The Pest
The pest is a manic miami con man whos about to become a hunters prey. The pest proves its best to be a moving target in this hilarious high-speed hunt that careens from a neo-nazis private island to the party-all-the-time streets of miamis south beach. Subtitles in english spanish portugese more. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 03/22/2005 Starring: John Leguizamo Aries Spears Run time: 84 minutes Rating: Pg13 Director: Paul Miller
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The Fox and the Hound (25th Anniversary Edition)
Featuring lovable characters brilliant animation and heartwarming messages THE FOX AND THE HOUND is “Vintage Disney” raves The Washington Post. And now Disney’s classic tale about an unlikely friendship is a new transfer for a special 25th Anniversary Edition. When a feisty little fox named Tod is adopted into a farm family he quickly becomes friends with a fun and adorable hound puppy named Copper. Life is full of hilarious adventures until Copper is expected to take on his role as a hunting dog — and the object of his search is his best friend! With an all-new Forest Friendship Game a DVD Storybook a Sing-Along Song and more your family will want to share the fun and adventure in this special edition of THE FOX AND THE HOUND again and again!System Requirements:Running Time: 83 MinutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre:Â CHILDREN/FAMILY Rating:Â G UPC:Â 786936694550 Manufacturer No:Â 4964203
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The One Mile Shot–DVD
Yes, It’s true… Tubb shoots a target at one mile… and then he does it again and again… no luck here. And, no he does not shoot from a benchrest position, he shoots prone with a sling! You’ll see how he prepared the ballistics of the ammuntion, how he set up his rifle and his scope, how he executed the shot, and the results of shooting at one mile. If that’s not enough, he then backs it up with a string of 1,000 yard shots that will amaze you even more. A fascinating demonstration for those of you who are interested in extreme accuracy and even those who are not.
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GUN DOG DVD Richard A. Wolters Trains Retrievers
RICHARD A. WOLTERS Trains Retrievers DVD
“You can have a Wolters trained retriever!”
The only video featuring the master, the late Richard A. Wolters. This two-hour program is a clear step-by-step guide to developing any of the popular retriever breeds. Starts with a seven-week old pup, through polished field companion.
From the back cover:
Richard a. Wolters shows the viewer what he’s been telling his readers for more than 20 years – how to train a hunting retriever. His methods emphasize helping a well-bred retriever learn to utilize the instincts and intelligence he was born with, rather than making him into a robot that merely follows commands. This two-hour program is a clear, concise, step-by-step guide to developing any of the popular retriever breeds from a seven-week-old pup into a finished hunting companion. A retriever trained by Wolters’ methods works with you as well as for you.
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Deer Masters Home Deer Processing – Field Dressing, Skinning, Processing, wrapping more
During this 2 hour video we show you how to process your deer from field to freezer. We know you are processing your deer at home so we demonstrate both at our store and AT HOME in a shed!
In this DVD:
We teach to Field Dress both a Buck and a Doe
We Skin 3 Deer including a Mount
We Process 3 Deer including one at Home
These are full scenes, we don’t cut out any parts, in 2 hours we do it all!
Easy 4-step field dressing method
Learn How NOT to Break the Bladder
Step-by-step method for skinning your deer
Learn to Keep the Hair off your Meat
Easily Pull the Parts WITHOUT using a saw
Learn the Shapes of the Bones
Excellent Double-Wrapping techniques we developed as we didn’t like rewrapping “Leakers”!
No more mystery cuts, learn your cuts of meat and the different uses of each cut
Learn what to keep, what to grind, and what to throw away, and WHY!
Learn how NOT to get cut with a knife – Don’t let the knife say “I gotcha”
We go slow and try to be as camera friendly as possible!
Our video is FULLY narrated with step-by-step instructions.
We don’t include any hunting tips we leave that part to you, the entire video is focused exclusively on PROCESSING YOUR DEER!
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Handgun Retention / Weapon Retention for Law Enforcement Concealed Carry
It’s a fact, sad but true, that most law enforcement officers who are shot are shot with their own gun. In this program, you will learn basic and advanced techniques that will allow you to sharpen your mindset and your physical skills to defeat a takeaway attempt.
Start with the basics: center of gravity, balance and distance. Then, learn joint manipulation techniques, miss direction, simple foot stomps and even knee and kicking techniques. You’ll discover striking, pinching, and pressure point techniques that are desinged to weaken your attacker’s will and desire and help you create time to outlast a larger opponent. Finally, we’ll tie all of these together as we show you how to defeat a take away attempt and gain the upper hand in a confrontation.
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Good Will Hunting [Region 2]
Robin Williams won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, and actors Matt Damon and Ben Affleck nabbed one for Best Original Screenplay, but the feel-good hit Good Will Hunting triumphs because of its gifted director, Gus Van Sant. The unconventional director (My Own Private Idaho, Drugstore Cowboy) saves a script marred by vanity and clunky character development by yanking soulful, touching performances out of his entire cast (amazingly, even one by Williams that’s relatively schtick-free). Van Sant pulls off the equivalent of what George Cukor accomplished for women’s melodrama in the ’30s and ’40s: He’s crafted an intelligent, unabashedly emotional male weepie about men trying to find inner-wisdom.
Matt Damon stars as Will Hunting, a closet math genius who ignores his gift in favor of nightly boozing and fighting with South Boston buddies (co-writer Ben Affleck among them). While working as a university janitor, he solves an impossible calculus problem scribbled on a hallway blackboard and reluctantly becomes the prodigy of an arrogant MIT professor (Stellan SkarsgÃ¥rd). Damon only avoids prison by agreeing to see psychiatrists, all of whom he mocks or psychologically destroys until he meets his match in the professor’s former childhood friend, played by Williams. Both doctor and patient are haunted by the past, and as mutual respect develops, the healing process begins. The film’s beauty lies not with grand climaxes, but with small, quiet moments. Scenes such as Affleck’s clumsy pep talk to Damon while they drink beer after work, or any number of therapy session between Williams and Damon offer poignant looks at the awkward ways men show affection and feeling for one another. –Dave McCoy
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The Doe Boy
James Duval shines in this vivid, affecting coming-of-age story. The Doe Boy follows Hunter (Duval)–a half-Native American, half-Caucasian boy with hemophilia–from childhood to his life as a young adult. His father (Kevin Anderson) doesn’t know how to relate to a boy who can’t work with tools or play sports; his mother (Jeri Arredondo) fights to protect her vulnerable son. When his father finally takes him on a hunting trip, Hunter accidentally shoots a doe–leading to the nickname “doe boy,” which haunts him. It’s difficult to describe The Doe Boy; a story summary sounds gimmicky and doesn’t capture the writing and performances, which are beautifully detailed and bracingly honest. Most importantly, despite not having a propulsive plot, The Doe Boy doesn’t drag or meander. In fact, you may want it to slow down so you can spend more time with these characters, whose lives are hurtling by. –Bret Fetzer
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Grizzly Falls
Grizzly Falls is a gorgeous, hopelessly old-fashioned film that’s unlikely to attract the viewership it ought to–none of the characters is particularly witty or clever; special effects, save a few stunts with a bear, are nil; and the irony level is at an all-time low. In other words, prying the kids away from Pokémon to watch this movie may be a challenge, but it’s worth the effort. Daniel Clark plays Harry, a lad of around 8 who accompanies Tyrone (Bryan Brown), his thrill-seeking dad, on a mission to the Colorado Rockies, where he intends to be the first to capture a live grizzly. It’s the early 1900s, so the means by which Tyrone plans to snare the beast aren’t especially humane–at a saloon stop, he hires five tough guys, one with a team of hounds. Then the hunt begins. The hounds’ punishing master quickly emerges as a villain; when he and two dogs are mauled by the grizzly, he exacts revenge by caging the bear’s cubs. She, in classic righteous-mother mode, retaliates by dragging Harry into the woods. What follows is a desperate chase through beautiful countryside by tireless Tyrone and the blossoming of an impossible boy-bear friendship. Mizzy, as Harry comes to call the bear, protects him from dangers of the wild while leading the boy to her caged cubs, who are traveling east with the ornery houndskeeper. There’s a showdown when the animal family is reunited, but Harry and Tyrone extinguish a series of confrontations handily, then move on to cement their own iffy relationship. The surplus of action scenes in this PG-rated movie will wow kids 8 and up, and only jaded viewers will summon the callousness to crack wise about its unapologetic portrayal of blind loyalty and courage at all costs. –Tammy La Gorce
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Cops – 5. Hunting for the Crocodile / Menty – 5. Ohota na krokodila
LANGUAGE (AUDIO): RUSSIAN ONLY; SUBTITLES: NO SUBTITLES. ATTENTION: This movie is recorded on DVD-R media. Please make sure that your DVD player supports this media. The newest adventures of the everlasting five of Petersburg cops, the newest crimes and… certainly, their successful investigation, shootouts, chases and humor, in one word, the complete set grown fond to the audience in the newest block of a serial Cops 5. Producer: Alexander Kapica. Director: Grigory Zhiharevich. Music: Sergey Bobrov. Starring: Aleksei Nilov, Sergey Selin, Alexander Polovcev, Anastasia Melnikova and others.
