典雅舒适的小剧院里,一出差强人意的舞台剧正在上演,突然有名观众挺身站起,打断了演出的进行。他自称名叫亚尼克,是一名停车场管理员,下班后舟车劳顿赶来看戏,演出内容却让他失望透顶。众人将他驱离剧院,过没多久他却又突然出现,掏出手枪跳上舞台……今晚,亚尼克才是真正的主角!
一伙年轻盗贼(西恩威廉史考特等)举办了一场疯狂的摇头派对掩人耳目,他们计划暗中窃入隔壁的银行盗取现款……由于音波互相干扰,警铃声响将被抵销…… 班被债主迫得走投无路,决定与几名友人爆窃银行。他们开了场疯狂的摇头派对掩人耳目,然后溜进隔壁的银行偷窃,利用音波互相干扰来抵销警铃声响。怎料波折重重,这群笨贼屡次失手,国际刑警突然出现,死对头又走来搞破坏……
泼辣刁蛮的乡下妹何婉蓉因为拆迁的事,认识了大公子刘仲邦,刘仲邦对何婉蓉渐生爱意,一心想把她变成淑女娶入家门,并委托下属周显云去培训何婉蓉,谁知他们二人却萌发了爱意……
《新宿天鹅2》的故事舞台随着同名漫画续作发展,搬到了日本横滨上演。男主角白鸟龙彦(绫野刚 饰)将与浅野忠信所饰演的“横滨巫师”社长泷正树正面对抗,在漫画中,泷正树是“新宿天鹅史上最恐怖的敌人”,这个角色,由怪咖影帝浅野忠信来演绎简直再合适不过。
在创业浪潮影响下,大学生元宝突发买头西班牙公牛做配种生意的奇想,说服父亲牛长寿和父亲的相好周会巧凑钱成立配种公司,马经理也趁机接手了一家频临倒闭的养牛公司,他们都自信有办法一夜暴富。 香港富商之子华星受父亲所托到西班牙拍回国宝夜明珠,华星不愿将价值两亿五千万美元的夜明珠给捐赠出去,于是携宝私逃。路途中,夜明珠被元宝家的种牛误食。于是展开了一系列,笑料连连的故事......
弗朗西斯和克劳迪娅是一对好朋友,他是一个律师,她是一个兽医。他们之间无话不谈,直到约翰的出现。克劳迪娅决定嫁给约翰,这时候弗朗西斯才发现自己对克劳迪娅的感情不仅仅是友情。
An obsessively punctual comprehensive school headmaster sets out to give an important speech at the annual Headmasters' Conference.
银行小职员斯坦利(金•凯瑞 Jim Carrey 饰)老实本分,过着和所有老实人一样的平凡生活。一次,斯坦利在接待金发美女蒂娜(卡梅隆•迪亚茨 Cameron Diaz 饰)时深深恋上了对方,不料蒂娜却是黑帮头目多利安(彼得•格林纳 Peter Greene 饰)抢劫银行前派来打探地形的。多利安随后成功抢劫了斯坦利所在的银行。 一晚,斯坦利意外获得了一个奇怪的面具。戴上面具后的斯坦利变得力大无比、身手敏捷。斯坦利开始四出捉弄平日欺负他的人,并抢走了多利安劫得的巨款,与蒂娜在夜总会尽情飞舞。多利安知道了面具的威力后,用计夺走了面具,斯坦利则被关进了监狱。斯坦利最后能否凭自己的智慧夺回面具,与蒂娜有情人终成眷属?
保罗·吉亚马提(Paul Giamatti 饰)是纽约一个剧团的演员,他正在排演契诃夫的戏剧《万尼亚舅舅》。但是这出戏让他身心疲惫,几近崩溃。偶然机会,保罗找到一家名为灵魂仓库的机构。利用先进的技术,保罗成功地将自己95%的灵魂提取出来。在此之后,他的演技没有任何进展,反而常常感到莫名的空虚,并且性格也发生变化。为了回归正常生活,保罗在医生的建议下“安装”了一个俄罗斯女人的灵魂,但却让他更加烦躁。他强烈建议要回属于自己的灵魂,却发现原本妥善保存的灵魂已经不翼而飞…… 本片荣获2009年捷克卡罗维发利国际电影节最佳男主角奖(Paul Giamatti)。
陆地兵营的Ken和罗邦改为到蛙人海军处报到,以及他们在训练时遇上了香港移民过来的黑社会石黑龙(黄恺杰饰)以及人称天下第二的蛙人教官(张智扬饰)所发生的故事。
本片以轻松的风格,描述60年代英国作家Joe Orton璀璨而短暂的一生。这名出身寒微的穷小子,以蔑视一切既定规律的作风,摇身一变成新浪潮文化红人,可惜一段不伦之恋,却令这个神话终结
在亚当(阿什顿•库奇 Ashton Kutcher 饰)的成长经历中,艾玛(娜塔丽•波特曼 Natalie Portman 饰)总是时不时的出现,所以两个人可以算是朋友。一次,亚当探望自己明星父亲时发现,父亲居然和自己的前女友同居了,这让亚当无论如何也不能接受,在遭遇情感的重创之后,亚当决定要随便找一个女性朋友上床发泻抑郁。宿醉的亚当醒来之后,发现自己居然裸着身体在艾玛家里,在达成“只谈性不谈爱”的协议之后,两人便开始时不时的幽会。随着时间的推移,亚当发现自己似乎对身边这个特立独行的女孩动了心,但是艾玛却表示不能接受亚当的爱意,所以他们最终决定结束这种关系。但是,分手之后二人才发现,他们早已习惯了彼此……
Sam (Matthew Broderick) is the reasonable man in a crazy urban world, the man of thoughtfulness and refined taste in a landscape of Leroy Neiman paintings and beer commercials. The guy would sooner cook for an hour over a hot stove than say `supersize it.' By day he's a store clerk in an upscale gourmet eatery, and these scenes raise a smile, especially for anyone who's visited the actual chain in New York City -- the portrayal isn't far off from the reality. Our man is besieged by hoards of customers who want their imported French cheese cut to impossibly exact standards. His efforts to remain outwardly polite (while you know he'd like to take the cleaver to the relentless clientele) are pretty funny, and will warm the hearts of clerks everywhere. In general, Broderick is in good form and provides the movie with most of whatever lightness it possesses. Sciorra's lovelorn dental hygienist, Ellen, is fine enough, too, and her unknowing interaction with our cheese-slicing hero shows some hopeful chemistry, and you may begin to feel you want to see these two get together. One of the main competitors for our lady's affections, a stockbroker (Kevin Anderson), is played as caricature: he's the beer swilling frat-boy whose idea of after-sex sensitivity is flipping on the football game. He's kind of funny at times, but the movie might be stronger if he was written or acted for us to like him more, instead of having us merely recognize him as the flat-out `wrong' guy in comparison to Broderick's sensitive man. Think of John Candy in Splash, taking a cigarette and beer can to the racquetball game; we know his lifestyle is not the one our hero should emulate, but we can't help but be charmed by the likeable goon. Whereas this character is merely a goon, and pretty unlikable all around. While it's a nice enough light movie for the first half, for me the story was somewhat derailed by its unbelievable (Hollywood) presentation of sex and adultery. (SPOILER AHEAD, skip to next paragraph.) When Ellen returns home after an evening's misadventures, she is naturally faced with the questioning husband (Michael Mantell). Quickly admitting her own indiscretion, she then immediately turns the situation around, demanding to know why the guy had gone ahead and bought a house without discussing it. Granted, it's a valid issue, and granted, many people use this countering maneuver in arguments. What's unbelievable is what happens next: the guy starts responding to her question, addressing the house-issue in a quiet, thoughtful manner. WHOA. You'd be hard pressed to find a married person in the world who, when faced with his/her partner's totally unexpected adultery, would be ready to address anything so calmly. The guy would surely be bouncing off the walls, or else crushed into silence and tears - but see, then we might actually feel for the poor schnook, and we'd see Sciorra's character in a poor light. And since that particular audience reaction doesn't serve the romantic comedy, the story tries to sneak around it. You may start to feel that, like the husband, you're being taken. Further dissatisfaction is just around the corner in the ending. We realize this is where misunderstandings will get sorted out, and our couple will finally see a clear path to one another. We want the satisfaction of rooting for them. But it's marred by another unbelievable character reaction, followed by an abrupt conclusion that feels rushed and forced, too easy and unearned. You may feel as though the movie's cheating on you again...