Vandread - Second Stage - Sacrifice - Watch a Movie
The adventure continues as the crew of the Nirvana encounter an enemy mother ship. Their initial attack against the alien "harvesters" proves futile, and tempers flare among the mecha pilots, exacerbated by the struggle between Misty and Dita for Hibiki's affections. When Jura sacrifices herself in a second attack, she inspires the quarrelsome group to work together: for the first time, all the "Dreads" fuse to form a giant CG super-mecha. Hibiki uses the robot Pyoro (who recalls 7-Zark-7 in Battle of the Planets) to deliver a virus that reduces the mother ship to so much scrap metal. Back aboard the Nirvana, the other crew members lock Hibiki and Dita in a room and watch them try to resolve their growing attraction. Neither is a exactly prize: Hibiki is hot tempered and immature; Dita makes Mihoshi in Tenchi Muyo! sound intellectual. (Rated 13 and older: profanity, brief nudity, violence, sexual humor) --Charles Solomon
CLICK ON IMAGE BELOW TO GET Vandread - Second Stage - Sacrifice ONLINE:
Vandread - Second Stage - Sacrifice is a movie that everyone can enjoy together.This is something not usually seen in movies of this type, so it makes it an unusual, yet pleasant experience.The movie is absolutely stunning and Hiroyuki Yoshino deliver some award winning performances in this movie. I also think Yumi Kakazu was great!
I think Trey Parker and Matt Stone worked wonderful in Cannibal! The Musical [UMD for PSP]. The great supporting cast includes Trey Parker, Matt Stone, Dian Bachar.
I left some information, immages, and video previews of Cannibal! The Musical [UMD for PSP] below.
Summary of Cannibal! The Musical [UMD for PSP]:
Alferd Packer was the only man in the United States ever convicted of cannibalism--what better hero for fellow Coloradan and future South Park creator Trey Parker to celebrate in music? Blue-eyed and boyish Parker was still in college when he wrote, directed, composed the songs for, and took the starring role as the innocent young Packer in this film, giving a gee- whiz performance as an ambitious pioneer who joins an ill-fated trek west that ends up stranded in the mountains. At times resembling a perverse community theater parody of Rodgers and Hammerstein ("My heart's as full as a baked po-ta-to!"), Parker bounces back and forth between cheery production numbers and goony songs ("Let's build a snowman," sings one starving-mad hiker) and grotesque gore (bloody body parts, festering sores, human hors d'oeuvres). It lacks in style and consistency and the juvenile gags and fart jokes wear thin over the course of a feature film, but Parker's sheer energy and inventiveness carry the overlong picture to a rousing conclusion. Regular Parker collaborators Matt Stone and Dian Bachar costar in this tuneful barbecue. --Sean Axmaker