In Movie Theaters the Week of August 18th, 19975 films are being released this week
| | Rated: R Navy Intelligence officer Lt. Jordan O'Neil (Demi Moore) sets a historic precedent when she is recruited as a test case to be the first woman allowed to train for the Navy Seals. Selected for her courage, skills, and level headedness, O'Neil is determined to succeed in the most demanding, most merciless and most honored fighting force in the world. Under the relentless command of Master Chief John Urgayle (Viggo Mortensen), O'Neil is put through weeks of physical and emotional hell, and is not expected to succeed. Indeed, military and high ranking government officials are counting on her to fail. |
| | Rated: R A jailbreak accidentally sets fast-talking petty con-artist Franklin Hatchet (Chris Tucker) on the run under suspicion of murder. now the whole city is on his trail and the only person who can help him clear his name is television reporter James Russell (Charlie Sheen).
Together, they're caught in the hillarious crossfile between cops, crooks and commandos attempting to retrieve a fortune in diamonds. |
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| Rated: R Dr. Susan Tyler (Mire Sorvino) and her husband, Dr. Peter Mann Jeremy Northam), deputy director, Centers for Disease Control, team up in New York City where, to all appearances, they successfully eradicate an epidemic threatening the lives of scores of children.
Three years later, what seemed like a stroke of genetic engineering genius has come back to haunt them with a vengeance. Their cure has taken on a life of it's own. They've altered the balance of nature, and nature is striking back. |
| | Rated: PG With this all-too-familiar refrain, June would signal Ward that young Theodore, a.k.a. "The Beaver," was once again about to transport the viewing audience into a wonderfully wacky world via the logic of innocent childhood. They could only hope that older brother Wally wasn't somehow involved as an often unwitting accomplice. Thirty-four years after the final episode first aired on national television, the refrain_and the story_are pretty much the same, thankfully, but the filmmakers undertaking a new bigscreen version of Leave It to Beaver were not without their challenges. |
| | Rated: PG-13 Sixteen year-old Ozzie Paxton is one of America's greatest underachievers. Give him a maze to maneuver and he's a genius. Give him a code to smash and he's a superhero. Give him a security system to hack into and he can beat the best of them.
But can Ozzie Paxton hack real life? He's about to find out. |
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