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		<title>iTradeMyDVDs.com Most Requested Games</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/</link>
		<description>Welcome to iTradeMyDVDs.com, the home of video game trade-ins online, trade in pre-played or new; swap them all!</description>
		<managingeditor>info@iTradeMyDVDs.com</managingeditor>
		<language>en-us</language>
		<copyright>Copyright 2005-2008 iTradeMyDVDs.com</copyright>

		<item>
		<title>Dogma (Special Edition)</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=7520</link>
		<description>Kevin Smith is a conundrum of a filmmaker: he's a writer with brilliant, clever ideas who can't set up a simple shot to save his life. It was fine back when Smith was making low-budget films like &lt;I&gt;Clerks&lt;/I&gt; and &lt;I&gt;Chasing Amy&lt;/I&gt;, both of which had an amiable, grungy feel to them, but now that he's a rising director who's attracting top talent and tackling bigger themes, it might behoove him to polish his filmmaking. That's the main problem with &lt;I&gt;Dogma&lt;/I&gt;--it's an ambitious, funny, aggressively intelligent film about modern-day religion, but while Smith's writing has matured significantly (anyone who thinks he's not topnotch should take a look at &lt;I&gt;Chasing Amy&lt;/I&gt;), his direction hasn't. It's too bad, because &lt;I&gt;Dogma&lt;/I&gt; is ripe for near-classic status in its theological satire, which is hardly as blasphemous as the protests that greeted the movie would lead you to believe. &lt;p&gt;  Two banished angels (Ben Affleck and Matt Damon) have discovered a loophole that would allow them back into heaven; problem is, they'd destroy civilization in the process by proving God fallible. It's up to Bethany (Linda Fiorentino), a lapsed Catholic who works in an abortion clinic, to save the day, with some help from two so-called prophets (Smith and Jason Mewes, as their perennial characters Jay and Silent Bob), the heretofore unknown 13th apostle (Chris Rock), and a sexy, heavenly muse (the sublime Salma Hayek, who almost single-handedly steals the film). In some ways &lt;I&gt;Dogma&lt;/I&gt; is a shaggy dog of a road movie--which hits a comic peak when Affleck and Fiorentino banter drunkenly on a train to New Jersey, not realizing they're mortal enemies--and segues into a comedy-action flick as the vengeful angels (who have a taste for blood) try to make their way into heaven. Smith's cast is exceptional--with Fiorentino lending a sardonic gravity to the proceedings, and Jason Lee smirking evilly as the horned devil Azrael--and the film shuffles good-naturedly to its climax (featuring Alanis Morissette as a beatifically silent God), but it just looks so unrelentingly... &lt;I&gt;subpar&lt;/I&gt;. Credit Smith with being a daring writer but a  less-than-stellar director. &lt;I&gt;--Mark Englehart&lt;/I&gt;</description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<title>Sid &amp; Nancy - Criterion Collection</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=16698</link>
		<description>After the cultish success of &lt;I&gt;Repo Man&lt;/I&gt;, maverick director Alex Cox made the film that remains his masterpiece--a loud, brash, abrasive, painful, funny, and utterly brilliant screen biography of British punk rocker Sid Vicious and his American girlfriend Nancy Spungen. As played to perfection by Gary Oldman and Chloe Webb, Sid and Nancy are made for each other, serving their mutual strengths and weaknesses and rising with the punk-rock fame of Sid's group, the Sex Pistols, while falling into the ultimately lethal pit of drug abuse. Cox doesn't pull any punches or compromise the unsavory aspects of this passionate love story, so the film presents a harsh mix of emotional and physical anguish tempered by the very poignant and genuine love shared by its tormented central characters. Through it all, the film emerges as an intimate and yet oddly epic chronicle of punk's glory days of anarchic sex, drugs and rock &amp; roll. It's as dynamic and confidently directed as any screen biography before or since, no less fascinating for its unpleasant aspects as for the touching emotions at its very human core.  &lt;I&gt;--Jeff Shannon&lt;/I&gt;</description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<title>Millennium - The Complete Third Season</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=34907</link>
		<description> In the third season of &lt;i&gt;Millennium&lt;/i&gt;, we find Frank Black (Lance Henriksen) a widower and a single father who is completely disillusioned with the Millennium group and their evil intentions. Hell-bent on revenge, Frank rejoins the FBI, gets a new partner, Special Agent Emma Hollis (Klea Scott), and launches a personal crusade to dismantle and expose the Millennium Group.  Interestingly, the visionary, quirky, &lt;i&gt;X-Files&lt;/i&gt; mythos-like direction in which the producer-writer team of Glenn Morgan and James Wong took &lt;I&gt;Millennium&lt;/I&gt; in season 2 didn't sit well with many fans.  Now that a good chunk of the Earth's population had been wiped out by the Group's killer plague, which also claimed Frank's wife Catherine (Megan Gallagher), Chris Carter decided to take the helm once again and redirect season 3 back to the dark, apocalyptic crime-fighting genre in which it was intended. The mythos element is still present, but season 3 is a definite return to the look and feel of season 1 where most of the episodes are individual dark crime stories. The scripts in season 3 are consistently sharp (especially Ken Horton's and Chip Johannessen's), and the interesting, new dynamics introduced could have easily carried the show onward for many more seasons. Sadly, it was never meant to be. Like an apocalyptic metaphor, one of the best-written, best-produced, and most-influential shows of the 1990s would be canceled at the end of season 3, less than one year before the year 2000. Fans were left to wonder about the future of Frank Black, Jordan, and the success of his personal vendetta. Fortunately, &lt;i&gt;The X-Files&lt;/i&gt; was still going strong at the time and fans got a bit of closure with &lt;i&gt;The X-Files&lt;/I&gt;' season 7 tie-in episode &quot;Millennium&quot; (included on this DVD set). &lt;i&gt;--Rob Bracco&lt;/i&gt;</description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<title>Band of Brothers</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=15830</link>
		<description>An impressively rigorous, unsentimental, and harrowing look at combat during World War II, &lt;I&gt;Band of Brothers&lt;/I&gt; follows a company of airborne infantry--Easy Company--from boot camp through the end of the war. The brutality of training takes the audience by increments to the even greater brutality of the war; Easy Company took part in some of the most difficult battles, including the D-Day invasion of Normandy, the failed invasion of Holland, and the Battle of the Bulge, as well as the liberation of a concentration camp and the capture of Hitler's Eagle's Nest. But what makes these episodes work is not their historical sweep but their emphasis on riveting details (such as the rattle of a plane as the paratroopers wait to leap, or a flower in the buttonhole of a German soldier) and procedures (from military tactics to the workings of bureaucratic hierarchies). The scope of this miniseries (10 episodes, plus an actual documentary filled with interviews with surviving veterans) allows not only a thoroughness impossible in a two-hour movie, but also captures the wide range of responses to the stress and trauma of war--fear, cynicism, cruelty, compassion, and all-encompassing confusion. The result is a realism that makes both simplistic judgments and jingoistic enthusiasm impossible; the things these soldiers had to do are both terrible and understandable, and the psychological price they paid is made clear. The writing, directing, and acting are superb throughout. The cast is largely unknown, emphasizing the team of actors as a whole unit, much like the regiment; Damian Lewis and Ron Livingston play the central roles of two officers with grit and intelligence. &lt;I&gt;Band of Brothers&lt;/I&gt; turns a vast historical event into a series of potent personal experiences; it's a deeply engrossing and affecting accomplishment. &lt;I&gt;--Bret Fetzer&lt;/I&gt;</description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
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		<item>
		<title>A Film Trilogy by Ingmar Bergman - Criterion Collection (Through a Glass Darkly/Winter Light/The Silence)</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=15929</link>
		<description>Between 1961 and 1963, Ingmar Bergman released a remarkable trilogy of so-called chamber dramas, each one concerned with the futility of sustaining faith in God, family, love, or much else. The series proved transitional for the internationally renowned Swedish filmmaker, securing his crucial collaboration with cinematographer Sven Nykvist (with whom Bergman would go on to make his many masterpieces--including &lt;I&gt;Persona&lt;/I&gt; and &lt;I&gt;Cries and Whispers&lt;/I&gt;--of the '60s, '70s, and early '80s), and underscoring a new preference for intimate, relationship-driven stories, austere settings, and haunting tones of emotional isolation and despair. &lt;p&gt;  &lt;I&gt;Through a Glass Darkly&lt;/I&gt; concerns a psychologically fragile woman, Karin (Harriet Andersson), who seeks recovery from a nervous breakdown while on a remote-island vacation with her family. Unfortunately, her father (Gunnar Bj&amp;#246;rnstrand), a successful writer, regards her with clinical detachment, her husband (Max Von Sydow), a doctor, feels unavailing in the effort to treat her, and her brother (Lars Passgard) is wrapped up in his own quest for sexual fulfillment. Karin's descent into further loneliness and delusion exacerbates the heretofore unspoken alienation at the heart of this entire family, and drives the characters to brood over the existence of God (or, in Karin's case, imagine that God is the chilling spider hidden behind an attic door). &lt;I&gt;Through a Glass Darkly&lt;/I&gt; is a heartbreaking, powerful work of art.&lt;p&gt;  &lt;I&gt;Winter Light&lt;/I&gt; reunites Bj&amp;#246;rnstrand, this time playing a pastor suffering a crisis of faith while ministering to a shrinking congregation, and Von Sydow as a parishioner lost to acute anxiety over the possibility of a nuclear holocaust. Neither man can help or heal the other, or even inspire renewed confidence in practiced rituals and older, more certain views of the world. Set on a chilly, Sunday afternoon, &lt;I&gt;Winter Light&lt;/I&gt;'s heavy stillness, lack of music, preference for intense close-ups and distancing long shots, and barren setting all lead us inescapably into the core of a profound silence, an echo chamber in which love can't grow and religion rings hollow. &lt;p&gt;  &lt;I&gt;The Silence&lt;/I&gt; is the most abstract entry in the trilogy, a somewhat eerie story of two sisters, Esther (Ingrid Thulin) and Anna (Gunnel Lindblom), and the latter's son (J&amp;#246;rgen Lindstr&amp;#246;m), all traveling by train to Sweden but forced to stay in a foreign country when Esther's chronic bronchial problems require her to rest. A stifling atmosphere, a desolate hotel, encounters with a troupe of carnival dwarves, Anna's anchoring illness, and an empty sexual encounter for Esther underscore the unnerving feeling that God has abandoned these characters to dubious salvation in their own connection. A highly memorable film. &lt;I&gt;--Tom Keogh&lt;/I&gt;</description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<item>
		<title>A Woman is a Woman - Criterion Collection</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=7435</link>
		<description>One of the landmark early films of the French New Wave, director Jean-Luc Godard (&lt;I&gt;Breathless&lt;/I&gt;) weaves a tale of desperation and deceit. Anna Karina (&lt;I&gt;Vivre Sa Vie&lt;/I&gt;) plays a stripper determined to have a child in the hopes that it will better her life. She tries in vain to convince her rough, selfish boyfriend (Jean-Paul Belmondo) to father the child, but he refuses. In desperation and sparked by anger she turns to his best friend to father the child, setting off a new round of recrimination and betrayal. &lt;I&gt;Une Femme Est une Femme&lt;/I&gt; is one of Godard's first films and essential viewing for fans of the &lt;I&gt;Nouvelle Vague&lt;/I&gt;, to chart the beginnings of the detached mood and style that influenced a coming generation of films. &lt;I&gt;--Robert Lane&lt;/I&gt; </description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<item>
		<title>Brief Encounter - Criterion Collection</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=18580</link>
		<description>To many, &lt;I&gt;Brief Encounter&lt;/I&gt; may seem like a relic of more proper times--or, specifically, more properly &lt;I&gt;British&lt;/I&gt; times--when the pressures of marital decorum and fidelity were perhaps more keenly felt. In truth, David Lean's fourth film remains a timeless study of true love (or, rather, the promise of it), and the aching desire for intimate connection that is often subdued by the obligations of marriage. And so it is that ordinary Londoners Alec (Trevor Howard), a married doctor, and contented housewife Laura (Celia Johnson) meet by chance one day in a train station, when he volunteers to remove a fleck of ash from her eye (a romantic gesture that, perhaps, inspired Robert Towne's &quot;flaw in the iris&quot; scene in &lt;I&gt;Chinatown&lt;/I&gt;). &lt;p&gt;  It so happens that their schedules coincide at the train station every Thursday, and their casual attraction grows, through quiet conversation and longing expressions, into the desperate recognition of mutual love. From this point forward, Lean turns this utterly precise, 85-minute film into a bracing study of romantic suspense, leading inevitably, and with the paranoid, furtive glances of a spy thriller, to the moment when this brief encounter must be consummated or abandoned altogether. Decades later, the outcome of this affair--both agonizing and rapturous--is subtle and yet powerful enough to draw tears from the numbest of souls, and spark debate regarding the tragedy or virtue of the choices made. A truly universal film, with meticulously controlled emotions revealed through the flawless  performances of Howard and Johnson, and an enduring masterpiece that continued Lean on his course to cinematic greatness. &lt;I&gt;--Jeff Shannon&lt;/I&gt;</description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<item>
		<title>The Adventures of Indiana Jones (Raiders of the Lost Ark/The Temple of Doom/The Last Crusade) - Widescreen</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=16</link>
		<description>As with &lt;I&gt;Star Wars&lt;/I&gt;, the George Lucas-produced &lt;I&gt;Indiana Jones&lt;/I&gt; trilogy was not just a plaything for kids but an act of nostalgic affection toward a lost phenomenon: the cliffhanging movie serials of the past. Episodic in structure and with fate hanging in the balance about every 10 minutes, the &lt;I&gt;Jones&lt;/I&gt; features tapped into Lucas's extremely profitable &lt;I&gt;Star Wars&lt;/I&gt; formula of modernizing the look and feel of an old, but popular, story model. Steven Spielberg directed all three films, which are set in the late 1930s and early '40s: the comic book-like &lt;I&gt;Raiders of the Lost Ark&lt;/I&gt;, the spooky, &lt;I&gt;Gunga Din&lt;/I&gt;-inspired &lt;I&gt;Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom&lt;/I&gt;, and the cautious but entertaining &lt;I&gt;Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade&lt;/I&gt;. Fans and critics disagree over the order of preference, some even finding the middle movie nearly repugnant in its violence. (Pro-&lt;I&gt;Temple of Doom&lt;/I&gt; people, on the other hand, believe that film to be the most disarmingly creative and emotionally effective of the trio.) One thing's for sure: Harrison Ford's swaggering, two-fisted, self-effacing performance worked like a charm, and the art of cracking bullwhips was probably never quite the iconic activity it soon became after &lt;I&gt;Raiders&lt;/I&gt;. Supporting players and costars were very much a part of the series, too--Karen Allen, Sean Connery (as Indie's dad), Kate Capshaw, Ke Huy Quan, Amrish Puri, Denholm Elliot, River Phoenix, and John Rhys-Davies among them. Years have passed since the last film (another is supposedly in the works), but emerging film buffs can have the same fun their predecessors did picking out numerous references to Hollywood classics and B-movies of the past. &lt;I&gt;--Tom Keogh&lt;/I&gt;  </description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<item>
		<title>Big Deal on Madonna Street - Criterion Collection</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=5975</link>
		<description>An all-star cast and jazzy score highlight this charming comedy, a deft satire of classic caper films like &lt;I&gt;Rififi&lt;/I&gt;. &lt;I&gt;Big Deal on Madonna Street&lt;/I&gt; hilariously details the plight of a sad-sack group of bumbling thieves and their desperate attempts to pull off the perfect heist. </description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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		<item>
		<title>All That Heaven Allows - Criterion Collection</title>
		<link>http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/index.php?page=games/indgame.php&amp;indid=16229</link>
		<description>Rock Hudson and Jane Wyman were so successful in Douglas Sirk's &lt;I&gt;Magnificent Obsession&lt;/I&gt; that they reteamed for this, his first melodrama masterpiece. Young hunk Rock is a strapping son of mother nature, a gardener who woos middle-aged, middle class widow Wyman to the snooty disapproval of her conservative social circle and embarrassment of her self-centered children. Wyman discovers a new life with his open-armed friends and back-to-nature lifestyle, but struggles with life-changing decisions in the face of social pressure and vicious gossip. Living the Henry Thoreau dream, Rock inhabits his personal Walden in a rustic country cabin by a bubbling brook, a dream house lit by a giant picture window overlooking an idyllic countryside where deer pose just outside the window. Wyman's elegant but sterile suburban home transforms into a tomb when she sacrifices her love for the &quot;good name&quot; of her children, and the lonely widow sees her future in the pale, colorless reflection of her TV screen. But don't despair just yet: Sirk's heroines are dynamic and resourceful and no Sirk melodrama ends without a heart-tugging, over-the-top twist. German director Rainer Werner Fassbinder, who championed Sirk as a master and a mentor, remade the film as &lt;I&gt;Ali: Fear Eats the Soul&lt;/I&gt; decades later. &lt;I&gt;--Sean Axmaker&lt;/I&gt; </description>
		<pubdate>Wed, Nov 19 2008 6:54:43 PST</pubdate>
		<source url="http://www.iTradeMyDVDs.com/dvdtoprequest.xml" />
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