2.5 (23 ratings)

(2.5 / 5.0)

No Description Available.
Genre: Foreign Film - Chinese
Rating: R
Release Date: 4-OCT-2005
Media Type: DVD

$0.45

5.0 (3 ratings)

(5.0 / 5.0)

Studio: Microcinema Inc. Release Date: 10/28/2008 Run time: 91 minutes

$17.49

4.5 (5 ratings)

(4.5 / 5.0)

$19.98

$16.99

3.5 (7 ratings)

(3.5 / 5.0)

$12.99

5.0 (1 ratings)

(5.0 / 5.0)

Director Mohamed Al-Daradji literally risked life and limb to bring you the only film about the Iraq War told from the Iraqi point of view. A film Variety calls an ambitious work that's both harrowing and beautiful - Ahlaamis the tale of three patients in a Baghdad mental institution running through rioting streets after their hospital is decimated.
The filmmaker had a camera in one hand and an AK-47 in the other. His crew was beaten and lined up to be shot by the insurgents, interrogated by American Soldiers, his 14 year old boom man was shot in the leg and someone from the cast was kidnapped. Somehow, the footage survived and has evolved into a powerful, bone chilling story of human beings struggling to make sense of unimaginable circumstances.
Arabic with English subtitles.
Special Features: Short film Trip of Dreams A short documentary commissioned by Al-Jazeera that Mohamed made about his return to Iraq to screen AHLAAM for the first time.

$9.99

4.5 (25 ratings)

(4.5 / 5.0)

This biography of Father Damien, the Catholic priest who in 1873 volunteered for service on the eponymous Hawaiian leper colony, doesn't hesitate to idolize its subject, and why should it? For 15 years Damien ministered almost single-handedly to the quarantined community, supplying what medication he could procure while struggling against the red tape from organizations (religious and governmental) that would rather have forgotten all about the hundreds of people slowly dying in primitive conditions. He won some battles and lost others, finally succumbing to the disease himself in 1888. The film can't overcome the inherent weaknesses of projects such as this: high officials given to improbable speeches recapping the relevant historical events for us, a certain formlessness generated by skipping through the years and only hitting the high points, stock bureaucratic villains whose motives are never fairly explored. On the other hand, screenwriter John Briley has an Oscar on his shelf for Gandhi, so he knows how to string the lessons together and make them go down smoothly.

The earnestness of the project no doubt led to the who's-who supporting cast (Sam Neill, Derek Jacobi, Peter O'Toole, Leo McKern) (oh yes, and Kris Kristofferson), but it is David Wenham who must carry the film as Damien, which he does well enough--not spectacularly but with a touching humility not above a tetchy self-righteousness. Director Paul Cox was an inspired choice, however, bringing to the project his patient fascination with emotions at their most subtle and restrained; as a result, Molokai's low-key sense of conflict, often a fatal flaw in similar movies, becomes the film's saving grace, a manifestation of its subject's quiet, persistent faith. --Bruce Reid

$81.98

5.0 (1 ratings)

(5.0 / 5.0)

$28.99

4.5 (2 ratings)

(4.5 / 5.0)

$2.92

$17.82