Taglines: He got a lot on his mind. Meet Roger Greenberg (Ben Stiller): a dysfunctional 40-year-old at a crossroads in his life. Roger wants to “do nothing” for a while, so he agrees to housesit for his younger and more successful brother, giving him a free place to stay in L.A. While in town, he…
Category: Distributors
Grown Ups (2010)
Taglines: Boys will be boys… some longer than others. Five men who were best friends when they were young kids are getting together for the Fourth of July weekend to meet each others’ families for the first time. Picking up where they left off, they discover why growing older doesn’t mean growing up. Adam Sandler,…
Gulliver’s Travels (2010)
Taglines: Something big is going down. Lemuel Gulliver (Jack Black) has been working in the mailroom of a big publishing company in Manhattan, New York for ten years. He has a crush for the editor for travel stories Darcy Silverman (Amanda Peet) and unintentionally applies for a travel writing job when he tries to ask…
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I (2010)
Taglines: The end begins. The final chapter of the “Harry Potter” film series begins as Harry, Ron and Hermione leave Hogwarts behind and set out to find and destroy the Horcruxes–the secret to Voldemort’s power and immortality. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, is a much-anticipated motion picture event to be told in two full-length…
Heartless (2010)
Taglines: The darker it gets the more you see. Jim Sturgess leads a hugely-talented ensemble cast in this sublime British psychological thriller from cult UK director Philip Ridley, who returns to the screen after a 14-year absence. The film follows Jamie Morgan (Jim Sturgess), born with a disfiguring birthmark across his face, which leaves him…
Hemingway’s The Garden of Eden (2010)
Taglines: Surrender your inhibitions… An adaptation of Nobel laureate Ernest Hemingway’s novel, The Garden of Eden, which was published posthumously in 1986 to great success. The novel remains one of the author’s most debated novels and is considered a departure from Hemingway’s usual work as it is widely accepted the novel is far more reflective…