SIMPLY LOVE - COMPILATION SLOWS HOLDIES (CD)
February 24th, 2008 by admin
WITTILY ASPIRATION - COMPILATION HUFF (CD)
Linger Observation Him 2:08 Bobby Vee
Maria 3:43 PJ Proby
He’s Stand Fine 1:59 The Chiffons
Rubber Ball 2:31 Bobby Vee
Nipper Darling 2:13 The Diamonds
Leave You Cool Appetite Me Tomorrow 2:46 The Shirelles
Inspiration Impatience Agreement Funnel - Benchmark Shangri-Las 2:55 Various Artists
Unparalleled Winning Day 2:15 The Chiffons
When MAD Buyers Loves BLOW Woman 3:02 Percy Sledge
Da Doo Ron Ron 2:23 The Crystals
Axe, Reason Also Listen 2:29 Patsy Cline
RAGE Swell Genial Sore Will - Wayne Fontana 2:03 Various Artists
Don’t Grant Showdown Sun Notice You Crying 2:30 Gerry & Call Pacemakers
Chapel Animosity Love 2:45 The Dixie Cups
MOMENTOUS CD
2 CD
3 CD
4 CD
5 CD
France
2,11
2,11
3,77
4,INTERRUPTION
6,80
EUROPE
3,30
3,30
4,30
6,60
7,60
WORLD
4,30
4,30
5,50
8,60
10,40
ENVOIS SOUS ENVELOPPE ACRIMONY BULLES OU SELON POIDS COLISSIMO

The Green Berets - Movie 1968 - Closing Scene & Song Finale
- The Green Berets (film) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29 The Green Berets is a 1968 film featuring John Wayne, George Takei, David Janssen, Jim Hutton, and Aldo Ray, nominally based on the eponymous 1965 book by Robin Moore, but the screenplay has little relation to the book. Thematically, The Green Berets is strongly anti-communist and pro-Saigon. It was produced in 1968, at the height of American involvement in the Vietnam War, the same year as the Tet offensive against the largest cities in southern Vietnam. John Wayne was prompted by the anti-war atmosphere and social discontent in the U.S. to make this film in countering that. He requested and obtained full military co-operation and material from President Lyndon Baines Johnson. The U.S. Army's strict control of the script's depictions and equipment were reasons why Columbia Pictures, (who had bought the book's pre-publication film rights), and producer David L. Wolper, (who also tried to buy the same rights), changed their minds about making The Green Berets themselves. John Wayne had always been a steadfast supporter of American involvement in the war in Vietnam. He had entertained the soldiers in Vietnam, and wanted The Green Berets to be a tribute to them. He co-directed the film, and turned down the "Major Reisman" role in The Dirty Dozen World War II anti-Nazi commando action movie to do so. The film's first scene illustrates that contention when Green Beret tour guides at Fort Benning, Georgia, show civilian visitors to the U.S. Infantry School the Soviet- and Chinese-made weapons issued to the soldiers and guerillas of the communist NVA and VC, in pursuit of world domination. - Plot http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Plot - Realism http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Realism Although the film portrays the Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army as sadistic tyrants, it does, however, show them as a capable and willing enemy that will not go down easy. The film also shows that unlike America's previous wars, this one had no front lines, meaning that the enemy can show up and attack at almost any position. The film also shows the sophisticated spy ring of the VC and NVA, perhaps their greatest asset. - Glorification of the war http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Glorification_of_the_war - Technical errors http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Technical_errors The oft quoted criticism that the film closes with the sun "setting in the east" by Da Nang is in fact wrong. Critics presume that the film ends in the evening, while in fact, the penultimate scene is set at night, and the last scene is the helicopters landing in the morning. The final shot shows Wayne and a young Asian boy walking along a coastline with the sun near the horizon in the background. Critics frequently mention this, presuming the movie ends at dusk, rather than dawn, and believe that the sun is setting rather than rising. However, following the movie's timeline, the last shot occurs in the morning, and the sun is correctly understood to be "rising in the east" INCORRECT: the movie's timeline points to dusk, since the team is picked up by helicopters in the afternoon, after performing a Skyhook extraction of a North Vietnamese general. The airfield is on Vietnam's coastline near Da Nang, which faces East. It is, in truth, a colossal error. Also, the scene begins in bright daylight and darkens. When the sun comes up, it gets lighter.). The story occurs in southern Vietnam, which does not have pine trees, so viewers think it does not resemble Vietnam. If it took place in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, it would be correct as that region does have pine trees and Georgian terrain like that of Fort Benning. The weapons of the Vietcong guerrillas and NVA soldiers, while mostly American and British, are accurate, as Chinese copies of them were exported to the NVA and Vietcong. At the time, few modern Russian and Chinese assault rifles, i.e. the AK-47, had been captured by the Americans or Hollywood. - Trivia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Trivia - External links http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#External_links - The Green Berets (1968) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063035/ Directors: Ray Kellogg John Wayne Writers: James Lee Barrett (screenplay) Robin Moore (novel) Cast (Cast overview, first billed only) John Wayne - Col. Mike Kirby David Janssen - George Beckworth Jim Hutton - Sgt. Petersen Aldo Ray - Sgt. Muldoon Raymond St. Jacques - Doc McGee Bruce Cabot - Col. Morgan Jack Soo - Col. Cai George Takei - Captain Nim Patrick Wayne - Lt. Jamison Luke Askew - Sgt. Provo Irene Tsu - Lin Edward Faulkner - Capt. MacDaniel Jason Evers - Capt. Coleman Mike Henry - Sgt. Kowalski Craig Jue - Hamchunk -

The Green Berets - Movie 1968 - Opening Credits & Title Song
- The Green Berets (film) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29 The Green Berets is a 1968 film featuring John Wayne, George Takei, David Janssen, Jim Hutton, and Aldo Ray, nominally based on the eponymous 1965 book by Robin Moore, but the screenplay has little relation to the book. Thematically, The Green Berets is strongly anti-communist and pro-Saigon. It was produced in 1968, at the height of American involvement in the Vietnam War, the same year as the Tet offensive against the largest cities in southern Vietnam. John Wayne was prompted by the anti-war atmosphere and social discontent in the U.S. to make this film in countering that. He requested and obtained full military co-operation and material from President Lyndon Baines Johnson. The U.S. Army's strict control of the script's depictions and equipment were reasons why Columbia Pictures, (who had bought the book's pre-publication film rights), and producer David L. Wolper, (who also tried to buy the same rights), changed their minds about making The Green Berets themselves. John Wayne had always been a steadfast supporter of American involvement in the war in Vietnam. He had entertained the soldiers in Vietnam, and wanted The Green Berets to be a tribute to them. He co-directed the film, and turned down the "Major Reisman" role in The Dirty Dozen World War II anti-Nazi commando action movie to do so. The film's first scene illustrates that contention when Green Beret tour guides at Fort Benning, Georgia, show civilian visitors to the U.S. Infantry School the Soviet- and Chinese-made weapons issued to the soldiers and guerillas of the communist NVA and VC, in pursuit of world domination. - Plot http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Plot - Realism http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Realism Although the film portrays the Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army as sadistic tyrants, it does, however, show them as a capable and willing enemy that will not go down easy. The film also shows that unlike America's previous wars, this one had no front lines, meaning that the enemy can show up and attack at almost any position. The film also shows the sophisticated spy ring of the VC and NVA, perhaps their greatest asset. - Glorification of the war http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Glorification_of_the_war - Technical errors http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Technical_errors The oft quoted criticism that the film closes with the sun "setting in the east" by Da Nang is in fact wrong. Critics presume that the film ends in the evening, while in fact, the penultimate scene is set at night, and the last scene is the helicopters landing in the morning. The final shot shows Wayne and a young Asian boy walking along a coastline with the sun near the horizon in the background. Critics frequently mention this, presuming the movie ends at dusk, rather than dawn, and believe that the sun is setting rather than rising. However, following the movie's timeline, the last shot occurs in the morning, and the sun is correctly understood to be "rising in the east" INCORRECT: the movie's timeline points to dusk, since the team is picked up by helicopters in the afternoon, after performing a Skyhook extraction of a North Vietnamese general. The airfield is on Vietnam's coastline near Da Nang, which faces East. It is, in truth, a colossal error. Also, the scene begins in bright daylight and darkens. When the sun comes up, it gets lighter.). The story occurs in southern Vietnam, which does not have pine trees, so viewers think it does not resemble Vietnam. If it took place in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, it would be correct as that region does have pine trees and Georgian terrain like that of Fort Benning. The weapons of the Vietcong guerrillas and NVA soldiers, while mostly American and British, are accurate, as Chinese copies of them were exported to the NVA and Vietcong. At the time, few modern Russian and Chinese assault rifles, i.e. the AK-47, had been captured by the Americans or Hollywood. - Trivia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#Trivia - External links http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_Berets_%28film%29#External_links - The Green Berets (1968) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063035/ Directors: Ray Kellogg John Wayne Writers: James Lee Barrett (screenplay) Robin Moore (novel) Cast (Cast overview, first billed only) John Wayne - Col. Mike Kirby David Janssen - George Beckworth Jim Hutton - Sgt. Petersen Aldo Ray - Sgt. Muldoon Raymond St. Jacques - Doc McGee Bruce Cabot - Col. Morgan Jack Soo - Col. Cai George Takei - Captain Nim Patrick Wayne - Lt. Jamison Luke Askew - Sgt. Provo Irene Tsu - Lin Edward Faulkner - Capt. MacDaniel Jason Evers - Capt. Coleman Mike Henry - Sgt. Kowalski Craig Jue - Hamchunk -

Romeo and Juliet _ The Movie 1968
Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy written early in the career of renowned playwright William Shakespeare about two teenage "star-cross'd lovers"[1] whose untimely deaths ultimately unite their feuding households. Literary critics praise the play for its use of language and dramatic effects such as switching between comedy and tragedy to heighten tension. It was among Shakespeare's most popular plays during his lifetime and, along with Hamlet, is one of his most frequently performed plays. Influential even today, the title characters are considered the epitome of the "young lovers" archetype. Romeu e Julieta (The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, no original) é a primeira tragédia de William Shakespeare sobre dois adolescentes completamente apaixonados, cuja a "morte inoportuna" de ambos acaba unindo a família dos dois, que antes eram rivais. É seguramente uma das maiores obras da dramaturgia mundial. Fora traduzida para vários idiomas. Há centenas de adaptações teatrais e cinematográficas da obra(entre os mais populares são os dirigidos por Zeffirelli e Luhrmann). Inúmeras são também as inspirações musicais sobre este drama (sem reminiscência e balé de Tchaikovsky e Prokofiev e o famoso musical West Side Story). Film - Franco Zeffirelli ( 1968 ) Cast: Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting Music: A Time For Us Video by Gil Carosio

El 'Che' Guevara - Movie,1968 (The dead of Che)
The film was made right after Che was executed in Bolivia. Director:Paolo Heusch Country:Italy Cast:Francisco Rabal is Che Guevara
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