Rated:PG-13 This is a remake of the 1960 film based upon the novel by H.G. Wells, which is about a man in the 1890s who builds a time machine that sends him farther and farther into the future. Eventually he finds himself 800,000 years away, and two races inhabit the Earth: the Eloi, who are calm, fun-loving creatures, and the Morlocks, hideous underground monsters who come out at night to kidnap the Eloi.
Rated:PG-13 Dr. Evil and Mini-Me have somehow escaped from a maximum security prison and the duo team up with Goldmember. Together they formulate a plan for world domination. And this particular scheme requires a large amount of time-travel, and kidnapping Austin Powers' father, England's master spy, Nigel Powers. As Austin chases Dr. Evil, Mini-Me and Goldmember through time, he stops in 1975 to "connect" with an old girlfriend, detective Foxy Cleopatra, and requests her help to track the villains and save his father.
Rated:PG In the sequel to 1999's hugely popular Stuart Little, the lovable mouse Stuart is now living a nice life with the Littles, the human family that adopted him. Stuart drives himself to school, builds model airplanes, and plays on the soccer team. But he longs for a friend his own size, and fate obliges when he meets a bird named Margalo. She tells of being terrorized by the evil Falcon, and when she disappears soon thereafter, Stuart and the Littles' cat, Snowbell, set out on an adventurous journey through Manhattan, N.Y., to find her.
Rated:G Based on an attraction at Disneyland, the Country Bear Jamboree, "The Country Bears" (2002) is one in a long line of live action Disney family films. The movie is a satire of Behind the Music rock & roll bands. Beary, a young bear raised by a human family in a world wear humans and talking bears coexist, attempts to trace his roots. He meets up with the Country Bears, a long-since broken-up band, a parody of bands like the Eagles. Beary helps the Country Bears reunite for one final concert, while searching for who he truly is.
Rated:R Tied to a chair in a seedy hotel room, Trevor Finch (Christian Slater) is held hostage by Critical Jim (Tim Allen), a hit man with a big heart and a passion for old movies. Critical Jim thinks he is holding Cletis Tout, a man the mob has hired him to kill. He's got Tout, and he wants to get paid. The place: Gladstone Hotel, #8. His demands: Transfer funds to his account #M (like McQueen) 01226226 F(as in Fonda), T (as in Tracey), K (as in Kubrick). They've got ninety minutes to pay him and get to the hotel or he lets Tout go.
Rated:R Famed actor and Paramount producer Robert Evans wrote his autobiography of the same title in 1994, and this film documents his storied career. Evans began as a clothing designer, then starred in films such as The Sun Also Rises, and later progressed to producing iconic films like The Godfather and Rosemary's Baby before spiraling downward into cocaine addiction. In the '90s, he made a comeback, again as a producer, with hits like Sliver and The Saint.