Amityville Horror
by admin on Aug.27, 2008, under Uncategorized
Amityville Horror
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Amityville Horror (2005) – Pan & Scan $19.99 Amityville Horror (2005) – Pan & Scan |
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The Amityville Horror - $12.99 “For God’s sake, GET OUT!” was the ad campaign for the 1979 shocker The Amityville Horror. The film was based on the allegedly true story of the luckless Lutz family, who move lock, stock, and barrel into a new home, only to find that it is possessed by the demonic spirits of its previous owners. Variations of the Seven Deadly Plagues emanate from virtually every household fixture, while other forms of otherworldly mischief are suffered by the Lutz children. Enter kindly Father Delaney (Rod Steiger), who does his utmost to exorcise the house. The Amityville Horror was frequently greeted with laughs from its first-run audiences, especially after it was discovered that the “actual” events depicted in the film (based on a book by Jay Anson) were complete fabrications. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi |

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The Exorcist : Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Newly Restored and Remastered $79.99 1998 CD on Warner. Newly restored and remastered gold disc. Does not contain ‘Tubular Bells.’… |
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Amityville Horror (Score) – O.S.T. $9.25 … |
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Amityville Horror : Music From the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack $50.00 12 Tracks of Lalo Shcifrin sountrack music from 1979… |
Literature in translation in ... Iran (Complete-review)
IBNA report that Statistics show a %14 growth in translated books.
Yes, 2,723 of the 7,676 literary titles published in 2010 were
translations -- 35 per cent of the total. However, there has also been a
decrease in the total number of literary titles published -- so one has to
wonder whether it hasn't simply become easier to publish (i.e. justify to the
censors) foreign books than domestic writing .....
(IBNA often mention what foreign books are now appearing in translation
in Iran, making for a fascinating and confusing little window into the
country: in the past few days alone they've reported on the publication of
_The Passport_ by Herta Muller (here) and ... _The Amityville Horror_ by Jay
Anson (here), neither of which I would have guessed would be likely to get
translated into Persian and published in contemporary Iran.)