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Here is the list of top sites for movie downloads. Buy and download movies or burn CD / DVD from these sites. Each site has millions of users and is a source of the latest and the best collection of videos and movies to download. These are the best among movie sites.

SharedMovies.com

shared movies com
Quality: excellent
Support: excellent
Recommendation: All Levels

NetMovieDownloads.com

ez movies net
Quality: good
Support: good
Recommendation: All Levels

SatelliteSoft.com

movie advanced com
Quality: good
Support: good
Recommendation: For Advanced

Our Review: Our Review: Our Review:


One of the easiest ways to get access to full DVD quality movies, tv shows--even unreleased music videos. Unlimited searching, downloading, and burning to CD is provided to members. This is a great legal way to enjoy your favorite movies.


Net movie downloads is a part of a large movie distribution and download network over the internet. You can download not just quality movies, but also TV shows, Games and Music Videos.


Games . IPod . Psp . Zune . IPhone . Movies . Music . Mp3 . Tv Shows. Watch Satellite TV on your PC. This is a unique software that allows you to tune into thousands of TV stations. Its works anywhere in the world. Only constraint is bandwidth.

Information about why we chose the top movie site :

Shared Movies is clearly the best thing going right now. This service is truly in a class of it's own. Just check out the site and you will be impressed. The membership tools, the file access, the countless titles. Everything is so fast compared to other services. If you have been unhappy with other movie sites in the past, or if you are looking to try out a movies download service for the very first time, then look no further. This service will give you everything you want, and a few things you didn't even know you wanted. Check it out! You could be watching a hit movie right now!

DVD Detective: The Best Environmental Documentaries by Farr

author:John Farr

61

Next to family and clean water, movies are my focus and my passion. In my writing and speaking engagements, I serve as a sort of quality filter for movie lovers, sifting intelligent, rewarding titles from the enormous volume of DVD titles in the marketplace.

For our friends at Waterkeeper, Im doing a series of articles highlighting films that celebrate the beauty of our natural world, and, directly or indirectly, illustrate the pressing need to protect it. Ill close the series with a piece on movies which pay tribute to the spirit of social, economic and environmental activism.

This first installment identifies some landmark documentaries which any lover of the outdoors should own. All recommendations are readily available on DVD.

We begin with the pioneering work of documentarian Robert Flaherty. In 1922, he released Nanook Of The North, chronicling how one Eskimo family cheerfully subsists in the most frozen, remote part of Alaska. Close to a century later, this remains an astonishing achievement, revealing mans ingenious, unwavering capacity to adapt and survive, even under natures most inhospitable conditions.

Eight years later, Flaherty partnered with legendary silent director F.W. Murnau (Nosferatu) to make Tabu, a semi-documentary shot on location in Tahiti. The film features actual Tahitian natives in a simple tale about the tragic consequences of forbidden love. Even with no spoken dialogue, the gorgeous black and white photography captures the beauty of the players and the lush, exotic locale, imbuing the film with a magic aura that defies datedness.

Flahertys next film, Man Of Aran evokes the raw power and majesty of the sea. Set on the harsh, inclement Aran islands off the coast of Ireland, this film builds on the impact of the directors Nanook, portraying the struggle of native people who subsist on the wild, unpredictable sea around them. In this struggle, the sea is not enemy but provider, yet temperamental and unpredictable enough to warrant skill, hardiness, and reverence in any approach. Both man and nature emerge triumphant.

In the talking picture realm, but with precious little talking needed, is Flahertys Louisiana Story (1948), perhaps the directors crowning achievement. A boy living with his family in the Louisiana bayous communes with his wild and mysterious surroundings while looking on with fascination at the work of oil drillers nearby. Flahertys brilliant camera work lends a subtle artfulness to the theme of civilization encroaching on nature. (Ironically, this film was underwritten by Standard Oil!)

Honoring our natural world also involves paying tribute to the explorers who opened up new vistas for us. In 1925, Rear Admiral Richard Byrd made history by being first to fly a plane over the North Pole, then in 1929 trumped himself by performing the same feat over the South Pole. This latter event might have been the stuff of history books had Byrd not brought two Paramount newsreel photographers on this heroic journey. With Byrd At The South Pole records the expedition for posterity, and even 75 years later, its a fascinating visual testament to human persistence and the awesome variety of our world.

I close with two more recent films which profile how the more physically fit and agile among us commune with elemental forces. Bruce Browns The Endless Summer (1964) captures the sheer adrenalized joy of the surfing experience just as this pursuit was becoming a national craze. Surfing is depicted as a state of mind as much as a sport, and the footage of thrill-seeking athletes riding immense, aquamarine walls of salt water provides potent vicarious thrills.

Finally, theres The Man Who Skied Down Everest (1975), a riveting movie that plays like a thriller. We join champion skier Yuichiro Miura and his team as they ascend the worlds highest peak (in itself an arduous, perilous undertaking), then attempt to descend on skis, a virtual suicide mission. Its difficult to prevent your heart leaping into your throat as you watch some of this footage and realize its no film stunt, but the real thing.

About The Author

John Farr is a life long movie buff. He is author of "DVD Detective" a column in the Stamford Advocate/Greenwich Time and co-founder of the Avon Theatre Film Center in Stamford, CT. Visit www.farronfilm.com for the best movies by Farr!

This article was posted on October 01, 2005

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