November 20 2009

Flameless LED Tea Lights (28 pack) Lithium Battery

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Flameless LED Tea Lights (28 pack) Lithium Battery


Average Rating:
Brand: Northern International Inc
Color: 20 white 4 silver 4 red
Model: 405485

Product Description:
The beauty of candlelight without the risk of fire.

Features:
  • 28 tea lights: 20 white, 4 metallic red, 4 metallic silver
  • 56 CR3032 Coin Batteries
  • 80 hours battery life per candle
Available at Amazon
List Price: USD 40.00
Lowest New Price: USD 19.98
Customer Reviews


safe tealights - and with no fumes
these cute little safe tealights are great for the absent-minded. fantastic for not burning the house down - and they're just as good as the flames for mood-lighting. the mother lode of spare batteries is a nice touch, too.

August 14 2009

Double Disco Balls with LED Lights

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Double Disco Balls with LED Lights


I consider myself a DJ even though most of my "gigs" are as low budget as birthday parties or family gatherings, so I'm always looking for some simple lights to enhance the mood. These guys are great! About a foot long, the two balls slowly turn and put out a surprisingly large amount of colored light. They rotate very slowly, so if you're looking for a strobe/techno effect you'll need some other equipment. Personally I like how slow it moves, however, because it creates great mood lighting even when the beats aren't pumpin'.

My only "issue" with them is the fact that it seems like disco balls should be located on the ceiling and there's really no way to attach this to a ceiling, so it really only works if you lay it on its back and have the lights going up or on its side. Both ways produce a great amount of light though, and certainly will make your party better than ever.

Overall this is a ridiculously simple contraption, but it works. At I'd say it's definitely worth it. It's a breeze to setup (just plug in and turn on) and is really impressive. Plus, with the lights being LED you don't have to worry about overheating or lightbulbs breaking. To get a party really started you'll probably need a few more lighting supplies, though. I added a police light and more fast-paced rotating disco lamp and together my room looks like a night at the Roxbury!

Average Rating:
Brand: Penny Lane Gifts

Product Description:
LED lights change color as the two miniature disco balls spin around creating a light show of color. 7" x 12"

Features:
  • This unit comes pre-fitted with 8 pieces led bulb (4 red, 2 blue, 2 green).
  • This unit conformity to EMC regulations.
  • Safety approval adaptor, 12V AC 500MA.
  • It has two twin balls that rotates different LED lights.
Available at Amazon
Lowest New Price: USD 129.99
Customer Reviews

May 12 2009

Flickering Lights (Blinkende Lygter)

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Flickering Lights (Blinkende Lygter)


No Dogme '95 here: this enjoyable Danish film could have been made in Hollywood. Writer/Director Anders Thomas Jensen is responsible for the screenplay for the great film After the Wedding and the earlier small gem Mifune (which was part of the Dogme oeuvre).

'After the Wedding' star Mads Mikkelsen (better know as Le Chifre in Casino Royale (2-Disc Widescreen Edition)) is part of the foursome at the core of Flickering Lights. Mifune's Iben Hjejle - known to US audiences for her role as John Cusack's long-suffering girlfriend in High Fidelity - is here too in a smaller role. But this movie is all about Søren Pilmark as the brooding, introspective gangster Torkild. Like James Gandolfini's conflicted, complex Tony Soprano, Pilmark's Torkild contemplates a simpler life without crime. And, like The Sopranos, it ain't as easy as it looks.

Jensen's script mixes moments of high comedy with real emotion and depictions of true, bonding friendships.

Average Rating:
Actor:
  • Søren Pilmark
  • Ulrich Thomsen
  • Mads Mikkelsen
  • Nikolaj Lie Kaas
  • Sofie Gråbøl
Director: Anders Thomas Jensen
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Brand: Vanguard
Number Of Discs: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2003-03-25
Languages:
Subtitled: English
Original Language: Danish

Product Description:
Four small-time hoods rip off a gang boss, and while they are in hiding, they find the quiet life agrees with them.

Format:
  • Color
  • DVD
  • Subtitled
  • NTSC
Available at Amazon
List Price: USD 19.95
Lowest Used Price: USD 9.28
Lowest New Price: USD 10.64
Customer Reviews


Terrific cast, plot line falls short.
Danish film based on 4 small time gang members who fail to deliver on a job for a mobster named Eskimo and then are asked to heist a safe with 0,000. The gang members, childhood friends, each face a personal crisis of one sort or another and decide to run away with the money to start a new life rather than turn over the loot.

* Terrific cast. Mads Mikkelsen ("Arne") and Ulrich Thomsen ("Peter") are particularly good.
* Witty lines in a dark / bleak comedy.
* Violent in a number of scenes (involving humans and animals)
* The film loops in reflections and flashbacks of the gang's childhood and upbringing but does so in a superficial and unconvincing manner.

Want to see some great Danish films, I would suggest you start with any of these four: The Inheritance. Brothers. After the Wedding. The Celebration.




One of my favorite Danish films!
Having seen quite a few Danish films since marrying a Dane (and visiting Denmark more times than I care to admit), I have to say that Flickering Lights remains one of my all time favorites.

The acting is, of course, superb. One should only expect as much from a film that has so many of Denmark's best actors in it. The pace is good and the movie makes you laugh. It's never boring, has a few twists you might not expect and overall it just works very well for what it is.

I can watch this movie over and over again, because it's just that kind of a good 'black comedy' film. If you've a fan of foreign movies, especially Danish films, I would definitely encourage you to check this one out. You'll be missing out if you don't.




danish film
I like Danish films especially those that have been written Anders Thomas Jensen. This movie is a Danish Cohen Brothers film. I loved the story, loved the characters and very much loved the outcome. Really good shoot out too.
It is just kind of sick though, nevertheless pretty funny


Great Film - Horrible Quality DVD Release
This is purely a technical review.

Be forewarned before you purchase this - Vanguard Video has really botched this release. It's 4:3 widescreen, low resolution, massive compression (the entire disc contains only 3.8gb of data). Worse, there's a "Special Features" option on the main menu - but just try to click it. Go ahead and try! It won't work. Why? Because they apparently decided to leave off the special features but *neglected to remove the option from the menu*. Certainly a trailer was all they were going to offer, and there was still more than enough room on the disk for that.

Oh, and the subtitles are burned directly onto the video. What you have here is a DVD version of the VHS master. And I thought Strand was the hands-down winner of DVD butchery. I can master a better DVD than this, and I don't get paid to do it.

May 11 2009

Lights in the Dusk

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Lights in the Dusk


"Lights in the Dusk" ("Laitakaupungin valot"), the final entry in Finnish director Aki Kaurismaki's "loser trilogy" (after "Drifting Clouds" and "The Man without a Past") is, in a nutshell, about one of the loneliest men in the movie history. The film may not be as impressive as other two installments (partly because of the absence of his muse Kati Outinen who shows up as cameo here), but Kaurismaki's quaint minimalist narrative style and his life-affirming attitude is unmistakable in his newest film with an undertone of old Hollywood noir and one Charles Chaplin film which has a similar title.

Kostinen (Janne Hyytiäinen) is a middle-aged night watch man at a shopping center in Helsinki. Silent and aloof, he is not a happy man, disliked, and perhaps mistreated, by his superiors and co-workers. Well, but Kostinen, whose loneliness reminds us of the characters in Dostoyevsky novels, anyway dislikes them too. The only time he shows his emotions after routine work is a brief moment when he drops in a kiosk and chats with the lady named Aila (Maria Heiskanen) there. His lonely life seems never to change forever until one day he is suddenly approached by a woman named Mirja (Maria Järvenhelmi) in a café, who asks him for a date and is eager to know things about his jobs as security guard.

There is nothing surprising about this "femme fatale" and the mobsters in black suit behind her. You already know the true motive of the woman, whose appearance virtually causes the subsequent downward spiral of Kostinen's fate. There is someone who is offering a help though, and that person is there just one step away from him, but Kostinen is the last person to realize that.

The brief plot summery might lead you to think that "Lights in the Duck" is a depressing tragedy, but the simple fact is Kaurismaki's film is a well-made serio-comic film with minimalist storytelling and wry humor. No other director would create a femme fatale with a very impassive (and curiously droll) face trying to seduce this guy having a lunch, or quietly vacuuming the mobsters' room.

Even by the standard of Kaurismaki, however, Kostinen as the protagonist is distant, harder to relate than those in "Drifting Clouds" and "The Man without a Past." We feel sympathy for him, but unlike the hapless protagonists in the two previous films of the trilogy, some of Kostinen's actions are results of his choice, which is not fully explained by acting. Sometimes facial expressions of the characters or actors in Kaurismaki films are described as "dead-pan," but the fact is that they show subtle nuances according to the scenes. Kati Outinen and Markku Peltola did show that subtlety in "The Man without a Past" which I couldn't find much in the relations between Kostinen and other ladies.

Still "Lights in the Dusk" is a fitting entry to conclude the trilogy with Kaurismaki's inimitable touch and beautiful photography by Timo Salminen. Loneliness is often seen as the theme of film, but loneliness, but it is seldom expressed in this explicit way, especially when it is accompanied by unexpected hope.

Average Rating:
Actor:
  • Ilkka Koivula
  • Janne Hyytiäinen
  • Maria Järvenhelmi
  • Maria Heiskanen
Director: Aki Kaurismäki
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Number Of Discs: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2007-10-16
Languages:
Subtitled: English

Product Description:
LIGHTS IN THE DUSK concludes the trilogy began by DRIFTING CLOUDS and THE MAN WITHOUT A PAST. Where the trilogy's first film was about unemployment and the second about homelessness, this final installment is about loneliness. Koistinen searches the hard world for a small crack to crawl in through, but both his fellow beings and the faceless apparatus of the society conspire to crush his modest hopes, one after another. Criminal elements exploit his longing for love and his position as a night watchman in a robbery they pull off, leaving Koistinen to face the consequences. Thus Koistinen is deprived of his job, his freedom, and his dreams. A poignant reminder of the lot of the emotional 'have-nots' in our world, this dark jewel of a film glows with genuine warmth and a small but enriching glimmer of hope.

Format:
  • Color
  • DVD
  • NTSC
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
Available at Amazon
List Price: USD 27.99
Lowest Used Price: USD 6.53
Lowest New Price: USD 11.94
Customer Reviews


strange but compelling film
***1/2

Clocking in at a pithy one-hour-and-fourteen minutes, "Lights in the Dusk" is an existentialist Finnish comedy in which a mild-mannered night watchman, who seems to be living in a world of his own, becomes an unwitting patsy in a jewelry-store robbery when he opens up to a woman who has seemingly taken a romantic interest in him.

As the much put-upon working man who allows a femme fatale to trick him into doing her dirty work for her, Janne Hyytiaien gives a marvelously deadpanned performance that perfectly reflects the spare, archly humorous world director Aki Kaurismaki has created for the film. With a tone of cool detachment, the script rarely lets us into the mind of this strangely uncommunicative and inscrutable young man, whose emotions and thoughts are always buried somewhere deep beneath an expressionless surface. Yet, somehow, despite his reticence, he still manages to pique our interest and engage our sympathy, primarily because his predicament and his lack of a conventional reaction to it are both so comically unsettling. We find ourselves identifying and rooting for him even though we don't really get to know all that much about him. In a way, he reminds us a bit of Meursault from Camus` "The Stranger," a man so emotionally detached from the world around him that his actions aren't always explicable to those of us who are residing in the "real world" watching him perform them.

Though it is a difficult film to pigeonhole, "Lights in the Dusk" is a modest, unassuming work that touches both the heart and the funny bone in roughly equal measure.


Ultimate Seduction
"Lights in the Dusk"

Ultimate Seduction

Amos Lassen

Aki Kaurismaki is a genius and this can easily be seen in the third film of his comic deadpan trilogy, "Lights in the Dusk". Here is the story of a handsome but lonely watchman who becomes entranced and seduced by a femme fatale who takes him down the path of crime and punishment. The film is aglow with sensibility and comedy as we look at the lives of dreamers, especially those who have fallen under a vixen's spell. The trilogy includes "Drifting Clouds" (1996) and "The Man without a Past" (2002) and now "Lights in the Dusk". All three films are cynical but "Lights" is by far the most cynical of the three.
A lonely security guard who is ignored by his coworkers has his life turned upside down by a woman, the ultimate tempest, and the results are deadpan humor. He is an outcast with no friends or family and he is somewhat dumb witted. He will do anything for a woman who shows interest in him. He is naïve and innocent and when he is duped by a beautiful blonde and set up in a robbery that he does not commit. His life is injustice after injustice.
The film is a comment on the descent of an individual which is the result of a an unequal society with an obviously faulty criminal system that punishes the innocent by putting a band-aid on symptoms of social ills such as the effects of imprisonment. The clerk's life is ruined while the real criminals manage to get away with whatever they can. Hard work reaps no reward. Kaurismaki gives us a wonderfully and full bittersweet look at the existential angst of life at the bottom. It looks at an extreme Darwinian world where life is hard and short. At the end, there is a ray of light in which we see humans who care for each other but like the reality of the world, we see that it is possible to die before good happens. The hero is inarticulate and it is almost impossible to determine whether it is because of depression or dictated by a moral stance over which he has no control. Koistinen, the clerk and night watchman, refuses to identify the woman who set him up even when the result is that he will pay the price for the crime. Simultaneously he is blind to the love that the honest manager of the place where he works feels for him. We see Finnish society from the point of view of poverty as well as from the angle of obscene ostentatious wealth. Rather than stand up and defend himself, he sets himself apart from society over and over again. He is incapable of reacting and is powerless against the society that has rejected him. We get a picture of a dreamlike world that too closely resembles the world of reality.
This is an absolutely wonderful movie and never disappoints. Even though it frustrates, it is one of those movies that must be seen. The ending is amazing and leaves you with plenty to think about.


Last Tango in Finland
Lights in the Dusk is not among Aki Kaurismaki's very best films, but is a good addition to his work. The movie is about Koistinen, a thirty-something security guard who is portrayed as the definition of a loser. He falls quickly for a blonde from the mob, even though he almost certainly knows from the start that this is a setup. The blonde gets his security codes, so the gangsters she is associated with can steal a jewelry at the department stores he guards. The running gag of the movie is that Koistinen is so lonely and hungry for personal companionship that the blonde has almost nothing to do to get his confidence: no sex, no kisses, and after he is caught, he refuses to name her to the police. Meanwhile, he rejects the only woman in the world that seems to care for him: a plain if kind hot dog vendor. The movie chronicles the sad fall of this man, even though at the very end a ray of hope (improbably) emerges. The problem with the movie is that Kaurismaki's has become too mannerist a filmmaker: the film is full of his usual quirks; for example, Koistinen and the two women he is involved with never made eye contact, as the actors are told to made a blank stare when they talk to each other. As usual in Kaurismaki's films, the music is great: the movie starts and ends with two tangos by the great Carlos Gardel: Volver and El Dia que me Quieras. In between, there are a number of good Finnish tangos and classic opera songs.