
Banana Hands
Australian Double Back
Blowhole Bob
Half Deer Edwards


that mohawk! This horror-comedy film was directed by Joe Dante. It is about a young man who receives a strange creature named Gizmo as a pet, which then spawns other creatures who transform into small, destructive monsters.
This film is darker in tone than its predecessor, it was always intended to be a horror movie as well as a remake of elements of Gunga Din (1939). The original title was "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Death." Like the first, it starred Harrison Ford as Jones, was directed by Steven Spielberg and based on an original story by George Lucas.
it picks up where Star Trek 2 left off, I thought Christopher Lloyd did a great Klingon. Interesting Nerd Trivia: The destruction of the Enterprise had to be done twice, since the initial destruction sequence - which ended in a warp core breach rather than the saucer exploding and the remainder burning up in the Genesis planet's atmosphere - was deemed to have too little emotional impact, and also appeared to be too similar to the ending of Return of the Jedi.
but it still holds up pretty good. Charlie McGee, a young girl with pyrokinesis — the ability to create fire with the power of her mind, along with other psychic powers. She was born with her pyrokinetic talent due to her parents' involvement in an experimental drug trial in college. The drug left Charlie's father, Andy, with a mind-control power which he calls "the push", and her mother, Vicki, with limited telekinetic and mild telepathic abilities. However, their powers are weak in comparison to their daughter's talent. There's nothing like experimental drugs in the 60s to turn your new born daughter into a mutant I say.

probably one of the most, if not THE most, masterful transitions from book to movie I have ever seen. filmed, appropriately enough, not only during the actual YEAR of 1984, but also during the exact same short span of months that the story took place in. Easily, its most impressive aspect was its phenomenal attention to detail.
Honorable mention: Two other favorites of mine, Goonies and Back To The Future came out soon later in '85.
Saturn From Below
If there's one way to market a movie, it's to put Rosario Dawson and Rose McGowan on the cover of Rolling Stone wearing nothing but ammo. The movie could be about Stephen Hawking and his struggle to put together a unified field theory and this would still be the best marketing scheme.
Warner Bros. and X-Men producer Lauren Schuler Donner have plans to bring Metal Men, yet another superhero franchise, to the screen. Robots invented by Dr. William Magnus, the Metal Men each possess the characteristics and interpreted personalities of separate metals, such as stretchy leader Gold, strongman Iron, insecure Tin, and infant brain damaging Lead.

Prepare the landscape button on your printer, because the quad-style posters for Spider-Man 3 have been released. And yes, that is a lens flare. Apparently there's some sort of "photo shop" where these types of awesome effects can be created.
If you're a fan of Edward Gorey's darkly comic illustrations, you'll be pleased to know his classic The Doubtful Guest will be adapted for the screen. The Jim Henson Company will bring to life the strange, unwelcome, snouted creature who torments a quirky family.

I gave up hope on this flick long ago.
Aardman Features, the UK makers of "Wallace & Gromit" and "Chicken Run" films, is finalizing a deal with Sony Pictures that gets it back into the U.S. market three months after its partnership with the Dreamworks studio ended.