Both Films Include An All-new Sneak Peek Of Charlie’S Angels (2019) And Hours Of Fun Archival Special Features
Charlie’S Angels (2000)
Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu star as the captivating crime-fighting trio who are masters of disguise, espionage and martial arts. When a devious mastermind embroils them in a plot to destroy individual privacy, the Angels, aided by their loyal sidekick Bosley (Bill Murray), set out to bring down the bad guys. But when a terrible secret is revealed, it makes the Angels targets for assassination.
Charlie’S Angels: Full Throttle
The “Angels”, three investigative agents who work for the Charles Townsend Detective Agency, return for another high-octane series of adventures as they investigate the theft of a database of witness protection profiles, after five of the people on the list are murdered. They’re aided by a new Bosley (Bernie Mac), in an adventure which pits them...
Charlie’S Angels (2000)
Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu star as the captivating crime-fighting trio who are masters of disguise, espionage and martial arts. When a devious mastermind embroils them in a plot to destroy individual privacy, the Angels, aided by their loyal sidekick Bosley (Bill Murray), set out to bring down the bad guys. But when a terrible secret is revealed, it makes the Angels targets for assassination.
Charlie’S Angels: Full Throttle
The “Angels”, three investigative agents who work for the Charles Townsend Detective Agency, return for another high-octane series of adventures as they investigate the theft of a database of witness protection profiles, after five of the people on the list are murdered. They’re aided by a new Bosley (Bernie Mac), in an adventure which pits them...
- 10/27/2019
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
With the new feature film reboot of the classic television series coming in November, Sony Home Entertainment is releasing the McG-directed films from 2000 and 2003. Both will contain a preview of the new film,w hich we have to say, looks like a lot of fun.
Charlie’S Angels (2000)
Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu star as the captivating crime-fighting trio who are masters of disguise, espionage and martial arts. When a devious mastermind embroils them in a plot to destroy individual privacy, the Angels, aided by their loyal sidekick Bosley (Bill Murray), set out to bring down the bad guys. But when a terrible secret is revealed, it makes the Angels targets for assassination.
Director: McG
Executive Producers: Betty Thomas, Jenno Topping, Joseph M. Caracciolo
Producers: Leonard Goldberg, Drew Barrymore, Nancy Juvonen
Written By: Ryan Rowe & Ed Solomon and John August
Cast: Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, Lucy Liu,...
Charlie’S Angels (2000)
Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu star as the captivating crime-fighting trio who are masters of disguise, espionage and martial arts. When a devious mastermind embroils them in a plot to destroy individual privacy, the Angels, aided by their loyal sidekick Bosley (Bill Murray), set out to bring down the bad guys. But when a terrible secret is revealed, it makes the Angels targets for assassination.
Director: McG
Executive Producers: Betty Thomas, Jenno Topping, Joseph M. Caracciolo
Producers: Leonard Goldberg, Drew Barrymore, Nancy Juvonen
Written By: Ryan Rowe & Ed Solomon and John August
Cast: Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, Lucy Liu,...
- 7/17/2019
- by ComicMix Staff
- Comicmix.com
Oh, I see what you did there, Fox. Sneaky. I like it. I'm not even remotely surprised that Fox is working to make a new "Predator" movie. I don't really care what they call it… reboot, remake, sequel, update… whatever. They'll never stop making "Predator" movies. They'll do it anytime they've got an idea that's even vaguely commercial, because it's an evergreen property for them. They don't have to license any rights. They're not playing with someone else's material. Like with the "Alien" series, they own "Predator" completely, and they've proven repeatedly that they're willing to bend those icons in a million different ways. Attaching Shane Black to co-write and direct the film is, for anyone who knows the first film, an especially sly move. Black is in the original film, playing one of the soldiers, and he appeared in that film during the heyday of what are known as the Pad O' Guys days,...
- 6/24/2014
- by Drew McWeeny
- Hitfix
Martin Rickett/Pa Wire/Press Association Images
Date: Saturday 25th January
Competition: Fa Cup
Venue: Stadium of Light
Kick-Off: 15:00
As one quest to reach a Wembley stadium final ends successfully, Sunderland turn to the Fa Cup, where they face non-league Kidderminster Harriers in the fourth round.
The Skrill Premier side have seen off Bradford Park Avenue, Sutton United, Newport County and of course Peterborough United. The League Cup finalists beat Carlisle United in the third round.
Manager Andy Thorn, who was part of the Wimbledon side that won this very trophy in 1988, has said that he hopes to pull off another cup upset:
“Any one-off game can go any way as long as you prepare properly, believe in what you do and go there with determination.
“In that run with Wimbledon. we were favourites to get knocked out in every game we played.
“But if you go with belief and desire,...
Date: Saturday 25th January
Competition: Fa Cup
Venue: Stadium of Light
Kick-Off: 15:00
As one quest to reach a Wembley stadium final ends successfully, Sunderland turn to the Fa Cup, where they face non-league Kidderminster Harriers in the fourth round.
The Skrill Premier side have seen off Bradford Park Avenue, Sutton United, Newport County and of course Peterborough United. The League Cup finalists beat Carlisle United in the third round.
Manager Andy Thorn, who was part of the Wimbledon side that won this very trophy in 1988, has said that he hopes to pull off another cup upset:
“Any one-off game can go any way as long as you prepare properly, believe in what you do and go there with determination.
“In that run with Wimbledon. we were favourites to get knocked out in every game we played.
“But if you go with belief and desire,...
- 1/25/2014
- by Joseph Speckman
- Obsessed with Film
The "jiggle" factor in the late-1970s television show "Charlie's Angels" has, in this film version, been turned into an all-out
derriere-swaying, belly-shaking, hair-tossing, leg-kicking, breast-heaving Glam Follies. For Charlie's amorous Angels slip in and out of costumes as swiftly as they leap out of airplanes, dive off boats, jump into cars and fall out of a hillside house.
Built for speed and elaborate peekaboo games with female flesh, this "Angels" starring glamour queens Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu will probably be derided by critics even more than the old TV show. But undemanding date-night audiences might respond to this ultimate chick action flick. And the good-natured humor of its three stars, who appear to be having a gas playing these ridiculous figures, goes a long way in overcoming the bad jokes and even worse plot twists in this James Bond -- or should we say Austin Powered -- riff.
"Angels'" filmmakers -- commercial and video director McG and screenwriters Ryan Rowe, Ed Solomon and John August -- have upped the ante over the TV show at every turn. Where the old Angels went undercover, so to speak -- usually in environments that called for the skimpiest clothing imaginable -- the 2000 versions find themselves disguised as geishas, belly dancers, race-car drivers, massage parlor hostesses and Swiss yodelers in teeny-tiny skirts.
Where the old Angels occasionally mixed it up with a bad guy, the new Angels rumble like Michelle Yeoh (though none possesses Yeoh's lithe athleticism, so much cinematic trickery is called for).
The disposable plot has the disembodied Charlie -- again given voice by John Forsythe over telephone speaker phones -- call in his three elite private investigators and their muddled minder Bosley (Bill Murray in a forgettable role) to solve the kidnapping of technology tycoon Eric Knox (Sam Rockwell). The Angels target Knox's telecommunications rival Roger Corwin (Tim Curry) but remain suspicious of Knox's top exec, Vivian Wood (Kelly Lynch).
Action movie roles get a gender reversal with all the usual kick-ass combat belonging to the ladies, while the male stars are more or less sidelined as onlookers to the battles. The actresses revel in these roles as part sex symbols and part ball-busters. They display sass and verve, but a self-consciousness sometimes intrudes, almost as if they worry about what Gloria Steinem will say.
Diaz is the most carefree here, gliding in and out of costumes with PG-13 rated naughtiness and putting tongue-in-cheek moves on bedazzled males. Liu can pout with the best of them, especially when someone questions her nearly lethal cooking. And Barrymore, one of the film's producers, brings a surfeit of energy and coquetry to her Angel in a series of devilish disguises.
Minor characters often prove very minor indeed. Running gags involving Tom Green and Luke Wilson die for lack of oxygen. And even the villains seem to lack the energy to keep up with these hyperkinetic chicks.
Technical credits are all over the top, clearly deriving more ideas from the James Bond series than the original TV shows. Stunt coordinator Vic Armstrong and senior visual effects supervisor Patrick McClung get the biggest workout because without their toil, "Charlie's Angels" is a short subject.
CHARLIE'S ANGELS
Columbia Pictures
Leonard Goldberg/Flower Films/Tall Trees
Producers: Leonard Goldberg,
Drew Barrymore, Nancy Juvonen
Director: McG
Screenwriters: Ryan Rowe, Ed Solomon,
John August
Executive producers: Betty Thomas,
Jenno Topping, Joseph M. Caracciolo
Director of photography: Russell Carpenter
Production designer: J. Michael Riva
Music: Edward Shearmur
Costume designer: Joseph G. Aulisi
Editors: Wayne Wahrman, Peter Teschner
Color/stereo
Cast:
Natalie: Cameron Diaz
Dylan: Drew Barrymore
Alex: Lucy Liu
Bosley: Bill Murray
Eric Knox: Sam Rockwell
Vivian Wood: Kelly Lynch
Roger Corwin: Tim Curry
Thin Man: Crispin Glover
Running time - 92 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
derriere-swaying, belly-shaking, hair-tossing, leg-kicking, breast-heaving Glam Follies. For Charlie's amorous Angels slip in and out of costumes as swiftly as they leap out of airplanes, dive off boats, jump into cars and fall out of a hillside house.
Built for speed and elaborate peekaboo games with female flesh, this "Angels" starring glamour queens Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu will probably be derided by critics even more than the old TV show. But undemanding date-night audiences might respond to this ultimate chick action flick. And the good-natured humor of its three stars, who appear to be having a gas playing these ridiculous figures, goes a long way in overcoming the bad jokes and even worse plot twists in this James Bond -- or should we say Austin Powered -- riff.
"Angels'" filmmakers -- commercial and video director McG and screenwriters Ryan Rowe, Ed Solomon and John August -- have upped the ante over the TV show at every turn. Where the old Angels went undercover, so to speak -- usually in environments that called for the skimpiest clothing imaginable -- the 2000 versions find themselves disguised as geishas, belly dancers, race-car drivers, massage parlor hostesses and Swiss yodelers in teeny-tiny skirts.
Where the old Angels occasionally mixed it up with a bad guy, the new Angels rumble like Michelle Yeoh (though none possesses Yeoh's lithe athleticism, so much cinematic trickery is called for).
The disposable plot has the disembodied Charlie -- again given voice by John Forsythe over telephone speaker phones -- call in his three elite private investigators and their muddled minder Bosley (Bill Murray in a forgettable role) to solve the kidnapping of technology tycoon Eric Knox (Sam Rockwell). The Angels target Knox's telecommunications rival Roger Corwin (Tim Curry) but remain suspicious of Knox's top exec, Vivian Wood (Kelly Lynch).
Action movie roles get a gender reversal with all the usual kick-ass combat belonging to the ladies, while the male stars are more or less sidelined as onlookers to the battles. The actresses revel in these roles as part sex symbols and part ball-busters. They display sass and verve, but a self-consciousness sometimes intrudes, almost as if they worry about what Gloria Steinem will say.
Diaz is the most carefree here, gliding in and out of costumes with PG-13 rated naughtiness and putting tongue-in-cheek moves on bedazzled males. Liu can pout with the best of them, especially when someone questions her nearly lethal cooking. And Barrymore, one of the film's producers, brings a surfeit of energy and coquetry to her Angel in a series of devilish disguises.
Minor characters often prove very minor indeed. Running gags involving Tom Green and Luke Wilson die for lack of oxygen. And even the villains seem to lack the energy to keep up with these hyperkinetic chicks.
Technical credits are all over the top, clearly deriving more ideas from the James Bond series than the original TV shows. Stunt coordinator Vic Armstrong and senior visual effects supervisor Patrick McClung get the biggest workout because without their toil, "Charlie's Angels" is a short subject.
CHARLIE'S ANGELS
Columbia Pictures
Leonard Goldberg/Flower Films/Tall Trees
Producers: Leonard Goldberg,
Drew Barrymore, Nancy Juvonen
Director: McG
Screenwriters: Ryan Rowe, Ed Solomon,
John August
Executive producers: Betty Thomas,
Jenno Topping, Joseph M. Caracciolo
Director of photography: Russell Carpenter
Production designer: J. Michael Riva
Music: Edward Shearmur
Costume designer: Joseph G. Aulisi
Editors: Wayne Wahrman, Peter Teschner
Color/stereo
Cast:
Natalie: Cameron Diaz
Dylan: Drew Barrymore
Alex: Lucy Liu
Bosley: Bill Murray
Eric Knox: Sam Rockwell
Vivian Wood: Kelly Lynch
Roger Corwin: Tim Curry
Thin Man: Crispin Glover
Running time - 92 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
- 10/30/2000
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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