
What movies do you watch on TV every time they air, even though you have seen them tons of times?
I like All The President’s Men, Trading Places, Sound of Music, Office Space, Die Hard, Selena, Four Weddings and a Funeral, When Harry Met Sally, Jaws, Close Encounters.., Midnight Cowboy (story is sad, but music is great), Bend It Like Beckham, and probably more that I can’t remember right now.
Groundhog Day, Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Tombstone,The Breakfast Club, Godfather II, and several others.
Ce Matin-La (Midnight Cowboy)
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“Midnight Cowboy”….Movie Sheet Music $6.00 |
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EP Percy Faith music movies Ballad Easy Ryder/Midnight cowboy Argentina edition $19.00 |
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Midnight Cowboy 1969 DUSTIN HOFFMAN Movie Music MATHIS $6.99 |
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Midnight Cowboy Poster 27×40 Dustin Hoffman Jon Voight Sylvia Miles Midnight Cowboy reproduction poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon’s largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, poster and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture Graphics,Inc… |
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Midnight Cowboy Poster Movie Belgian 11×17 Dustin Hoffman Jon Voight Sylvia Miles Brenda Vaccaro Midnight Cowboy reproduction Approx. Size: 11 x 17 Inches – 28cm x 44cm Belgian Style A mini poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon’s largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, posters and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture Graphics,Inc… |
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Midnight Cowboy Poster Movie 11×17 Dustin Hoffman Jon Voight Sylvia Miles Brenda Vaccaro Midnight Cowboy reproduction Approx. Size: 11 x 17 Inches – 28cm x 44cm Style A mini poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon’s largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, posters and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture Graphics,Inc… |
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Ferrante & Teicher – All-Time Greatest Hits $1.82 … |
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All-Time Great Movie Themes $5.81 … |
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Trinity Revisited [CD/DVD] $12.06 Trying to recapture the lightening in a bottle that was the Cowboy Junkies’ The Trinity Sessions for its 20th anniversary would have been futile. Instead, the band reconvened in the same Toronto church where that now classic, nearly magical session occurred–this time with a camera, light crew, and famous friends–to play the songs again. Guest vocalists/musicians Natalie Merchant, Ryan Adams, Vic… |
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Slingshot $2.00 Midnight Cowboy meets Drugstore Cowboy in this frowzy cruise through the underclass. Childhood buddies David Arquette and Balthazar Getty are scam artists roaming from place to place; they land in a ritzy Connecticut town where the housewives appear ripe for plucking. Getty makes the mistake of genuinely liking one target (Julianna Margulies) and then falling for her smart, rebellious daughter (Th… |
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Midnight Cowboy, Spanish Movie Poster, 1969 $19.99 Midnight Cowboy, Spanish Movie Poster, 1969 – Premium Poster |
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Midnight Cowboy, in German, German Movie Poster, 1969 $34.99 Midnight Cowboy, in German, German Movie Poster, 1969 – Giclee Print |
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Midnight Cowboy, Belgian Movie Poster, 1969 $34.99 Midnight Cowboy, Belgian Movie Poster, 1969 – Giclee Print |
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Songs from Midnight Cowboy $13.59 After original vocalist Carly Simon left Elephant’s Memory for her own fame and fortune, the band recorded their self-titled Buddah debut, Elephant’s Memory, with Michal Shapiro handling the female lead. That disc is not their John Lennon/Yoko Ono/David Peel Apple Records debut from 1972, which was also named after this ensemble. When two Elephant’s Memory songs from the 1969 Buddah Records album appeared in the Capitol Records soundtrack to the film Midnight Cowboy, Buddah vice president Neil Bogart revamped and re-released the original LP, most likely and understandably, to cash in on the attention the band was getting from the hit film. “Old Man Willow” and “Jungle Gym at the Zoo” from the first LP appeared in Midnight Cowboy, and they show up again on side one of this disc along with a different spin on the Nilsson hit “Everybody’s Talkin’.” Here Michal Shapiro gives a woman’s take on the classic Fred Neil composition over a poppy/folksy Wes Farrell production. There’s a strange instrumental version of John Barry’s theme to “Midnight Cowboy,” jazzy rock with a female vocal, most likely Michal, adding a nice eerie resonance to the spirited and jumpy rendition, a far cry from the version that contained Vinny Bell’s elegant guitar, the Top Ten hit for Ferrante & Teicher in 1969. The two new titles as well as the Elephant’s Memory material from the movie make up side one. Side two contains seven more titles from the first LP, including the singles that were released from that disc, “Crossroads of the Stepping Stones” and “Don’t Put Me on Trial,” two excellent slices of ’60s pop. Over 40 minutes of music graces Songs From Midnight Cowboy Plus Their Hit Singles, the two new titles plus everything from the Buddah debut minus the songs “Band of Love” and “Hot Dog Man” (which was the flip of the 45 rpm “Jungle Gym at the Zoo”). The album could have been even more interesting had their 45 rpm “Keep Free, Pts. 1 & 2″ from November 1968 found its way onboard rather than the reissue of “Yogurt Song,” a composition from keyboardist Richard Sussman and drummer Rick Frank which sounds like a Frank Zappa nightmare. Other than that, the album actually is quite consistent and is lots of fun. Later releases Take It to the Streets and Angels Forever don’t have the pop meets psychedelia underground feel of this neo-bubblegum period piece. ~ Joe Viglione, Rovi Performers: Gary VanScyoc – Bass, Vocals; Michal Shapiro – Vocals; Rick Frank – Drums, Vocals; Stan Bronstein – Vocals, Saxophone; The Groop – Vocals |
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Midnight Cowboy $10.38 A well-above-average soundtrack, both for the contributions of top film scorer John Barry and some interesting odds and ends of late-’60s rock. The Midnight Cowboy soundtrack is most famous for Nilsson’s hit single cover of Fred Neil’s “Everybody’s Talkin’,” present in both the familiar version and a shorter one that is substantially different, particularly in its use of harmonica (which is not present at all on the single). Barry’s five compositions are suitably atmospheric, the standout being the “Midnight Cowboy” theme, with its memorable languid, melancholy melody and Toots Thielemans-style harmonica; it should have been a hit single (Ferrante & Teicher had one with a less interesting cover of the tune). The album is filled out by rock from the Groop, Leslie Miller, and Elephants Memory, which is mostly period music suitable for background party scenes, though Leslie Miller’s “He Quit Me” was written by a then-unknown Warren Zevon. Check out Elephants Memory’s seven-minute “Old Man Willow,” though, an enchanting slice of whimsical and surreal late-1960s psychedelia with trippy organ and female vocals. Elephants Memory is mostly known for briefly serving as John Lennon’s backup band in the early 1970s, but this is a lot closer to Ultimate Spinach than the Plastic Ono Band. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi Performers: Elephant’s Memory – Vocals; Harry Nilsson – Vocals; Leslie Miller – Vocals |
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Cowboy Bebop: The Movie $9.98 The popular animé series Cowboy Bebop gets its own feature-length film with the aptly named Cowboy Bebop: The Movie. Set in the late 21st century, it jumps into the series’ story line just prior to its conclusion, with the bounty hunting crew of the interstellar craft Bebop chasing a hacker aboard a tanker into a major city on Mars. As crew member Faye Valentine closes in on the tanker, she witnesses its catastrophic explosion, which soon appears to be a viral terrorist attack as the death toll continues to mount in the days following. Furthermore, Faye caught a glimpse of the person responsible for the blast and is thus the only surviving witness of the crime. After the government puts out a large bounty for the perpetrator’s capture, the Bebop gang — slacker Spike Spiegel, former policeman Jet Black, and hacker girl genius Edward — begin their own hunt for the mass murderer, who is eventually revealed to be one Vincent Volaju. Vincent, it turns out, was the lone survivor of a governmental medical test and now seeks revenge by unleashing the same microscopic robotic virus used in the tanker explosion on the unsuspecting city. The Bebop crew must scramble to prevent Vincent from carrying out his plan, as well as try to locate an anti-virus to counterattack the effects of Vincent’s virus. Released in both dubbed and subtitled cuts in the United States in 2003, Cowboy Bebop – The Movie premiered in Japan in 2001. ~ Ryan Shriver, Rovi |
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Midnight Cowboy, 1969 $34.99 Midnight Cowboy, 1969 – Giclee Print |
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Dustin Hoffman – Midnight Cowboy $7.99 Dustin Hoffman – Midnight Cowboy – Photo |
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Buck Jones, Movie Cowboy $14.99 Buck Jones, Movie Cowboy – Premium Poster |
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Greatest Cowboy Movie Never Made $23.18 After the commercial failure of the Saints’ third album, 1978′s Prehistoric Sounds, EMI gave the band their walking papers and guitarist Ed Kuepper and drummer Ivor Hay decided to pack it in and leave London to return home to Australia. Singer and guitarist Chris Bailey, however, wasn’t about to throw in the towel, and with Kuepper’s blessings he assembled a new version of the Saints and began the long, hard struggle to re-establish the group as one of the world’s great rock bands. Bailey’s first three albums with his new Saints are collected in The Greatest Cowboy Movie Never Made, a box set includes the LP’s The Monkey Puzzle, Out in the Jungle… and A Little Madness to Be Free in their entirety, as well as the Paralytic Tonight Dublin Tomorrow EP and an unreleased live set. Folks looking for a four-disc onslaught of old-school punk in the manner of (I’m) Stranded will be disappointed, but given the eclecticism the Saints displayed on their first three albums, the blend of pop melodies, soul accents and rock & roll passion Bailey and his bandmates summon on the studio material certainly fits the spirit if not the letter of the band’s original intentions, and one thing that remains consistent throughout is the excellence of Bailey’s singing, which is smart, forceful and original throughout, as well as his considerable gifts as a songwriter. And folks who want to hear Bailey rock out are rewarded with disc four, titled “A Gallon of Rum Is a Harsh Mistress the Morning After: Live in Oz,” a warts-and-all recording of a well-oiled and highly energetic show in Sydney from 1981 that features classic songs from the Kuepper-era Saints as well as Bailey’s more recent tunes. The only disadvantage to this set is that some hardcore Saints fans may already have the three albums included and will have to pony for them a second time to get the live CD, though given the obscurity of this material (especially in North America), that isn’t terribly likely, and this is a fine package for fans of one of the more unpredictable (yet satisfying) groups of their era. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi Performers: Hugh McDowell – Cello; Patrick Mathé – Harmonica; Pig & Monkey Choir – Vocals (Background); Roger Cawkwell – Clarinet (Bass), Saxophone, Organ; Brian James – Guitar; Cab Calloway – Guitar; Chris Bailey – Vocals, Guitar; Denis Haines – Pia |
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Midnight Cowboy, 25th Anniversary, 1969 $34.99 Midnight Cowboy, 25th Anniversary, 1969 – Giclee Print |
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Wildfox Manhattan Midnight Cowboy Cardigan in Dirty Black $275 Wildfox Manhattan Midnight Cowboy Cardigan in Dirty Black |
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Midnight Movie Collection, Vol. 2 $16.96 Four latter-day efforts from low-budget auteur Ray Dennis Steckler are included in this box set from Media Blasters’ offshoot label Guilty Pleasures. Midnight Movies Collection II contains the movies Blood Shack (aka The Chooper), Body Fever (aka Super Cool and The Last Original B Movie), The Hollywood Strangler (aka The Hollywood Strangler Meets The Skid Row Slasher) and The Las Vegas Serial Killer. All four movies have been transferred to disc in widescreen format, letterboxed at 1.85:1 on conventional televisions and enhanced for anamorphic playback on 16×9 monitors, except for The Las Vegas Serial Killer, which is in the full-frame aspect ratio of 1.33:1. None of the films look especially outstanding here — they’ve all been sourced from film prints that have obviously seen some serious use in the past, with Blood Shack looking a bit ragged in spots and The Las Vegas Serial Killer appearing flat and unattractive on video — but given the low-budget direct-from-the-drive-in style of Steckler’s work, the technical flaws aren’t always as distracting as one might fear. The audio on all four features has been mastered in Dolby Digital Stereo from monophonic elements, and the sound is acceptable, though the level on The Hollywood Strangler is uncomfortably low in spots. All the movies are in English, with no multiple language options or subtitles included. Guilty Pleasures have gone out of their way to give all four movies their fair share of bonus goodies; they all feature on-camera interviews with Steckler discussing various aspects of their production, while all but The Las Vegas Serial Killer also include actress Carolyn Brandt chatting with Steckler (who is also her former husband). The Hollywood Stranger and Body Fever feature introductions and optional commentary from drive-in movie authority Joe Bob Briggs, while Steckler recorded commentary tracks for all four movies. Body Fever includes a bonus second feature, The Chooper, which is actually a longer cut of Body Fever with different music and credits; the disc also includes a gallery of stills and ad artwork, along with trailers for other releases from Media Blasters and Shriek Show. The Body Fever disc includes a bonus short subject, Goof On The Loose, and color footage from a show staged to promote Steckler’s Rat Pfink and Boo Boo, along with another set of trailers. The Hollywood Stranger boasts a gallery of stills, posters and box-cover art and more trailers. And finally, The Las Vegas Serial Killer features two short subjects by Steckler, Face Of Evil and Slashed, as well as (of course) several coming attractions trailers. While the cover artwork for all four movies is pretty awful, the films themselves have been given quality treatment (beyond the flawed source prints), and fans of Steckler’s cinematic free-associations will want to give it spin, especially since the set is list priced at less than twenty bucks, making it an excellent value. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi Movie Guide |
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Cowboy: $9.79 Celebrity host of CMT’s Cowboy U Rocco Wachman’s modern guide to being a cowboy. Cowboy: The Ultimate Guide to Living Like a Great American Icon is the first book to explore, through a pop-culture lens, the many facets of the cowboy life. This book entertains and educates with an insider’s look at topics such as ranching, rodeos, chuck wagon cooking, cowboy music, country and western dancing, and most important, the cowboy spirit. Cowboy includes instructions, recipes, profiles, photographs, and trivia that vividly depict the day-in, day-out rituals of this iconic lifestyle and show what it meant to be a cowboy in frontier days, and what it means to be a cowboy today! A fresh take on all things cowboy, Cowboy is certain to appeal to the huge fan base of those who love all things Western. |
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