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The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Widescreen Edition)

 out of 5 stars
2005-09-13

starring: Bill Bailey (IV), Anna Chancellor, Warwick Davis, Mos Def, Zooey Deschanel
directed by: Garth Jennings



List Price: $14.99
Our Price: $10.99
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The Groove Tube

 out of 5 stars
2000-05-30

starring: Kirtus Allen, Richmond Baier, Bill Bailey (II), Richard Belzer, Peter William Blaxill



List Price: $19.95
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Haunted Honeymoon

 out of 5 stars
2001-08-28

starring: Roger Ashton-Griffiths, Bill Bailey (II), R.J. Bell, Jim Carter, Dom DeLuise





The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Full Screen Edition)

 out of 5 stars
2005-09-13

starring: Bill Bailey (IV), Anna Chancellor, Warwick Davis, Mos Def, Zooey Deschanel
directed by: Garth Jennings



List Price: $14.99
Our Price: $13.49
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Outland

 out of 5 stars
1997-11-19

starring: Sean Connery, Peter Boyle, Frances Sternhagen, James Sikking, Kika Markham
directed by: Peter Hyams


Outland is another in a long line of Westerns retooled for science fiction. Writer-director Peter Hyams (Capricorn One, 2010, Timecop) restages ...


Four Sheets to the Wind

 out of 5 stars
2007-11-06

starring: Cody Lightning, Mike Randleman, Mark Loftis, Jeri Arredondo, Fank Dodson
directed by: Sterlin Harjo


DescriptionAn endearing, comic and eternally universal love and death story set among the modern traditions of the Oklahoma Indian. Starring Cody ...
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Vera Drake

 out of 5 stars
2005-03-29

starring: Imelda Staunton, Richard Graham, Eddie Marsan, Anna Keaveney, Alex Kelly (II)
directed by: Mike Leigh


The brilliant writer-director Mike Leigh (Topsy-Turvy, Secrets and Lies, Naked) has crafted an utterly compelling movie about one of the most ...
List Price: $27.98
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Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy [UMD for PSP]

 out of 5 stars
2005-09-13

starring: Bill Bailey (IV), Anna Chancellor, Warwick Davis, Mos Def, Zooey Deschanel
directed by: Garth Jennings


The brilliant writer-director Mike Leigh (Topsy-Turvy, Secrets and Lies, Naked) has crafted an utterly compelling movie about one of the most ...
List Price: $14.99
Our Price: $13.49
You Save: -$1.50 (10%)
Prices subject to change.


Big Brother 4 - X-Factor

 out of 5 stars
2004-06-08

starring: Eddie McGee; Josh Souza; Curtis Kin; Jamie Kern; George Boswell; Cassandra Waldon; Brittany Petros; Karen Fowler (II); Jean Jordan; William Collins (VI); Regina Lewis; Drew Pinsky; Will Kirby; Nicole Nilson Schaffrich; Monica Bailey; Hardy-Ames Hill; Bill Miller; Krista Stegall; Kent Blackwelder; Mike Malin
directed by: Win Media


With A bigger house, tough new rules and the addition of the 'X-Factor', where house guests' ex-lovers pay an unexpected ...


Ninku/ Yu Yu Hakusho

 out of 5 stars
2001-01-30

starring: Justin Cook, Laura Bailey (II), Christopher Sabat, Cynthia Cranz, Chuck Huber
directed by: Noriyuki Abe


Description2 great titles on 1 DVD. Yu Yu Yusuke Urameshi is not exactly what you'd call an angel. In fact, some ...
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LONDON/HONG KONG (Reuters) - China and the United States sparred on Friday over how to handle an economic crisis that has forced central banks around the globe into a series of dramatic interest rate cuts.

For years, architects have gone to great lengths to protect their buildings from marauding skaters. But as aesthetic trends move toward folded planes that transition seamlessly from wall to ceiling and back to wall, designers have been looking to their former adversaries for a lesson in flow.

"We have this fascination with buildings becoming topography," says Alejandro Zaera-Polo, a partner at London's Foreign Office Architects, "and skateboarders have that physical experience." So for a park in Barcelona, his firm extended paving stones up the sides of small hills—to shield vegetation from salty sea breezes. At least that's what it told city officials. But skaters got the message. The resulting quarter-pipe landed on the March 2006 cover of Transworld Skateboarding.

Architect Zaha Hadid shares the love. She wanted her Phaeno Science Center in Germany to be an all-inclusive venue for pedestrians and skateboarders alike. Liability issues prevented skate-park designation—though you'd never guess it from the YouTube videos of pro skaters "visiting" the museum. "We design spaces that are flowing and continuous, and—just by coincidence—skateboarders look for that kind of continuity," Dillon Lin, an architect (and skater) at Hadid's firm, says with a wink.

And though the new Oslo Opera House (shown here) was inspired by the image of two glaciers colliding, the architects at Snøhetta didn't call on glaciologists to help fine-tune the details. They enlisted real experts in twisted planes: skateboarders. "We spoke to them about surface textures and the areas they prefer," architect Simon Ewings says. His firm followed up the conversation with a statement in stone.

Snøhetta used different finishes of marble to guide skaters looking for rideable surfaces. Acoustically sensitive parts, like above the auditorium, got rough marble that's unpleasant to wheel over. But other areas silently beckon skaters. Surfaces rise up all over the place to become ledges, curbs, and benches—like the jagged facets of a glacier (or skate park). One particularly tempting spot is a 3-foot-wide railing of smooth stone. Snøhetta architect Peter Dang is, ahem, absolutely sure it's skatable. "Just make sure to fall toward the inside," he advises.

Tricked Out

The new Oslo Opera House is much more than a temple to the vocal arts. It's a palace of thrash, with as many gnarly facets as the best skate parks. Here are some key features and suggested moves.

Stair Ledge =
50-50 Grind
Marble Bench =
Kick Flip
Sloped Plaza =
Bert Slide
Upper Level =
Acid Drop
Pedestrian Ramp =
Downhill Slalom
Walkway Balustrade =
Switch Crook

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Chance of success at French megaproject enhanced

Boffins at MIT say they have cracked some tricky problems in the design of power stations running on nuclear fusion, though they hasten to add that many more hurdles remain before fusion energy becomes a reality.…


For years, architects have gone to great lengths to protect their buildings from marauding skaters. But as aesthetic trends move toward folded planes that transition seamlessly from wall to ceiling and back to wall, designers have been looking to their former adversaries for a lesson in flow.

"We have this fascination with buildings becoming topography," says Alejandro Zaera-Polo, a partner at London's Foreign Office Architects, "and skateboarders have that physical experience." So for a park in Barcelona, his firm extended paving stones up the sides of small hills—to shield vegetation from salty sea breezes. At least that's what it told city officials. But skaters got the message. The resulting quarter-pipe landed on the March 2006 cover of Transworld Skateboarding.

Architect Zaha Hadid shares the love. She wanted her Phaeno Science Center in Germany to be an all-inclusive venue for pedestrians and skateboarders alike. Liability issues prevented skate-park designation—though you'd never guess it from the YouTube videos of pro skaters "visiting" the museum. "We design spaces that are flowing and continuous, and—just by coincidence—skateboarders look for that kind of continuity," Dillon Lin, an architect (and skater) at Hadid's firm, says with a wink.

And though the new Oslo Opera House (shown here) was inspired by the image of two glaciers colliding, the architects at Snøhetta didn't call on glaciologists to help fine-tune the details. They enlisted real experts in twisted planes: skateboarders. "We spoke to them about surface textures and the areas they prefer," architect Simon Ewings says. His firm followed up the conversation with a statement in stone.

Snøhetta used different finishes of marble to guide skaters looking for rideable surfaces. Acoustically sensitive parts, like above the auditorium, got rough marble that's unpleasant to wheel over. But other areas silently beckon skaters. Surfaces rise up all over the place to become ledges, curbs, and benches—like the jagged facets of a glacier (or skate park). One particularly tempting spot is a 3-foot-wide railing of smooth stone. Snøhetta architect Peter Dang is, ahem, absolutely sure it's skatable. "Just make sure to fall toward the inside," he advises.

Tricked Out

The new Oslo Opera House is much more than a temple to the vocal arts. It's a palace of thrash, with as many gnarly facets as the best skate parks. Here are some key features and suggested moves.

Stair Ledge =
50-50 Grind
Marble Bench =
Kick Flip
Sloped Plaza =
Bert Slide
Upper Level =
Acid Drop
Pedestrian Ramp =
Downhill Slalom
Walkway Balustrade =
Switch Crook

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