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- In a dystopian near future, according to the laws of The City, single people are taken to The Hotel, where they are obliged to find a romantic partner in 45 days or they're transformed into beasts and sent off into The Woods.
- Lt. Hornblower and his mates are sent to accompany a doomed royalist invasion of revolutionary France.
- Sgt. Kabukiman NYPD contracts a deadly new STD, The Sex Lobsters, and unknowingly spreads it around town while visiting Tromaville's best orgy spots. Only Dolphinman can find the cure and save the day!
- A girl finds a lobster in the woods. She contemplates boiling her lobster but, struck by compassion, she decides to set it free.
- TV Series
- Every three hundred years a lobster would take the form of a human.
- LOBSTER WAR is an award-winning feature film about a climate-fueled conflict between the United States and Canada over waters that both countries have claimed since the end of the Revolutionary War. The disputed 277 square miles of sea, known as the Gray Zone, were traditionally fished by US lobstermen. But as the Gulf of Maine has warmed faster than nearly any other body of water on the planet, the area's previously modest lobster population has surged. As a result, Canadians have begun to assert their sovereignty, warring with the Americans to claim the bounty.
- A look at the life of a lobster that was taken home from a grocery store and rehabilitated as a pet.
- Angus, a lonely grocery store worker, finds an unlikely friend in a lobster after working a long night shift.
- A Russian soldier returns from war service in Chechnya. Though greeted warmly by his family, he seems unable to adjust.
- This film was released originally in 1928. In 1948 it was released again with sound. The cinematographer, Harry Forbes, died on August 17th, 1939. The Fresh Lobster is a 6 minute gem.
- Owen Benjamin talks to the clinical psychologist, Dr. Jordan B. Peterson.
- Miri is a hard-headed but charming college student with a hard party lifestyle. As she visits her dying grandmother in the hospital, Miri must navigate the harsh realities of self-realization and the lasting impacts of guilt.
- A teenager finds escape from his difficult home life by going to sea on a lobster fishing boat for a day. But the work proves harder and more dangerous than he had expected.
- A middle age cook orders a lobster for his restaurant to celebrate the one year of operation. Things get strange when a mysterious young woman visit him and tells him that the particular lobster is secret and that he should not eat him.
- The Lobster and the Liver is a documentary about the Seattle cartoonist Jim Woodring. We chart his journey as a child experiencing terrifying hallucinations, through his troubled youth as a prankster and alcoholic, and examine his current status as a master craftsman and seeker of spiritual truth. As well as displaying his incredibly surreal artwork, the documentary features music by jazz guitarist Bill Frisell, and includes interviews with such notable cartoonists as Peter Bagge, Ellen Forney, and Jim Blanchard.
- Frank the Lobster is a short animated film about a lobster called Frank, who lives in the lobster tank of a posh restaurant. Frank has been living in the lobster tank for fifteen years Frank is depressed because there has never been picked. From Frank's point of view , being picked is something wonderful and worth pursuing. He has no knowledge of what being picked means, he just wants to be picked no matter what .
- In this extraordinary film shot on the rugged North Cornwall coast, director Jane Darke starts recording her husband Nick's life as a fisherman, beachcomber and playwright. Already recovering from a stroke, Nick is then unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer. From that moment forward, Jane's film captures Nick's attempts to pass on knowledge and experience to his sons, and becomes in the process a profoundly moving and honest account of loss, grief and hope. The Art of Catching Lobsters follows on from the huge success of Nick and Jane's previous film, the award-winning The Wrecking Season. Written and directed by Jane Darke, the film was co-produced by Boatshed Films and Sevenstones Media and received its world premiere on BBC4. Since its initial broadcast, the film has screened at several film festivals and received huge praise from critics and audiences alike. Check out what other people had to say about the film in the Reviews section. 'A simple touching insight into love and grief' - Daily Telegraph 'Raw warm and powerful...a remarkable video diary, part love letter and part epitaph, punctuated with wry humour...' - Time Out 'One of the most heartbreaking and uplifting programmes of the year' - Daily Mail
- When an advanced race of giant lobsters from outer space land on Earth, no one can figure out why they've come. A complete failure to communicate on both ends leads to panic and pandemonium.
- Larry is a real swell fella. He's off to visit the folks with his very first girlfriend... but he's about to find out that meetin' the parents ain't always so easy.
- A 13 years old girl who works for a gang as a street vendor. Her dream is to move to a place in the south for pursuit of a better life. One day, when she attempts to secretly get on a train, her boss notices and gets rid of her train ticket. When she feels like there's no way out, she meets a street monk, who begs for money on the street in a vow of silence. Intrigued by his silent kindness and in order to fulfill her duty as the street vendor, she joins the monk traveling door to door for later to find their partnership is mutually beneficial. But the fun journey with the monk spirals into something unexpected.
- A reenactment of the viral video of two Boston guys freaking out while boating - thinking they're seeing a baby whale. This epic reenactment uses the audio but has the two visiting a Red Lobster Restaurant.
- During a tango competition at Murphey's Jardin De Danse, Von Blotz, a professor of the terpsichorean art, enters the contest, but the judges and the crowd do not care for his old style, dreamy waltzing. Consequently, when the prizes are given out, he gets the third, or "booby" prize, entitled, "A Living Likeness." It proves to be a live lobster. He is thrown out of the dancehall, but climbs back up the fire escape and steals the first prize, a silver loving cup, and returns home with both lobster and cup. He starts to cook the crustacean in the loving cup by holding it over the gas jet, but the chandelier and a large area of plaster falls on his head, shaken down by the tangoing going on overhead, underneath and all around. Finally, he goes to bed and dreams that the tenants of the nearby apartments are holding a tango competition, of which he is judge. He is disgusted at the sameness of the dancing, and declares, "He'll show 'em." He selects a partner and is soon whirling about the room, upside down, on the ceiling. After performing some startling eccentricities, he winds up by whirling his partner out the window and running down to the street in time to catch her as she falls. He returns triumphantly and declares that in his judgment, he is the winner. A free-for-all fight starts, just as he wakes up. The bed has collapsed and he is almost suffocated. The neighbors rush in, and after resuscitating Von Blotz, all grab a portion of the lobster and go out shouting, "Thanks for the lobster." Von Blotz shakes his fist after them, then philosophically fills the cup with liquid refreshments, lights the pipe and smiles to himself.
- Frank is a college senior down on his luck. Recently dumped by his girlfriend, unable to land a voice acting gig, and wary of a forthcoming drug test, he turns to self-help by one particularly famous psychologist in an effort to reboot his life. However, a conversation with a confidant threatens to reveal Frank's real struggle to be against his own attitudes and prejudices.
- Tamo has been living in Paris for three months, working in a restaurant, far from his dream : being a professional cook. The girl he loves is about to leave before he had the chance to tell her how he feels. Tamo is confronted to a one-in-a-life-time-opportunity ; he must prepare a proposal meal.
- A. Gourman, fond of the inner man, but has never suffered the pangs of indigestion or had bad dreams, is not careful of his diet. One night he heartily enjoys a meal of lobster, beer, ice cream, etc., which causes him great distress. In a dream he imagines he meets a charming woman, whom he takes to a ball. When she removes her hat and veil he finds that she is a colored lady. They are shown out of the place. Wandering from there he comes to a house which he thinks is his home. Then he tries to find the keyhole, but the doors rock to and fro. Finally, disgusted, he throws away the key and jumps through the second story window. Looking around he finds a woman's dress, which he dons and goes out. He meets a policeman at the front door who tries to flirt. The policeman is persistent and follows him. Gourman is about to enter an ice cream parlor, when C. Swellfellow meets him and invites him to a café. He accepts; the policeman still following. They enter the café. C. Swellfellow orders and puts down the cigar he is smoking, when Gourman picks it up and smokes. Swellfellow is greatly surprised and, in trying to get the cigar away from him, Gourman's wig falls off, disclosing that "she" is a man. A chase ensues. Gourman, after losing the woman's clothes, discovers the policeman following him. In his anxiety to get away from him, he jumps up a telegraph pole and walks the wire into the three story window of a house. Coming through the window, he discovers a lady and her children eating. He admires the lady and kisses her. The chef is called and Gourman is thrown out of the window, landing on the policeman. Finally he takes to the woods, when he is suddenly surrounded by Indians. One throws a spear, which pierces his body, and while the Indians are dancing he escapes. Then there is a chase through the woods, when finally he stumbles, the point of the spear sticking in the ground, throwing him in the air, while the Indians build a fire under him and dance. Gourman is awakened by his family coming in to bid him good night. He then finds that it is a dream and is very thankful.
- Experience a day on a Cape Cod lobster boat. Ride out through the choppy, early morning swells and accompany the lobstermen as they haul their traps, sorting and banding these ancient crustaceans. Underwater footage reveals the lobsters in their native habitat, feeding on fish and kelp, then follows them into the traps as they're hauled topside.
- Larry saves the Magic Lobster from being cooked, and soon finds out the Lobster is not magic, and throws him into the lake.
- A diner dreams of hell, Africa and under the sea.
- The documentary profiled the murder case of the lobster boy.
- When Bud catches to teenagers trapping lobsters out of season, they threaten Sandy's run for presidency to keep him quiet. Bud's silence later put's Flipper's life in grave danger.
- Danny suspects a down-and-out comic of stealing his material.
- A lobster man arrives in a space craft claiming to be a friend but in reality he wants one of the nuclear rods to cause an explosion thus paving the way for an invasion.
- Prof. Moriarty has stolen the Coral Lobsters after having a craving idea for having actual lobsters for meal time.