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“Ghut Tahmz” is a unique event where everybody is invited to let their guard down, shimmy on to good old school tunes, and boogie into the night as we up the tempo and pace. “Ghut Tahmz” is all for a night out with your best mates, filled with stupid incidents and crazy antics. We invite you to rock up to a night where you are the master of the dance floor.
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Steve Carell stars as Maxwell Smart – the best, but bumbling, analyst for a secret government agency, CONTROL, dedicated to fighting an evil anarchist counter agency, KAOS (they used to be Commies, but that team lost the Cold War, so I guess they decided to go guerilla). While Max is brilliant at what he does, he dreams of taking on the sexier, more high profile role of agent, where he can participate in field work, be a star and find the excitement he seeks. Now, it looks like Max will be getting his chance.
KAOS has infiltrated CONTROL, started eliminating agents one-by-one, and plans a horrible attack while CONTROL is trying to regroup, so The Chief (Alan Arkin) has promoted Max to Agent 86, and matched him with Agent 99 (Anne Hathaway) to make sure the good guys (and good ladies) win.
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A one-word review of Wanted would be “Wow.” That’s one of a series of similar-sounding exclamations – along with “whoo,” “whoa” and “what the …” – you’ll find yourself muttering as this action-adventure thrill ride fills the screen with its pumped-up and postmodern snap, crackle and pop.
Perhaps the rarest response an action movie can evoke from viewers jaded and benumbed in this age of seen-it-all CGI overload is: “I’ve never seen that before.” Wanted achieves this most special of effects again and again and wastes no time in doing so. The opening sequence shows a supercool guy striding down a hallway and bursting into a high-rise office. Bullets start flying, windows start splintering; next thing you know, he’s launching himself from one building to another, arcing over the street, guns blazing as he takes down a team of rooftop snipers.
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Jake (Sean Faris) is a kid whom a recent family tragedy has left with the kind of deep-seated psychological trauma that manifests in bursts of anger and hitting things, mostly other people. His frazzled mother (Leslie Hope) moves him and his little brother (Wyatt Smith) to Florida so the younger brother can attend a tennis camp and maybe Jake can pull it together before things go really wrong.
Jake finds himself in a new high school, surrounded by beautiful kids from various economic backgrounds who don’t really look like they’d ever be in the same high school, but whatever. These kids like to beat the slop out of each other in underground mixed-martial-arts fight-clubs that make the rounds via cell video and the internet. It’s all the rage.
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Adam Sandler is one of the smartest guys in Hollywood. He has perfected a formula for making low-budget romantic comedies that turn into box office gold. While most studio executives are still pursuing big-budget blockbusters, Sandler, who heads his own production company, Happy Madison Productions, keeps doing what he does best: Little movies which turn a big profit margin.
His latest film, despite its ridiculously long name, is another little romantic comedy. Zohan is a bit different, however, in that it dares to take on the long-running conflict between Jews and the Arabs in the Middle East. Unlike most serious films about this subject, this comedy actually brings some sense to the bitter conflict, as well as a touch of much-needed sweetness and romance, along with comedy.
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