![]() Made of Honor - Movie Poster - 11 x 17 $4.99 MovieGoods has Amazon's largest selection of movie and TV show memorabilia, including posters, film cells and more: tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from MovieGoods on Amazon at www.amazon.com/moviegoods ![]() Frankenstein Man Who Made A Monster Vintage Movie MOUSE PAD $9.99 Brand new high quality mouse pad. 8.5 x 7 inches. 1/8 inch thick. Non-skid natural rubber base with polyester fabric top. Vibrant crisp image with rich deep color. Works with all mouse types. We can create custom mouse pads. Please contact us for details and check out our other items for great deals, great products, and personal professional service. ![]() Bad Golf Made Easier [VHS] $14.95 WHAT! i can't give 6 stars?!?!?! well in that case five will have to do... you say golf's your game... golf's not your game... do you like laurel & hardy? the 3 stooges? if you agree to any of the above try this tape. you never saw golf played like this, or dreamed it was possible either!this is a wacky 100% funny tape. nielsen at top form with a great straight man i seem to remember from "how to succeed in business without really trying". it runs a little over 40 minutes, and keep watching when the golf feature is over. there is a featurette on the making of the film that's worth the price of the tape alone! ![]() Movie-Made America: A Cultural History of American Movies $21.95 While I realize that Robert Sklar's Movie Made America is a regularly used text in many university film courses, I can only surmise that this may be why so many film classes are boring. While Skylar's book is somewhat comprehensive as far as it goes, it is not only overly pedantic but it is written with no determinable sense of chronology. While it is subtitled "A Cultural History of American Movies," it is more a social history of early Hollywood with an emphasis on the old studio system and those early personages which comprised that system. Furthermore, easily one-third of the book is dedicated to the first twenty years of American film making. I purchased this book for adoption in a university film course that I teach which has as its emphasis the cultural underpinnings of American Film. While my students appreciated that the book was inexpensive, both the students and I agreed that the book was uninspired, unexciting, unimaginative, unattractive, unintelligible, and nearly unreadable. Additionally, it is cheap looking; it is printed on cheap paper which allowed bleed-through of the ink; and the photographs are reproduced with less quality than you would find in a newspaper. I am going back to John Belton's book, American Cinema, American Culture, next semester. |
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