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[Blu-Ray] Mission Impossible: Ultimate Missions Collection – £14.99


Mission Impossible

Mission Impossible

Tom Cruise stars as secret agent Ethan Hunt in all three blockbuster instalments of the MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE franchise, collected here. Based on the hit 1960s-’70s TV series, the films feature a raucous mix of spectacular chases, amazing stunts, high-tech gadgetry, and elaborate schemes. Set against a backdrop of paranoia and intrigue, Hunt and his Impossible Mission Force (IMF) traverse the globe, working to foil the plans of villains and terrorists. And as ever, it’s a question of who’s double-crossing whom?

From Play.com:

Mission Impossible: Ultimate Missions Collection (Blu-ray)

And hmv.com:

Mission Impossible 1/2/3: Ultimate Missions Collection: 4blu: Box Set


Archive for the 'Family' Category

Play.com – Blu-Rays from £6.99


Ranging from £6.99 through to £14.99 Play.com Have a wide selection of Blu-rays for you to choose from!


Archive for the 'Family' Category

[Blu-Ray] Independence Day – £5.99


Independence Day

Independence Day

Directed by Roland Emmerich Independence Day delivers the ultimate encounter when mysterious and powerful aliens launch an all-out invasion against the human race.
The spectacle begins when massive spaceships appear in Earth’s skies. But wonder turns to terror as the ships blast destructive beams of fire down on cities all over the planet. Now the world’s only hope lies with a determined band of survivors, uniting for one last strike against the invaders – before it’s the end of mankind.

Now £5.99 Independence Day


Archive for the 'Family' Category

[Blu-Ray] Pixar Shorts – £9.98


The Pixar Short Films Collection

The Pixar Short Films Collection

Pixar’s unprecedented string of hit animated features was built on the short films in this collection. John Lasseter and Ed Catmull used these cartoons the way Walt Disney used the “Silly Symphonies” during the 1930s: as a training ground for artists and a way to explore the potential of a new medium. Although it’s only 90 seconds long, “Luxo, Jr.” (1986) ranks as the “Steamboat Willie” of computer animation: For the first time, audiences believed CG characters could think and feel. (It was also the first CG film to make audiences laugh.)

From Amazon.co.uk:

The Pixar Short Films Collection [Blu-ray]



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