Free | Xfinity
Posted: 10/7/2011
Heart warming story of a shy, single postman who adopts a boy with a troubled past. Together they discover families are not born, they're made.
Another Time, Another Place
Free | Xfinity
Posted: 10/7/2011
An American correspondent suffers a nervous breakdown over the death of her married British lover during World War II.
$$$ | Hulu Plus
Posted: 10/7/2011
Bitter about being forced into retirement, a colonel ropes a cadre of former British army men into aiding him in a one-million-pound bank robbery—a risky, multitiered plan that involves infiltrating a military compound.
Free | Trailer Addict
Posted: 10/7/2011
Excerpt from the 1971 short Granny Gets the Point.
The introduction of decimalisation on 15 February 1971 marked the beginning of the end for guineas, ten-bob notes, half-crowns and those chunky brass threepenny bits. But the changeover to the supposedly simplified system, based on 100 new pence in a pound rather than 20 shillings to the pound, was fraught with much confusion for many. The transfer took the Decimal Currency Board five years to plan and an 18-month period of dual pricing was decreed to allow people time to adjust to the new system.
Centering around the Collins family, who occupy a flat on the 13th floor of a London high-rise, this film breaks no conventions in its depiction of the varying degrees of understanding and acceptance of the currency revolution by different generations. For the teenage son, Peter, with his youthful voracity for change and an aptitude for maths, the adjustment is painless. However, old habits die hard for Granny Collins, (played by Doris Hare of On the Buses (ITV, 1969-73) fame), and the notion of a floating decimal point proves somewhat impenetrable.
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