![]() Uncertain Canvas Print - Canvas Art This is a beautiful stretched-canvas art print wrapped on 2.5" thick stretcher bars. The print is professionally printed, assembled, and shipped within 2 - 3 business days from our production facility in North Carolina and arrives ready-to-hang on your wall. FineArtAmerica.com is home to more than 20,000 artists from all over the world who entrust us to fulfill their print orders online. We offer a 30-day money-back guarantee on every print that we sell and look forward to helping you select your next piece. ![]() WARNING LIFE IS UNCERTAIN: EAT DESSERT FIRST Ladies T-Shirt Pink Large $26.99 The Design/Saying is printed on the front of this T-Shirt, we use the newest & best technology to print the design with great inks that are cured into the product. This new high tech way of producing garments is very fade resistant. WE DO NOT USE TRANSFERS. It is great, since you dont have that thick transfer feeling. The feel is very smooth and comfortable. T-ShirtFrenzy offers over 30,000 designs on tons of products to offer millions of variations. You can search our store for something for everyone on your gift list or shop for yourself (our personal favorite). Please contact us with questions. ![]() That Uncertain Feeling $2.99 This is a review of the DVD of Beat the Devil/That Uncertain Feeling, not the other editions. The prints are not great, but I found them quite watchable. The "bonus features" appear not to exist. Still, this is a reasonably priced way to view these two delightful films. I was already familiar with "Beat the Devil" so I really got this for Lubitsch's "That Uncertain Feeling" and I was not disappointed - it's a delightful comedy with some interestingly suggestive moments ("When I come, they go" - hmmm, it would seem she needs to come more often..) and some great discussions of modern art and music. I wouldn't mind a better print of this film, but at present there only seem to be over-priced "imports" around. "Beat the Devil" is a somewhat silly, but quite enjoyable film that plays off Bogart's established screen persona to good effect. Robert Morley and Peter Lorre are quite amusing and everyone has a good time. A rather slight film all things considered, but well worth watching. Why the DVD producers called this "Comedy Noir" I couldn't tell you (Lubitsch certainly isn't noirish at all and I'm not really convinced that "Beat the Devil" counts as noir either, but maybe) nor why they belong on the same DVD (other than both being in the public domain). Definitely worth a few bucks and let's hope someone issues more classic Lubitsch in a superior edition soon! |
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