The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight
$9.99 | iTunes
Released: 2006
Beppo, Ezmo, Mario...uh-oh! When Kid Sally and his gang of goodfellas come up with a plan to grab a piece of the mob action, it'll be a no-brainer. The screen version of newspaperman Jimmy Breslin's best-selling comic novel about a Brooklyn turf war has all chambers firing. Jerry Orbach (Law and Order) plays Kid Sally, a small-timer aiming for the big time by targeting rival Baccala (raspy-voiced Lionel Stander). And on-the-rise screen giant Robert De Niro plays Mario, posing as a priest in the Kid's scheme to give Last Rites to Baccala. It's the perfect crime. Planned by perfect idiots.
$9.99 | iTunes
Released: 2000
Zoot-suited Jessy is not only a Christ-like figure, he is Christ. En route to Jerusalem, where he hopes to find work as a "singerdancer- actor," Jessy finds himself in a dusty western town. At first, he is targeted for extermination by town boss Seaweedhead Greaser but all this changes when he brings Greaser's son Lamy back from the dead. Jessy's healing powers lead to all sorts of wacked-out complications and, inevitably, a bizarre confrontation with the town looney, exotic dancer Cholera.
The Man With the Golden Gun
$9.99 | iTunes
Released: 2000
In this 9th entry in the James Bond series, Agent 007 (Roger Moore) is assigned to retrieve the world's only device (the "Solex") that can be utilized to harness the sun's energy. A hair-raising car chase through Bangkok and a stunning confrontation with an entire martial arts school leads Bond to Hong Kong and the island hideaway of mysterious international hit man Francisco Scaramanga, who uses tailor-made gold bullets and his signature gold pistol on his contract victims. Based on the novel by Ian Fleming.
$9.99 | iTunes
Released: 1978
Henry Winkler whose "Fonzie" characterization captivated millions of TV fans every week on the long-running Happy Days, portrays an outrageously self-confident but out-of-work actor, a young man who dreams of stardom and leaves college to pursue fame and fortune, searching for it in the most unlikely of arenas-the wrestling ring. Winkler, in this incisive film role, and Kim Darby, as his loving wife who finds it difficult to cope with her husband's antics, are sublime. The witty, well-paced script is imaginatively directed by comic great Carl Reiner.
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