The Curse of the Werewolf
$9.99 | iTunes
Released: 2005
Oliver Reed portrays the bloodthirsty man-beast who loves by day and kills by night in this gripping gothic thriller. Directed by horror filmmaker Terence Fisher of Hammer Film fame, this atmospheric tale of terror follows Reed, the orphaned baby of a maniacal beggar and a mute girl, from birth to manhood, when he discovers his horrible secret. Try as he may, the cursed youth is unable to suppress the dark forces within. When the moon is full, he becomes an uncontrollable killer incapable of distinguishing between friend and foe. Spectacular makeup effects and beautifully photographed 19th Century European locales heighten the suspense of this classic werewolf story.
$9.99 | iTunes
Released: 1987
A relentless Soviet spy (Pierce Brosnan) smuggles parts for a nuclear bomb into England. His goal: detonate a device next to an American airbase, blame the Yanks and watch U.S.-British relations go up in a mushroom cloud. Only one man guesses what's going on: a canny British agent (Michael Caine) on the outs with his bosses. Two stars identified with screen spies who made the Cold War cool - Caine as the hero of the Harry Palmer series and Brosnan as 007 in four James Bond films - team for a riveting, unsettling East-West thriller based on a besteller by Frederick Forsyth (The Day of the Jackal, The Odessa File). In an era when nuclear terrorism is an all-too-real threat, The Fourth Protocol makes for compulsive viewing.
$2.00 | VUDU
Released: 1987
In an undercover plot to destroy NATO, the KGB plans to annihilate a peaceful English residential area and an U.S. Air Force base. Only one member of British intelligence can stop the countdown to terror.
$9.99 | iTunes
Released: 1986
Brian Stimpson, headmaster, runs his school, as he runs his life, by the clock - until one little slip destroyed his schedule and turned one of the most important days of his life into a disaster. By the end of the day he is wanted by the police for kidnapping, car theft, vandalism and impersonating a monk and all because he went right instead of left!
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