil and rival to Tony’s loyal, usually level-headed wife, Carmela (Edie Falco). Lorraine Bracco makes Tony’s therapist, Dr. Melfi, a convincing confidante, by turns “professional,” perceptive, and sexy; the duo’s therapeutic relationship is also depicted with uncommon accuracy. Such grace notes only enrich what’s not merely an aesthetic high point for commercial television, but an absorbing film masterwork that deepens with subsequent screenings. In its second season, The Sopranos repeatedly defies formula to let the narrative turn as a direct consequence of the characters’ behavior, letting everyone in this rogue’s gallery of Mafiosi, friends, and family evolve and deepen. That gamble is most apparent in the rupture of the relationship that formed the spine of the first season, the tangled ties between Tony and Livia, whose betrayal makes Tony’s estrangement a logical response. Filling that vacuum, however, is prodigal sister Janice (Aida Turturro), whose New Age flakiness never successfully conceals her underlying calculation and opportunism. Soprano’s relationship with therapist Melfi also frays during early episodes, as she struggles with escalating doubts about her mobbed-up patient. At home, Tony contends with wife Carmela’s ruthless ambitions on behalf of college-bound Meadow (Jamie Lynn Sigler), as well as son Anthony Jr.’s (Robert Iler) sullen adolescent flirtation with existentialism–the sort of touch that the show handles with a smart mix of sympathy and amusement. In the brutal and controversial third season, The Sopranos justified its 11-month hiatus with some of its best, and most hotly debated, episodes. It continued to upend convention and defy audience expectations with a deliberately paced, calm-before-the-storm season opener that revolves around the FBI’s attempts to bug the Soprano household, and a season finale that (for some) frustratingly leaves several plot lines unresolved. “Employee of the Month,” in which Dr. Melfi is raped and considers whether to exact revenge by telling Tony of her attack, earned Emmys for its writers, and is perhaps Emmy nominee Lorraine Bracco’s finest hour. Other story arcs concern the rise of the seriously unstable Ralph Cifaretto (Joe Pantoliano) and Tony’s affair with “full-blown loop-de-loo” Gloria (Emmy nominee Annabella Sciorra). Plus, there is Tony’s estrangement from daughter Meadow, his wayward delinquent son Anthony, Jr., Carmela’s crisis of conscience, bad seed Jackie Jr., and the FBI–which, as the season ends, assigns an undercover agent to befriend an unwitting figure in the Soprano family’s orbit. Though for some the widely debated fourth season contained too much yakking instead of whacking, and an emphasis on domestic family over business Family, in most respects The Sopranos remains television’s gold standard. The season garnered 13 Emmy nominations, and subsequent best actor and actress wins for James Gandolfini and Edie Falco as Tony and Carmela, whose estrangement provides the season with its most powerful drama, as well as a win for Joe Pantoliano’s psychopath Ralph. Other narrative threads include Christopher’s (Emmy nominee Michael Imperioli) descent into heroin addiction, Uncle Junior’s (Dominic Chianese) trial, an unrequited and potentially fatal attraction between Carmela and Tony’s driver Furio, and a rude joke about Johnny Sack’s wife that has potentially fatal implications. Other indelible moments include Christopher’s girlfriend Adriana’s projectile reaction to discovering that her new best friend is an undercover FBI agent in the episode “No Show,” Janice giving Ralph a shove out of their relationship in “Christopher,” and the classic “Quasimodo/Nostradamus” exchange in the season-opener, which garnered HBO’s highest ratings to date. Freed from the understandably high expectations for the fourth season, heightened by the 16-month hiatus, these episodes can be better appreciated on their own considerable merits. They are pivotal chapters in television’s most novel saga. From the moment a wayward bear lumbers into the Sopranos’ yard in the fifth-season opener, it is clear that The Sopranos is in anything but a “stagmire.” The series benefits from an infusion of new blood, the so-called “Class of 2004,” imprisoned “family” members freshly released from jail. Most notable among these is Tony’s cousin, Tony Blundetto (Steve Buscemi, who directed the pivotal season 3 episode “Pine Barrens”), who initially wants to go straight, but proves himself to be something of a “free agent,” setting up a climactic stand-off between Tony and New York boss Johnny Sack. These 13 mostly riveting episodes unfold with a page-turning intensity with many rich subplots. Estranged couple Tony and Carmella (the incomparable James Gandolfini and Edie Falco) work toward a reconciliation (greased by Tony’s purchase of a $600,000 piece of property for Carmela to develop). The Feds lean harder on an increasingly stressed-out and distraught Adriana to “snitch” with inevitable results. This season’s hot-button episode is “The Test Dream,” in which Tony is visited by some of the series’ dear, and not-so-dearly, departed in a harrowing nightmare.

Nokia E65 QuadBand Unlocked GSM Cell Phone — Pink

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

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Nokia E65 QuadBand Unlocked GSM Cell Phone — Pink
Nokia E65, the slim slider, contains the mobile business capabilities of a Nokia Eseries device in an exquisite package with top notch materials. The Nokia E65 has been designed for easy access to the most frequently used applications from the One Touch keys on the front cover. Users can make conference calls, access their contacts database, mute and unmute calls, and access an application of choice through My Own key with just one push of a button. With active Standby, the capability to customize the phone display to show and provide quick access to user-defined applications, together with One Touch keys, simplifies connecting to business and personal applications and switching between tasks. Furthermore, Nokia E65 can be integrated with leading corporate telephony systems with Nokia Intellisync Call Connect for Cisco, Nokia Intellisync Call Connect for Alcatel and Avaya one-X Mobile Edition for Nokia solutions. The Nokia E65 device also supports the most used corporate and consumer email solutions.

Sony Ericsson W-950i TriBand GSM Unlocked Phone — Unlocked

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

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Sony Ericsson W-950i TriBand GSM Unlocked Phone — Unlocked
The Sony(r) Ericsson W950i Triband digital phone features a highly functional music player with a 4GB Flash memory and easy messaging with a touch screen and handwriting recognition. It’s Bluetooth(tm) enabled and also offers offers an FM radio, a speakerphone, video playback, and a bright QVGA TFT 2.6-in display.

Basic Wiring for Model Railroaders: The Complete Photo Guide

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

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Basic Wiring for Model Railroaders: The Complete Photo Guide
Learn how to get your locomotive, train set, or complete model railroad operating — even if you don’t understand the principles of electricity! Teaches basic electrical connections for a two-rail DC powered layout of any size or complexity. Basic layout wiring techniques are presented simply, , with numerous photos, illustrations, and diagrams.