A Chance Encounter Can Change Your Life Forever A cast of Hollywood's brightest young stars shines in this award-winning drama about finding yourself in the detours on the journey of life. Antonio Sabato Jr. stars as Jeremy, an irresponsible, womanizing college student. Neil McDonough (Band Of Brothers, Medical Investigation) costars as Brian, a hotshot salesman entering "the real adult world." A chance encounter at an intersection leaves both men secretly envious of each other's lives. Jeremy envies Brian's material success. Brian yearns for Jeremy's carefree, quota-free lifestyle. Both will discover that things are not what they seem as they follow the paths toward their futures. Amy Smart (Rat Race, Starsky & Hutch) appears as the girl Jeremy lost along the way.
If you love watching Neal McDonough or Antonio Sabato Jr., you are deffinetly going to want to watch Crossing Paths.
Crossing Paths has always been a favorite of mine.Through out the movie, Neal McDonough simply shines. Antonio Sabato Jr. actually caught my interest too.
Wow! I really loved the movie Hideous Kinky. The movie is absolutely stunning with top-notch graphics and visuals while Kate Winslet deliver some award-winning performances in this movie.
I also think Sad Taghmaoui was great! The visuals and graphics make for some very realistic on screen special-effects but that is the beauty of the movie.When the movie wants to be funny it is funny, the same is true for when the movie needs to deliver its scary aspects.
I think Kate Winslet and Sad Taghmaoui worked wonderful in Hideous Kinky. The great supporting cast includes Kate Winslet, Sad Taghmaoui, Bella Riza, Carrie Mullan, Pierre Clmenti.
You should see it, make no mistake this is a definite blockbuster!
I think Kate Winslet and Sad Taghmaoui worked wonderful in Hideous Kinky. The great supporting cast includes Kate Winslet, Sad Taghmaoui, Bella Riza, Carrie Mullan, Pierre Clmenti.
I left some information, immages, and video previews of Hideous Kinky below.
Hideous Kinky journeys back to the early 1970s to Marrakesh, that hippy mecca for everyone from Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix to Gillies MacKinnon, the director of this movie. Here you'll find one nice but confused middle-class young woman escaping the daily grind of a drab London with her two young daughters in tow. Whereas Esther Freud's book was told from the younger girl's perspective, the film-script places Julia centre-stage as she searches for what she describes wistfully as "the annihilation of the ego."
Though fresh from her Titanic experience, Kate Winslet is no drippy hippy, bringing a refreshing feistiness to her role and looking fetching swathed in diaphanous layers. As her two daughters, Bella Riza (Bea, the wide-eyed younger one) and Carrie Mullan (Lucy, the sensible one) are brilliant discoveries--unselfconscious, charmingly quirky, and enjoying a camaraderie that belies their difference in characters. Completing the family unit is Julia's lover, the endearingly unreliable Bilal (a fiery performance from Sad Taghmaoui). When the money runs out, their adventures begin and the resilience and practicality of the girls is contrasted throughout with the dreaminess of their mother, her sense of duty vying with her quest for self-discovery. Visually, it's a veritable feast as we're pitched from the color and cacophony of the marketplace to the dusty harshness of the mountains. And that elusive title--which is never explained in the film--is in fact a phrase coined by the girls as a term of approbation. --Harriet Smith