Showing posts with label 2010. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2010. Show all posts
SAW 3D: The Final Chapter (2010)
Saw 3D (released on home media as Saw: The Final Chapter) is a 2010 3D horror film directed by Kevin Greutert, written by Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunstan, and starring Tobin Bell, Costas Mandylor, Betsy Russell, Sean Patrick Flanery, and Cary Elwes. It is the seventh and final installment of the Saw film series,
and the only film in the series to be in 3D. The film focuses on a man
who untruthfully claims to be a Jigsaw survivor and writes a book
detailing his experience, becoming a local celebrity. He soon finds
himself part of a real Jigsaw game where he must ultimately save his
wife. Meanwhile, Jill Tuck explains to an internal affairs officer that rogue Detective Hoffman
is the man responsible for the recent Jigsaw games; Tuck is put under
police protected custody while officers search for Hoffman.
An eighth installment was planned, but the decrease in the box office performance for Saw VI compared to previous installments led to Saw 3D being the final planned film in the series, and the plot concept for Saw VIII being incorporated into Saw 3D. Saw V director David Hackl was to direct the film, but two weeks before filming Lionsgate announced that Greutert, who directed the sixth film, would direct. Principal photography took place in Toronto, Ontario, from February to April 2010 and was shot with the SI-3D digital camera system, as opposed to shooting with traditional cameras and later transferring to 3D in post-production.
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An eighth installment was planned, but the decrease in the box office performance for Saw VI compared to previous installments led to Saw 3D being the final planned film in the series, and the plot concept for Saw VIII being incorporated into Saw 3D. Saw V director David Hackl was to direct the film, but two weeks before filming Lionsgate announced that Greutert, who directed the sixth film, would direct. Principal photography took place in Toronto, Ontario, from February to April 2010 and was shot with the SI-3D digital camera system, as opposed to shooting with traditional cameras and later transferring to 3D in post-production.
| Directed by | Kevin Greutert |
|---|---|
| Produced by | Mark Burg Oren Koules Gregg Hoffman |
| Written by | Patrick Melton Marcus Dunstan |
| Starring | Tobin Bell Costas Mandylor Betsy Russell Sean Patrick Flanery Cary Elwes |
| Music by | Charlie Clouser |
| Cinematography | Brian Gedge |
| Editing by | Andrew Coutts |
| Studio | Twisted Pictures |
| Distributed by | Lionsgate |
| Release date(s) |
|
| Running time | 92 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $17 million |
| Box office | $136.1 million |
Chain Letter (2010) 720p
Chain Letter is a 2010 horror film directed by Deon Taylor.
It was written by Diana Erwin, Michael J. Pagin, and Deon Taylor. The
film is about six friends who are stalked by a murderer that uses chains
to kill them if they do not pass on the chain letter.
STORYLINE:-
Chain Letter is a story about a bunch of mid 20's high school students who receive a creepy chain letter via text, stating that they have to pass it on to five more people within 24 hours, or they will die. Sure enough, they scoff at the text and ignore it (but pass it on anyhow), and one by one they start to die in grisly ways... killed by a hulking figure dressed all in black, who seems to be able to sneak around this upscale city escaping any and all notice. Not only that, but he can access homes and schools at will, abduct people, set up elaborate torture schemes, and slowly kill them... as if no one else in town is awake through all of this.
Now, it's odd to me that amidst all of these "teens" dying off that we never see much of the parents getting involved, nor do the police seem to be all that frenzied to find out what's going on. After all, the town in which the movie takes place is the "multimedia capital of the world" or some such shit, so wouldn't you think at least the police would be on the cusp of technology? Maybe there's web-cams everywhere that might catch something odd? Or, better yet, would anyone in town use a smart phone, which are non-existent in the movie?
It sat on the shelf for a few years, so I'm guessing that the film makers have no clue that technology changes about 50 times in that same amount of time where computers and phones are concerned. The frigging movie is about TECHNOLOGY! How can the get that aspect of things wrong?
Nikki Reid (as our final girl), takes about a year and a half to figure out that "something just isn't right here", and she's the smartest of the bunch. She figures out there's something about a cult that hates electronics so much that they feel the need to torture innocent (if not annoying) kids to death to prove their point... which is what? Technology is the devil?
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STORYLINE:-
Chain Letter is a story about a bunch of mid 20's high school students who receive a creepy chain letter via text, stating that they have to pass it on to five more people within 24 hours, or they will die. Sure enough, they scoff at the text and ignore it (but pass it on anyhow), and one by one they start to die in grisly ways... killed by a hulking figure dressed all in black, who seems to be able to sneak around this upscale city escaping any and all notice. Not only that, but he can access homes and schools at will, abduct people, set up elaborate torture schemes, and slowly kill them... as if no one else in town is awake through all of this.
Now, it's odd to me that amidst all of these "teens" dying off that we never see much of the parents getting involved, nor do the police seem to be all that frenzied to find out what's going on. After all, the town in which the movie takes place is the "multimedia capital of the world" or some such shit, so wouldn't you think at least the police would be on the cusp of technology? Maybe there's web-cams everywhere that might catch something odd? Or, better yet, would anyone in town use a smart phone, which are non-existent in the movie?
It sat on the shelf for a few years, so I'm guessing that the film makers have no clue that technology changes about 50 times in that same amount of time where computers and phones are concerned. The frigging movie is about TECHNOLOGY! How can the get that aspect of things wrong?
Nikki Reid (as our final girl), takes about a year and a half to figure out that "something just isn't right here", and she's the smartest of the bunch. She figures out there's something about a cult that hates electronics so much that they feel the need to torture innocent (if not annoying) kids to death to prove their point... which is what? Technology is the devil?
| Distributed by | New Films Cinema |
|---|---|
| Release date(s) |
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| Running time | 98 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $3 million |
| Box office | $585,36 |
Hereafter (2010) 720p BRRip
Hereafter is a 2010 American supernatural drama fantasy film directed by Clint Eastwood, written by Peter Morgan and executive produced by Steven Spielberg. The film tells three parallel stories about three people affected by death in similar ways - all three have issues of communicating with the dead; Matt Damon plays American factory worker George who is able to communicate with the dead and who has worked professionally as a clairvoyant but no longer wants to communicate with the dead; Cécile de France plays French television journalist Marie who survives a near-death experience during the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami; and twins Marcus and Jason (played by Frankie and George McLaren), British boys touched by tragedy when Jason dies. Bryce Dallas Howard, Lyndsey Marshal, Jay Mohr, and Thierry Neuvic have supporting roles.
Morgan sold the script on spec to DreamWorks in 2008, but it transferred to Warner Bros. by the time Eastwood (who has a long-standing relationship with Warner Bros.) had signed on to direct in 2009. Principal photography ran from October 2009 to February 2010 on locations in London, San Francisco, Paris, and Hawaii.
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Morgan sold the script on spec to DreamWorks in 2008, but it transferred to Warner Bros. by the time Eastwood (who has a long-standing relationship with Warner Bros.) had signed on to direct in 2009. Principal photography ran from October 2009 to February 2010 on locations in London, San Francisco, Paris, and Hawaii.
Neverlost (2010)
Neverlost (2010)
Storyline:
After losing his Kate, his high school sweetheart, in a horrific house fire Josh Higgins’ life tumbles into a depressing mix of insomnia and poor choices. After taking seemingly harmless sleeping pill, Josh is thrusted from his current banal existence to one that he had lost years earlier. As the walls of his own psychosis slowly start to close in around him, Josh must race to save himself, Kate and the parallel life that he vows can never again become…lost.Movie Info:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1663999/Ratings: IMDB: 4.6 (173votes)
[FORMAT]:…………………..[ Matroska
[AWARDS]:…………………..[ none atm
[GENRE]:……………………[ Fantasy | Thriller
[FILE SIZE]:………………..[ 449 MiB
[NO OF CDs]:………………..[ 1
[RESOLUTION]:……………….[ 1280*528
[ASPECT RATIO]:……………..[ 2.40:1
[FRAME RATE]:……………….[ 23.976 fps
[LANGUAGE ]:………………..[ English
[SUBTITLES]:………………..[ none
[ORIGINAL RUNTIME]:………….[ 01:28:00
[RELEASE RUNTIME]:…………..[ 01:28:00
[SOURCE]:…………………..[ pFa
Screens:
Download Links:
Password:- directmovs
Dead Cert (2010)
Dead Cert is a 2010 supernatural horror film written and directed by Steven Lawson.
Dead Cert is based on an idea by Garry Charles and Steven Lawson and written by Ben Shillito. Principal photography began in October 2009 and the film had a worldwide release in 2010.
In 2011 Shout! Factory released Dead Cert on DVD and Blu-ray in Region 1
| Distributed by | Momentum Pictures |
|---|---|
| Release date(s) |
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| Running time | 92 minutes |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $1.5 million |
PLOT
Freddy Frankham (Craig Fairbrass) thought he was out of the gangland world, a retired boxer, Freddy now owns a successful “gentlemen’s” nightclub. But when a gang of Romanian drug dealers, lead by the enigmatic Dante Livienko (Billy Murray), move into London, the stakes are too good to resist one last gamble
Death Race 2 (2010)
Death Race 2 (formerly Death Race: Frankenstein Lives) is a 2010 American science fiction action film directed by Dutch filmmaker Roel Reiné,[2] written by Tony Giglio and Paul W. S. Anderson,[3] and starring Luke Goss, Ving Rhames, Tanit Phoenix, Danny Trejo and Sean Bean. Death Race 2 is a direct-to-DVD prequel to the 2008 film Death Race,[4][5] which, although marketed as a remake of the 1975 film Death Race 2000 (based on Ib Melchior's short story "The Racer"), has been described as a prequel, making Death Race 2 a prequel to both films. Despite the fact it was never released in theaters, it has developed a cult following.
The film explores the origins of the first "Frankenstein" car driver, Carl "Luke" Lucas (Luke Goss), who died in a race at the beginning of the first film, from Luke's beginning as a bank robber until his death in Death Race.
Plot:-
Cinematography Scott Kevan Editing by Radu Ion
Herman P. KoertsStudio Moonlighting Films Distributed by Universal Pictures Release date(s)
- 18 January 2011
Running time 96 minutes Country Australia
United StatesLanguage English Budget $7 million[1]
In 2012, private corporations own and manage the prison systems. Getaway driver Carl "Luke" Lucas (Luke Goss) is arrested after a robbery for his crime boss Markus Kane (Sean Bean) goes wrong. As his accomplices are robbing the bank, two police officers casually enter the building. Luke tells his accomplices to abort, but they refuse; Luke intervenes, resulting in the death of one of the three accomplices. Luke shoots and kills one of the officers and dumps off his accomplices in order to fulfill Markus's wishes. In doing so, Luke is eventually captured by the police following a high-speed chase and sentenced to serve time on Terminal Island.Terminal Island is a prison under the control of The Weyland Corporation, which hosts Death Match, a televised pay-per-view competition where two dangerous convicts are chosen and then forced to fight to the death or submission. The prisoners are given access to weapons or defense items to use during the fight by stepping on a marked plate in the arena. Luke meets the men who eventually become his pit crew in the Death Race: Lists (Frederick Koehler), who annoys him by over-analyzing everything, Goldberg (Danny Trejo), and Rocco (Joe Vaz). The host of Death Match is September Jones (Lauren Cohan), a former Miss Universe who lost her crown due to allegations of having a sexual relationship with all of its judges. She now works for The Weyland Corporation to create profit from the pay per view subscribers of Death Match. When a convict tries to stab Lists (because of his nature and weakness, as he was convicted only of swindling), Luke takes it upon himself to defend him.
Step Up 3D (2010)
Step Up 3D (also known as Step Up 3) is a 2010 American 3D dance film written by Amy Andelson and Emily Meyer and directed by Step Up 2: The Streets's Jon M. Chu. The sequel sees the return of Adam Sevani and Alyson Stoner, who portrayed Moose from Step Up 2 the Streets and Camille Gage from Step Up, respectively.
As the third installment in the Step Up trilogy, and the first shot in 3D, the film follows Moose and Camille Gage as they head to New York University, the former dancer of whom is majoring in electrical engineering after promising his father that he would not dance anymore. However, he soon stumbles upon a dance battle, meeting Luke Katcher and his House of Pirates dance crew and later teaming up with them to compete in the World Jam dance contest against their rival, the House of Samurai dance crew.
Step Up 3D premiered in Hollywood at the El Capitan Theater on August 2, 2010 and was subsequently released worldwide on August 6, 2010, through conventional 2D and 3D (in RealD 3D, Dolby 3D, and XpanD 3D) formats. It was also the second movie to feature the 7.1 surround sound audio format, the first of which was Toy Story 3. The film grossed $15.8 million in its opening weekend, the lowest of the trilogy, but went on to make more money than any other installment in the series and has received generally positive critical reviews, with most praise towards its dance sequences and effective use of 3D, while criticism went towards the repetitive story and acting.
| Directed by | Jon M. Chu | |
|---|---|---|
| Produced by |
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| Written by |
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| Based on | Characters by Duane Adler |
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| Starring |
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| Music by | Bear McCreary[1] | |
| Cinematography | Ken Seng | |
| Editing by | Andrew Marcus | |
| Studio | Offspring Entertainment | |
| Distributed by |
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| Release date(s) |
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| Running time | 107 minutes | |
| Country | United States | |
| Language | English | |
| Budget | $30 million[2] | |
| Box office | $159,289,358[2] |

