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  • Gremlin 6:11 am on February 15, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Dancing, Dancing Gizmo, Dancing Gremlin, , , , , , Musical,   

    Musical Dancing Gizmo the Gremlin 

      • Save a dance for Gizmo! Singing plush from the Gremlins movie features sound and dancing action. Lifelike fur, hand-painted ears, and an 11-inch earspan.

      • He can’t wait to entertain your family and friends!

      Save a dance for Gizmo!

    • Turn him on and watch him sing and dance! This super, high-quality plush is adorable as can be.
    • Even the box he comes in is cute! Gizmo features lifelike fur, hand-painted ears, and an 11-inch earspan.
    • He stands 7-inches tall and can’t wait to entertain your family and friends. Just make sure they know not to get him wet!

    Product Description

      Save a dance for Gizmo! Singing plush from the Gremlins movie features sound and dancing action. Lifelike fur, hand-painted ears, and an 11-inch earspan. He can’t wait to entertain your family and friends!

    Save a dance for Gizmo! Turn him on and watch him sing and dance! This super, high-quality plush is adorable as can be. Even the box he comes in is cute! Gizmo features lifelike fur, hand-painted ears, and an 11-inch earspan. He stands 7-inches tall and can’t wait to entertain your family and friends. Just make sure they know not to get him wet!

    Gremlins Musical Dancing Gizmo Plush

     
    • gabriel 9:35 am on December 20, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      wow, funny

    • C. Sicard 3:49 pm on February 15, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      I just wanted a simple Gizmo toy. But one that sings is awesome. It actually sound really good, unlike hundreds of horrible sounding toys that talk.
      Rating: 4 / 5

    • C. Yee 3:06 pm on February 15, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      The toy is called ‘Dancing” Gizmo, but it’s just really “Singing” Gizmo. The toy is loud so you won’t be leaving it on for long as it can get very annoying.
      Rating: 3 / 5

    • Christopher Brad Shoesmith 12:06 pm on February 15, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      gizmo looked grate,but on closer inspection the stiching was hanging out and is not made to good, (but i’m still happy i got it).

      thanks,shoey
      Rating: 3 / 5

    • M. Johnson 9:36 am on February 15, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      As cute as Gizmo is, once he’s on, he’ll annoy everyone.

      Sofar my first Gizmo was booted across a room and stopped dancing, the second one was strung up to the roof by a pc’s mouse at work.
      Rating: 3 / 5

    • B. Espinoza 7:17 am on February 15, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Never received product. Received and email instead stating that the product was returned to the seller in a “damaged” condition. Was very disappointed in this….
      Rating: 1 / 5

  • Gremlin 10:35 pm on February 10, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Gremlins DVD, Gremlins Movie   

    Gremlins the Movie – Buy it on DVD 

    • Format: DVD MOVIE
    • Genre: HORROR
    • Rating: PG

    Description
    A man buys a Mogwai as a Christmas present for his son. The young boy is told to keep the pet away from water, out of the light and never to feed it after midnight. Inadvertently, the creature is dampened and almost instantly, produces half a dozen furry replicas of itself –which continue to multiply and turn the small town upside-down.

    Gremlins is a whee of a film (if you don’t mind the occasional gross-out) from producer Steven Spielberg, writer Chris Columbus, and director Joe Dante. Zach Galligan is the young man whose inventor father (Hoyt Axton) gives him an odd Christmas present: a tiny, furry creature that comes with a set of rules: don’t get him wet, don’t feed him after midnight, and keep him away from direct sunlight. But Galligan breaks the first rule and the damp little critter pops out a dozen little offspring. Then the offspring break the second rule and, overnight, turn from cute furry guys to malevolent scaly guys with world domination on their mind. The only way to stop them: rule three. But it’s an anxious (and extremely funny) battle to make it to daylight–and the bad gremlins find ways to multiply over and over. Great special effects and a gruesome sense of humor make this a wild (if occasionally dark and scary) ride. –Marshall Fine

    Buy Gremlins the Movie at Amazon.com

     
    • Brian W. Glenn 5:06 am on February 11, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      …You watch it and find yourself sucked into an otherwise story by numbers movie (hey, the old guy says “no sunlight, water or food after midnight” so you’re warned what to expect already). Main criticism of course is its lack of focus on the hilarious antics of the evil Gremlins (something the sequel did a little better) who destroy a good portion of a town, but aren’t seen nearly enough to make you detest them – instead they’re little more than pests. The level of gore is surprising, which is how you can tell that this isn’t technically a “kids” movie, so care should be taken with young children (but saying that I’d have been 7 when I saw this and had no problem….but then Nightmare on Elm Street might have desensitised me a bit by that time) but it’s essential viewing if only so that you can watch the sequel too.
      Rating: 1 / 5

    • Bruce Lee Pullen 3:34 am on February 11, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Footnote: Official Actual Review: **** 1/4 stars (four and a quarter star rating)

      In the summer of 1984 as Ivan Reitman’s ceaselessly beloved supernatural box-office comedic powerhouse Ghostbusters was prevailingly netting all the profuse blockbuster revenues and inestimably enshrining itself adamantly with adoring audiences across all divides as the year’s principally paramount money rainmaker of the year, a minor monster film B-Movie tribute to Capracorn and 1950′s space paranoia exploitation flicks came into circulation at around the same time. Internationally released to movie theaters around the globe, Gremlins was an unappeasably premeditative liberating commandeering of the world’s silver screens in one fell swoop of cinematic amnesty from the norm. Unhesitatingly conspiring and invigoratingly procuring to unhesitatingly unleash a mischievous torrent of cantankerously inconsolable scaly adversarial devils wantonly assailing restrained movie tastes with the provocatively stimulating rousing sensationalism of maliciously volatile foresight. Joe Dante’s phenomenally lucrative massively unfashionable bold creative re-imaging of the exploitation genre sensationally ran amok with the general public as it universally grossed resoundingly beyond anyone’s comprehension and beguilingly entranced millions more into an atypical personal connection with the film.

      Dexterously consolidating into a whole new age of pop cultural advertising packaging integrating (beginning with Star Wars and exploding with E.T.), Gremlins was principally choked with indefinite unattributable mountains of merchandise. The Gizmo doll, Gremlin action figures, Gremlin lunch boxes, Gremlin posters, Gremlin story-time audio cassettes (do you remember those?) and all sorts of other cherished child and adult paraphernalia that became incredibly dispensed at an glaringly astronomical pace. Yet at the heart of this significant immeasurable love affair with the Gremlins and it’s essential myth, lies ultimately the film itself. After nearly twenty years and untold droves of imbecilic rehashes, moronic re-shoots, and Kindergarten retreads, the film remains an indisputable pop culture cinematic touchstone classic of the 1980′s. Directed by cinematic maverick satirist Joe Dante (Gremlins 2: The New Batch, The Howling, Looney Tunes: Back In Action) and executive produced by the omnipresent commercial dynamo of the 1980′s Steven Spielberg, Gremlins is the uncanniest ironclad combination of subversive divine parody (Frank Capra’s It’s a Wonderful Life) and thrillingly riveting acute joyride (Howard Hawk’s The Thing from Another World)
      we’ve yet seen in the last generation of motion pictures.

      Name me another picture that can so instantaneously, ambidextrously, and completely shift gears from brutal savagery to out-and-out comedic lunacy (just think of the Christmas Cookies/Blender Sequence) with the stunningly ghoulish extraordinary clout that Gremlins accomplishes without ever batting a reptilian eye. You may attribute this attractive charisma entirely to the Gremlins. However it’s also Dante’s steadfast no compromise craftsmanship that delivers the delicate balance of menace and perversity that remains so universally adored about this film to this very day by so many legions of fans and new viewers alike.

      Overflowing with the quintessential Looney Tunes spirit of jovial irrelevance pulsating throughout its daffy festivities, the Gremlins bar sequence remains one of the single most mentally arresting moments of Eighties cinema. With it’s gleeful lunatic goofiness taken to the very optimal zenith of cantankerous hilarity, this definitive burlesque showcase of pricelessly gut-busting spectacle lampoons the shear shallow splendor of binge drinking, chain-smoking, gluttony, high-stakes poker, Dashiell Hammett film noirs (The Big Sleep), misogynistic anarchy, the television show Cheers, urban crime, and Jennifer Beals’s cheesy Flashdance renown to the absolute euphoric dizzyingly heights of galvanizing comedic possibilities.

      Billy Peltzer (Zach Galligan) and Kate Beringer (Phoebe Cates) chaotically desperate escape from the old-town movie house is an especially exceptional affectionately subversive amicable nod to Disney’s masterwork Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1938). This singularly breathtaking climatic chase sequence remains a transcendental majestic tribute to the film medium’s boundless past that remains supernaturally priceless beyond the mere mention of words, and blows continuing proof of Dante’s ecstatically voracious exhilaration in ransacking the respectable into indelible comical genius. The exemplary majesty of Gremlins remains in it’s devilish application of absurdity so effortlessly that it leaves many viewers blushing way beyond the restriction of age. Gremlins has carved its own permanent niche in American Pop Culture and it’s definitely not likely to be carted away by any philosophical Asian mystic anytime soon.

      As for the new Gremlins Special Edition DVD, it includes a 2001 remastering of the entire film with the inclusion of numerous extras including: a commendably impressive 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen presentation, a properly atmospheric Dolby Digital 5.1 audio track, an impressive Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround audio track, a charmingly nostalgic director and star commentary track featuring Joe Dante, Zach Galligan, Phoebe Cates, Howie Mandel, and (Dante regular and greatly under-appreciated) Dick Miller, an intriguing director and special effects department commentary featuring Joe Dante, Michael Finnell (producer) and Chris Walas (Effects Supervisor), ten minutes of behind-the-scenes footages, theatrical trailer, and several other fascinating trappings to siphon through at your leisure.

      P.S. Break-dancing Gremlins now that will be the day. Oh wait we do have hundreds of Agent Smiths, a skeletal Geoffrey Rush, a half-cranium mechanistic Schwarzenegger (was that a change?), and liquid medal invulnerable supermodels clamorously roaming around by now so who knows.
      Rating: 4 / 5

    • Anonymous 2:30 am on February 11, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      I would not recommend this movie. It was violent, and scary. When my mom and I watched this a few years ago, my mom had to turn it off halfway to the middle. If it hadn’t been made before PG-13 was invented, that’s what this movie would have been rated.

      A lot of kids would say this movie isn’t scary, but that’s because so many kids today are allowed to see rated R, which is as bad as it gets.

      Don’t get this movie unless you like to be disturbed!

      P.S. Please don’t insult my review in your own, thank you!
      Rating: 2 / 5

    • Anonymous 12:14 am on February 11, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      What was Steven Spielberg thinking when he made Gremlins? What a lame movie. Bad special effects turns what looks like a stuffed rag doll into obviously fake puppet-like gremlin

      Ooooooooo! Scary!

      A silly plot and bad acting round out the score. If you’re seven years old or under, this movie’s probably a hoot. If not, then stay away.
      Rating: 1 / 5

  • Gremlin 2:22 am on January 23, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Touch   

    What Is The Best Kind Of Screen Protector For An Ipod? 

    I got my iPod touch a couple days ago and I’m worried about scratching the screen. what’s the best screen protector for it? Thinking about getting one of these.

     
    • tashakli 12:37 pm on January 23, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      The best screen protector is definitely “clear protector” that is the brand and the material is originally made for protecting helicopter blades from flying debris. it works very well and i got mine off of ebay for ten dollars but that is a good deal because it lasts forever. most cases you have to keep buying more and more and it will end up costing a lot of money.
      hope this helped…:)

    • Nick.Bla 5:41 am on January 23, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      I’ve seen many tests and trials on YouTube about the screen protection and if it’s needed or not..
      I bought a silicone case which included a thin screen protector that just lies right above it. I like it because you don’t get many fingerprints on it and you don’t get gunk build up like you would without the protector, so that it makes it easier to slide and tap!
      I think you should buy a case for it, find an inexpensive one though!

  • Gremlin 11:18 pm on January 21, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Splotches   

    Annoying Splotches On iPod Screen Protector? 

    I just got a iPod Touch screen protector and when I put it on, I keep getting these annoying splotches on the screen. They aren’t bubbles, but when I press on them, they don’t go away. How do I get rid of them?

     
    • Kitty F 11:50 pm on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      those are definitely air bubble. just don’t use the protecter and get screeen cleaner. ….. put it on your christmas/Chanukah’s/Kwanzaa gift list.

    • Anonymous 5:02 pm on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      as you re apply it to the scrreen make sure there is alot of pressure applied from one end to the next, lay it on sly and lay the rest on with pressure

    • Eric K 11:12 am on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      i have a screen protector, but its a lot stiffer, so air bubbles come out easier.
      in your case, when applying the protector, use the edge of a credit card to squeegee out the air bubbles.

    • almeda_9 7:55 am on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      its because when u put it on u put it incorrectly u have to use the squeegy board to smooth out all the air bubbles and also have to wash ur hands and applyit in one direction and also try to be in a area wit very little dirt and dust

    • Im Finna Ax Somebody 4:19 am on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Screen Protectors NEVER work. They are the Dumbest thing to buy. Take your’s off.

  • Gremlin 5:47 pm on January 20, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ninja socks, ninjas, socks   

    LOL the joys of ninja socks! 

    Image:Five Fingers 1420.jpg

     
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