Posters: Joseph William Turner Poster Art Print - The Lauerzersee (14 x 11 inches)
Art Poster Print - Sun Rising through the Vapor - Artist: Joseph Mallord William Turner- Poster Size: 6 X 9
Joseph Mallord William Turner:Sun Rising through the Vapor 6 X 9 inches. High Quality Art Work. Browse our store for framed and unframed posters and shop for all your art needs at ASuperShop. This Sun Rising through the Vapor is made with High Quality Poster paper and is made for years of enjoyment. Note: This item is not available for express shipping. Brand New Quality Product
Price: $14.37
William Turner Paper, 190gsm - 24″ x 39′ Roll, 13640135, Roll Paper for Inkjet Printers
Hahnemuhle William Turner Paper, 190gsm for Inkjet - 24″ Wide Roll - 39′ Long
Type: Digital Photography > Printers & Scanners > Roll Paper for Inkjet Printers.
Heritage of World Civilizations, Combined Volume (7th Edition)
Brief yet detailed, this book provides a thoughtful history of human civilizations while maintaining a balance between the Western world and the rest of global civilization. It covers the general intellectual and material history of human societies and cultures that have left some kind of written and/or archeological record behind. A seven-part organization covers the coming of civilization, empires and cultures of the ancient world, consolidation and interaction of world civilizations, the world in transition, enlightenment and revolution in the west, the modern world, and global conflict and change. For anyone trying to understand the historical experiences that have informed and shaped the world’s cultures.
List Price: $135.80
Amazon Price: $104.57
Used Price: $26.00
Customer Review: Correct Book Needed
Needed book for school. Arrived in great conditions and it was the correct book for school. Very happy with purchase.
Customer Review: Good
Book cover was torn but i actually got this book from amazon. Thats a first since the others never showed.
The Fly II (1989 Film)
List Price: $15.98
Used Price: $18.50
Customer Review: For once, a rather underrated sequel. 3.5 Stars
Needless to say, The Fly 2 had a pretty tough act to follow as its predacessor sits among the best sci-fi horror films of all time. Not to mention the fact that David Cronenberg did not return to direct this follow up didn’t exactly help its cause. However, special effects creator Chris Walas from the original tried his hand at directing this sequel, and truthfully the results aren’t that bad. Albeit not nearly as effective in any category as the original remake, it’s still a solid movie that does not deserve to be tagged with the less than honorable reputation of the average horror sequel. We begin with a Geena Davis look-alike in a lab who gives birth to Martin Brundle, son of Seth Brundle. The infant is then taken in by Mr. Bartok, the president of Bartok Industries, who raises him within the confinement of a laboratory to study the genetic effects Seth’s experimentations will have on him. Martin proves to be rather interesting boy indeed as he grows at an accelerated rate physically and mentally. By the time he is five years old, Martin already appears to be in his twenties and has the mind of a genius. He admires the Mr. Bartok as his father and eventually agrees to finish Seth’s work on the infamous telepods for the benefit of Bartok Industries. As Martin’s work progresses, he slowly stumbles upon more things to indicate that Mr. Bartok has been deceitful in his hospitality. He finds the horiffic results of a telepod experiment on his childhood dog, spy cameras in his room, and eventually discovers that Mr. Bartok plans to keep him as an experiment when the fly genes kick in. Well, Martin eventualy does undergo the fly metamorphosis, and when complete he unleashes his revenge on Bartok and all others who had wronged him. Thankfully there wasn’t too much of a gap between these two films, so the look is very similar and some footage of Jeff Goldblum as Seth is even featured in the movie. The trademark gross out effects are present once again with the mutated dog scene, a very memorable death scene involving a security guard’s face, and the final showdown with Mr. Bartok. The fly transformation was more or less abbreviated to a coccoon like process this time around, but it does more justice to the pacing than it hurts it. The acting is generally well done, and John Getz even briefly reprises his role from the first film. You will defiently get a good laugh when he utters the horribly corny pun, “He bugged me”, in reference to Seth. Overall it’s a cool revenge story with a fantastic ending. It doesn’t really convey any of the emotion the original did, but then it probably wasn’t meant to for the most part. If approached without any expectations set forth by the original, The Fly 2 actually makes for a decent watch. I’d recommend it to horror and science fiction fans.
Customer Review: By the numbers sequel to a great film
The Fly II is a clealry by the numbers sequel to a great film. When I say by the numbers I mean more gore, less story, more action, weak acting. Eric Stoltz does an okay job in the lead role but to me Stoltz has always been more of a serious actor and he seems lost in this film. Just check it out if you wanna see gore otherwise be afarid, be very afarid.

Posters: Joseph William Turner Poster Art Print - The Lauerzersee (14 x 11 inches)








