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Mommy I'm Here cl-103br Child Locator, Brown
Mommy I'm Here cl-103br Child Locator, Brown

$29.99
I bought this for my almost 2 year old son for a recent trip to Disney. It was a great purchase! Luckily we never needed to use it due to him being lost, but I used it as a way to alert my son. We stay at the Ft. Wilderness campground, and whenever he'd play at the beach there or the playscape, he would tend to wander away from the other kids. I always kept him in my sight, but I'd set this little bear off to let him know to stop...it worked great!

He'd wear it on his shoe (anything with laces or velcro, we used it in velcro), and anytime the bear made it's high pitch whine, he'd stop, look at his shoe, look for me, then come running back to the rest of the group instead of continuing to wonder away...it was perfect!

I don't know how helpful this would be in a real crowded place (like a theme park) since there's so much other stuff going on. I think hearing this would be difficult if your child wondered too far off, but it's perfect if you're taking your toddler shopping with you. In a store or park this would be very easy to hear, not to mention that anyone near your child will hear it as well. I purchased extra batteries to have just in case it arrived with dead ones (I read in some other reviews that that can happen), but so far I haven't needed them. Overall, I ABSOLUTELY recommend this. At this price, you really can't go wrong. You still need to pay attention to where your child is, but this is a bit of added security should they sneak away on you.
From Here to Eternity [VHS]
From Here to Eternity [VHS]

$14.95
In hindsight, this 1953 classic doesn't seem as much a military drama as it does a highly charged soap opera, which shouldn't come as a surprise given that master filmmaker Fred Zinnemann (The Nun's Story) was at the helm. The veteran director upended the western genre just a year earlier with the Gary Cooper classic High Noon, and he places the same incendiary focus of character over action here, that is, until the inevitable climax which uses the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor as a catharsis for the characters' dilemmas now dwarfed by the coming world war.

Based on James Jones' epic novel, screenwriter Daniel Taradash manages to reduce the complexity of the book's themes without trivializing them, and then-offbeat casting enhances the movie immeasurably. Set on a U.S. Army base in Hawaii in the months leading up to the attack, the focus is on two men, both dedicated to the military with no aspirations to become the officers they have grown to detest. One is Private Robert E. Prewitt, a talented boxer (and bugler) who refuses to fight on his regiment's team since blinding a sparring partner. The other is First Sergeant Milton Warden, a take-charge, professional soldier who earns the trust of his men even as he kowtows to his weak-willed commanding officer.

Life in the barracks is fraught with adversarial personalities, chief among them Private Angelo Maggio, Prewitt's loudmouthed best friend, and Staff Sergeant "Fatso" Judson, the sadistic stockade warden. Both Prewitt and Warden meet women who seek to change their lives. Prewitt finds cynical nightclub "hostess" Lorene at a brothel masquerading as a social club, while Warden embarks on a passionate affair with his commanding officer's wayward wife Karen. Burt Lancaster is well cast as Warden, and he brings surprising nuance to his character's clandestine encounters with Karen. However, it's Montgomery Clift - despite looking too slight to be genuinely believable as a boxer - who transcends his loner role by playing off his innately sensitive nature to portray a man who will never sacrifice his honor despite how dire the consequences. Well within his comfort zone, Frank Sinatra's turn as Maggio is small but impactful.

Still two years away from Marty, Ernest Borgnine makes Judson's malevolence palpable in just a few scenes. Deborah Kerr submerges her Scottish accent and previous lady-like demeanor to reveal the embittered, sexually assertive side of Karen without sacrificing any of the character's vulnerability. The legendary, much-parodied beach scene with Lancaster still sizzles after all these years. Similarly, Donna Reed foregoes her good-girl image (epitomized by her memorable turn as Mary Bailey in It's a Wonderful Life) to play the sultry, delusional Lorene. The 2003 DVD comes with a small set of extras - a three-minute making-of retrospective short, a nine-minute collection of on-set footage and interviews from a documentary entitled "Fred Zinnemann: As I See It", and the original theatrical trailer. The best extra is the commentary track from Tim Zinnemann (the director's son) and screenwriter Alvin Sargent (Spider-Man 2), who had a small role in the movie.
Pink Floyd (Wish You Were Here, Man on Fire) Music Poster Print - 24
Pink Floyd (Wish You Were Here, Man on Fire) Music Poster Print - 24" X 36"

$19.99
We bring you the best selection of Movie Posters, Music Posters, Sports Posters, Art Prints, Television Posters, College Humor, and more! This is the premier destination for finding entertainment posters. Find authentic movie advertisements, increase your celebrity photo and poster collection, locate that missing pop idol piece you need to complete your set, or discover rare concert sheets from your favorites musicians and bands. Whether its that one rare framed art print youve been looking for, or you need to wallpaper your dorm room with the hottest, sexiest posters, this is the place to find everything. Brand new, perfect condition, fast shipping! Buy from the best!!!
Monopoly Here and Now World
Monopoly Here and Now World

$39.99
I am a monopoly fanatic and was really excited to see that the game had been upgraded to include electronic banking. Not even giving attention to the exorbitantly increased prices for everything, the banking system just didn't do it's job. Of all the six cards you are provided, only the player 4 card reads correctly when withdrawing money. The others either didn't read at all or showed up as though they were the player 4 card. I feel like this was such a waste of money. In my opinion, it's not worth the hassle.

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