Monsieur Hulot, Jacques Tati’s endearing clown, takes a holiday at a seaside resort, where his presence provokes one catastrophe after another. Tati’s masterpiece of gentle slapstick is a series of effortlessly well-choreographed sight gags involving dogs, boats, and firecrackers; it was the first entry in the Hulot series and the film that launched its maker to international stardom.
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After nights of sleepwalking, a troubled teen straps a camera to himself and discovers a sinister truth.
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When his star recruit botches a Major League Baseball debut, humiliated talent scout Al Percolo (Albert Brooks) gets banished to rural Mexico, where he finds a potential gold mine in the arm of young phenom Steve Nebraska (Brendan Fraser). Soon, the Bronx Bombers put a $55 million contract on the table — provided a psychiatrist (Dianne Wiest) can affirm Nebraska’s mental stability. Watch for Yankees owner George Steinbrenner’s cameo.
An uptight insurance man and his film-censor wife become a kinky couple’s landlords.
A banker has died. He trafficked in nuclear material, so French intelligence assign two agents to find his list of contacts, which are on a flash drive: Muriel – the boss, acerbic, willing to sleep with any man, wondering if she should have a child – and Philippe, younger, boyish, meticulous, bothered by Muriel’s frank sexual interest. They watch Constance, the banker’s widow: a naïve, friendly, open, trusting. She’s taking opera lessons, so the French spies join the class, which Muriel enjoys. It seems that other spies are after the same USB, and some of them sing as well. Singing, spying, and sex lead to duets of all kinds as well as to an eventual showdown.
Ollie is in the hospital with a broken leg. When Stan comes to visit him, total chaos ensues.
Gilby finds himself in a tangled web of lies when the truth proves to be too much to admit and even harder to accept.
A millionaire sets out to prove his theory that his pet chimpanzee is as intelligent as the teenagers who hang out on the local beach, where he is intending to build a retirement home.
April 1992. Members of a large family strewn around the former Yugoslavia gather around the death bed of their elderly matriarch. She is not well, but the forecast of a family doctor that her death is a matter of minutes away proves incorrect, so the waiting stretches out for days. Relatives start bickering, playing tricks and arguing over the inheritance to be left by the old woman, especially over her large family house in Sarajevo. Despite her deteriorating health, Grandma happily joins the fray. It appears as if that might be what is keeping her alive. Family feuds and intrigues directed against one of the sisters are more important to the family than the clear, terrifying signs of an approaching cataclysm. When the scheming is finally revealed, it is too late. A war has begun in Sarajevo.
A group of oddball high school students find themselves trapped in detention with their classmates having turned into a horde of Zombies.
Hyperactive teenager Kelly is enrolled into a military school when her new stepfather becomes the Commandant. At first she has problems fitting in and taking orders until she tries out for the drill team.
While enjoying the flower gardens, Sailor Moon (Usagi) and friends encounter an old childhood friend of Mamoru’s: an alien! He’s come back to give Mamoru a special flower, but doesn’t like Usagi and the rest of the planet’s inhabitants. Sailor Moon must defend the earth from the evil Kisenian Flower he’s brought back… before the evil vines and blossoms overrun the planet!