Emerson DVD/VCR Dual Deck with Remote
Maximize your viewing and listening pleasure when you plug into this DVD/VCR from Emerson. Play and record your favorite programs and movies at the touch of a button, and if you just want to listen to a few tunes, this unit also accommodates CD-Rs and CD-RW discs. For great discounts on all your electronic needs, click on Overstock.com(R).DVD features include:DVD Audio/DVD+RW/DVD+R/DVD-RW/DVD-R/Audio CD/CD-RW/CD-R/CD MP-3 playback Resume playBookmarkParental lock16:9 wide4:3 Pan and ScanVirtual surroundDolby Digital(R)/DTS(R) outputVCR features include:4-head record and playback181-channel auto-set PLL frequencySynthesized tuner19 Micron headsThree-speed playback (SP/LP/SLP)Two-speed record (SP/SLP)Digital trackingAuto head cleaner1-year/8-event pogrammable timerInputs/outputs:Front and rear AV input jacks for VCRRF input for VCRAudio/Video combined outputRF output for DVD and VCRComponent video output for DVDS-Video output for DVDComposite video output for DVD and VCRDigital audio output for DVDAnalog audio output for DVD and VCRThis high-quality item has been factory reconditioned. Please click on the icon above for more information on quality factory-reconditioned merchandise.
Paul and Mary Bland (Paul Bartel and Mary Woronov) are a dull but well-meaning couple, who more than live up to their surname. The Blands dream of owning a restaurant; however they don't have the $20,000 needed for the venture. Late one night, a swinger from the party next door enters the Blands' apartment and tries to assault Mary, but is killed when Paul whacks him with a frying pan. When the Blands discover the deceased is loaded with money, the couple hit upon an idea: lure sex-seekers to their home via a classified ad, kill them, and take their money. This way, they're not only financing their dream, they're cleaning up society! But when a locksmith named Raoul discovers their scheme, the Blands must make him a partner -- especially since Raoul knows that the tasty cadavers are being disposed of in a culinary manner...DVD Features:Region 1Keep CaseWidescreen - 1.85Audio: Dolby Digital Stereo - English
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Handcrafted by Carolyn Nez of the Navajo Nation, this sublime bracelet displays an amazing attention to detail.
A sterling silver rose and its petals are accompanied by five precious turquoise stones.
Specifications:
Handcrafted Navajo bracelet
Turquoise stones
Sterling silver
What is Worldstock?
The handcrafted nature of this product will produce minor differences in design and sizing. Subtle variations will occur from piece to piece, adding to its unique qualities. Measurements may vary slightly.
All carat weights and measurements are approximate and may vary slightly from the listed dimensions.
Treatment code E. See
Gemstone Treatments for further information.
In what may be the director's most personal film, he makes use of
incidents from his own life in exploring the mystery of Sherlock Holmes sexual preference and past romances. Robert Stephens stars as the fictional detective, shooting cocaine to alleviate the boredom that plagues him between cases. But his ennui evaporates when he and longtime colleague Dr. Watson (Colin Blakely) receive tickets to the performance of a Russian ballet company. Afterwards, Petrova (Tamara Toumanova), the prima ballerina asks Holmes to become the father of his child, intending to combine her beauty with his intellect. Homes refuses on the basis that he and Watson are lovers, greatly annoying his staunchly heterosexual companion, who begins to wonder whether the detective really is gay. Before this mystery can be solved, the two men find Gabrielle Valladon (Genvieve Page), a beautiful and intriguing woman in the grip of amnesia, on their doorstep. When she remembers that she's seeking her husband, Holmes agrees to take the case, and is soon off to Scotland. Matters grow progressively more bizarre, as the detective must deal with the Loch Ness monster, a family of midgets, and an experimental submarine. Unique among the director's films, it's steeped in a bittersweet romanticism, expressing
a vulnerabilty and self-doubt found nowhere else in the body of his work.
Robert Stephens, who was so overwhelmed by the intense sense of self-loathing Wilder wished him to explore that he attempted suicide during production, is excellent as Holmes, and the florid romanticism of Miklos Rosza's violin concerto creates a suitable ambiance.DVD Features:Region 1Keep CaseAnamorphic Widescreen - 2.35Audio: Mono - EnglishAdditional Release Material: Interview - 1. Ernest Walter - Editor Deleted Scenes Trailers - 1. Original Theatrical Trailer Additional Footage - 1. Christopher Lee:Mr. Holmes, Mr. WilderText/Galleries: Photo Gallery
Copyright (C) Muze Inc. 2005.
For personal use only.
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