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- After years of making movies, the King made a triumphant return to the stage in 1970. Now, see the backstage footage from rehearsals to relaxing at the hotel and the performances in one of the most intimate looks at Elvis captured on film.
- Follows the story and challenging life of legendary musician and genius keyboardist Billy Preston.
- The music video was directed by René Elizondo, Jr. in March 1993. Set in a loft, Jackson is depicted amongst friends and is persuaded to play her new single. Jackson plays the song, briefly interrupted by a dancer who pauses it to express her approval. The song resumes while Jackson and company begin to dance, ending with Jackson talking and joking amongst her dancers. The video was choreographed by Tina Landon. To build anticipation, a promotional advertisement was aired on music channels for several weeks prior to the video's premiere, depicting Jackson narrating and introducing her dancers from behind a camera lens. The video is also infamous for introducing a then-unknown Jennifer Lopez, who appeared as a backing dancer and had a spoken line in the video's opening dialogue.
- Record executives want a highly-regarded record producer to focus on a white pop act whom they feel has the sound America wants. To keep his creative integrity, Buckmaster carefully begins to fight the system that has made him the respected producer he has become.
- Armed with a voracious curiosity, impulsive slant, and intrinsic ability to connect with others, Mahsa Darabi embarks on a journey to find her way back to her Iranian roots through the common language of food.
- Hock, an ordinary underachiever, discovers disco when his favorite kung fu movie is replaced by "Forever Fever," a low-budget Saturday Night Fever (1977) knockoff. Amazingly, the movie's main character comes to life and becomes Hock's guardian angel.
- Tamara, a successful career woman, lives in a world of high expectations and perfect performances. When she gives birth to her first daughter, the change shakes her world, altering the power dynamics in Tamara and her husband's marriage and sex life. While she struggles to maintain her place at work, their intimacy becomes more and more demanding. But Tamara continues the race, crossing her own boundaries again and again. She is torn between her many roles-as a motherwife, and career woman. When her home becomes a battlefield, Tamara realizes she is a queen trapped in her own castle.
- Through the throes of young adulthood, Laura struggles to get her play produced. Will she be successful in her creative endeavors or will her personal obstacles crash down upon her in this coming of age feature, "The Way That I Am."
- 20001hTV-PG7.6 (77)TV MovieHow did the psychedelic drugs LSD and Ecstasy journey from a scientific discovery to a popular recreation to banned drugs? Mental health professionals once believed that LSD could treat schizophrenia or alcoholism. Meanwhile, Ecstasy, the "penicillin for the soul", was used in marriage counseling. Now, continuing the cycle of the hallucinogen, some of the latest derivatives in this category of drugs, the "rave" drugs such as GHB and Ketamine, are about to be banned.
- After a year away, Cole, returns home to face the very things he was running from. Brief but meaningful encounters with his brother, and his brother's wife--the love of Cole's life--leave Cole searching for redemption.
- Music video for "Se a vida é" by Pet Shop Boys.
- 20001hTV-PG7.7 (80)TV MovieDerived from South America's coca leaf, cocaine was touted as a cure-all in the late 19th century and was the secret ingredient in many medicines and elixirs such as Coca-Cola. But cocaine's allure quickly diminished as racism entered the picture - the concept of the "cocaine-crazed Negro" even led police to strengthen the caliber of their guns from .32 to .38. We'll see how, though it was outlawed in 1914, its popularity soared in the 1980s and '90s and gave birth to a deadlier form - crack.
- Brummie comedian Joe Lycett performs his stand up set, talking about his love for trolling, outweirding others and his life in general.
- A new video was made in August 1989 with the same director and theme for the single's re-release. It consisted of less dancing and more interaction between Abdul and her material world.
- It consisted of Abdul dancing and singing with male dancers at a photo shoot, while expensive product shots were flashed in and out.
- Eric Clapton performs in the music video for "It's in the Way That You Use It" from the original motion picture soundtrack for The Color of Money (1986). Eric Clapton stands under a blue light plays guitar and singing while clips from the film are show.
- Big Nate, the comic strip character by Lincoln Peirce, must destroy the Probe, a shape-shifting villain who has stolen his nose to use for evil purposes.
- Music video for Céline Dion's song, That's the Way It Is.
- Centering around the character of Cheolsik who is brave in heart but not so in reality, the director adds some tinge of black comedy and tried to make some fresh comedy with Cuban music. Revenge is courage coming out of surprise action.
- AC/DC performs in the music video "That's the Way I Wanna Rock 'n' Roll" from the album "Blow Up Your Video" recorded for Atlantic Records. The video features the band performing at a sold out concert. Fans who missed the concert (including a man in a full body cast, a school girl with homework, young men at a pub, and two women in a broken down car) are visited by AC/DC who play for them personally.
- The most trusted man in America dies and it ends an era of "trust" in the United States. "And That's the Way It Is" explores the ramifications of this news legends passing and the symbolic gesture which ends a news media era.
- Discover the secret world of the gay community in Myanmar through the eyes of a brave young man in a country where homosexuality is perceived to be a disease.
- Since his ex-wife obstinately and by her own will prevents Zvonko from spending time with his underage daughter, and the institutions do nothing, he has less and less time for everyday's life. He obsessively collects evidence, records and writes transcripts of events that lead him away from the outside world.
- A psychological journey through a man and woman's reality: fantastical and dangerous, compelling and obsessive, delusional and very real.
- 19823m6.2 (20)Music Video
- Andrew Dasz is an actor, martial artist and fight choreographer from Argentina. This video record his Kung Fu journey from his home town to Hong Kong in the past two decades. And how Bruce Lee and movie industry bring him to Hong Kong.
- "That's the Way I Do It" tells the story of Henry Townsend, the legendary American blues singer, composer, and performer who recorded during every decade from the 1920s to the beginning of the 21st century. Townsend performs his signature songs ("Cairo" and "Tears Come Rollin' Down," sung with his wife, Vernell Townsend) and recalls his eventful life and experiences with other veteran blues artists. Musician Ron Edwards and musician and Nighthawk Records producer Leroy Pierson, music producer and former "Blues Unlimited" magazine editor Bill Greensmith provide insight into Henry Townsend's contribution to blues history.