The Public Enemy, a 1931 Warner Brothers gangster classic, is easily remembered as the movie in which James Cagney used Mae Clarke's nose as a grapefruit grinder. As Cagney recalls, it was just about the first time that "a woman had been treated like a broad on the screen, instead of like a delicate flower." The ambivalence toward women is just one of the many stylistic contradictions that make The Public Enemy worth studying, not only for its intrinsic merits but also as a creative expression bending under the constraints of censorship.
Welcome to Sarajevo is set in that city during the war in Bosnia and involves a British foreign correspondent, stationed in war-torn Sarajevo, who discovers an orphanage on the front line.
Capricorn One
Billy Pilgrim returns home from the Second World War only to be kidnapped by aliens from the planet Tralfamadore, who teach him that time is an eternal present.
FBI agent Sean Archer (John Travolta) must go undercover to investigate the location of a lethal biological weapon planted by his arch rival, terrorist-for-hire Castor Troy (Nicolas Cage).
By all outward appearances, Sammy's life appears to be perfect - a successful business owner, devoted husband, and a wonderful father. But Sammy leads a double life, he is addicted to sex and driven by impulses he is powerless to control.
Killer Tomatoes Eat France
By all outward appearances, Sammy's life appears to be perfect - a successful business owner, devoted husband, and a wonderful father. But Sammy leads a double life, he is addicted to sex and driven by impulses he is powerless to control.
Smugglers are out to capture the world's diamond market and James Bond must find out why.
1 VHS: CC; BW; G; 54 minutes.
When a mysterious Cossack crime lord gains control of a powerful satellite laser weapon, James Bond is sent to Russia to stop him, at all costs.