![]() Advisory Committee $14.98 This CD has so much raw emotion. She's got a wonderful indie style and a great voice. This is a real gem! ![]() The Pretty Committee Strikes Back (The Clique, No. 5) $9.99 Of the many Clique books by Lisi Harrison, The Pretty Committee Strikes Back was my favorite. This book was realistic fiction. I really liked the setting, Lake Placid. In this book the main characters, Massie, Claire, Alica, Dylan, and Kristen, went on OCD's first ever boy-girl field trip. While there Massie gets stuck in a web of lies and finds it hard to get out. I recommend this book to everyone who likes books that are fun and suspenseful. This book is great...and I think everyone should read it! This book is really fun to read. If you're into the clique series this is a must-read. I rated this book a 5 because it was very descriptive and well written. I really loved how she described all the scenes so carefully and with such detail. I could visualize the story throughout the entire book! -FB ![]() The Committee $14.95 This footnote in the Pink Floyd filmography has its memorable moments, Arthur Brown singing "Nightmare" (NOT "Fire", for what it's worth), Manfred Man's Paul Jones in a quirky little acting role, and rather limited Pink Floyd participation. There are no Pink Floyd "songs" here, it seems that the band must have been shown rushes (sections of film scenes) in-studio that they played reactionary sounds & sound-effects to; an ominous keyboard sequence here, a drum fill there, a slide-guitar effect, that's really about it, and that's why you've never seen any cuts from this film on any bootleg records or CDs. If you're Pink Floyd hardcore you're going to see this anyway; if you're merely Pink Floyd curious you can skip this one and go straight to "La Vallee" and "Zabriskie Point." The film itself is sort of Kafka-light; The Committee knows your secret actions and your hidden thoughts, but they want to persuade you through polite confrontation and psycho-analysis to come around to their way of seeing thing, Big Nanny instead of Big Brother. The film is sometimes a bit unclear and a bit of a mess, but the Writer/Producer & Directors interviews see you clear on what they were attempting, even if it does get a little lost in self-indulgence from time to time. Its historic significance is going to keep this film perpetually on the shelves, but it's really not very noteworthy as a film. |
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