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Tomorrow Never Knows: Rock and Psychedelics in the 1960s
Tomorrow Never Knows: Rock and Psychedelics in the 1960s

$16.00
Beatle-crazed and ridiculously weak in terms of coverage of zoned superstars like the Jefferson Airplane, the Rolling Stones and the Grateful Dead, this book barely scratches the surface of the topics presented in the title.
Tomorrow Never Dies [VHS]
Tomorrow Never Dies [VHS]

$9.99
A flat pre-credit sequence and by-the-numbers climax prevent "Tomorrow Never Dies" (1997) from matching the overall excellence of "GoldenEye." What remains is mostly splendid - with Pierce Brosnan as an elegant yet refreshingly hard-edged James Bond. Jonathan Pryce's multimedia villainy and Michelle Yeoh's energetic presence help tremendously. However, the 007 producers made a big mistake replacing k.d. lang's dynamic theme song with Sheryl Crow's weak "official" version in the opening credits.
Tomorrow Never Dies
Tomorrow Never Dies

$14.98
Tomorrow Never Dies is one of the best Bond movies. Though I've enjoyed the later Bond movies starring Daniel Craig, I still think Pierce Brosnan was the better Bond, James Bond. Craig never seems like he's having any fun. Brosnan has the ability to show Bond enjoying himself, while still bringing a more realistic performance to a very non-realistic film genre. When Bond crashes down onto the Millennium Dome, Brosnan makes you feel Bond's pain (even if it is much less pain than a normal person would feel.) Bond teams up with Michelle Yeoh, as a Chinese secret agent, and provides an equal match for our hero. I would have loved to have seen more with that team. Jonathan Pryce is also entertaining as the main villain. His secret power is the ability to type with one hand. That's one ability I'd like to have!

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