Full Screen: https://www.bitchute(dot)com/video/5Ca5hYWaVP7B/
Musical Comedy
Clash between new and old military band members threatens the band's stability. The movie, set in the Israeli 1969 War of Attrition, tells the story of a prestigious military band, and the tensions and ego crises new band members cause when joining the band. Will the band survive?
From IMDB:
9/10
The 24 years thats passed puts this movie in its right perspective.
trifo10028 January 2003
I never belived I could be so excited from a musical. Israel of the 70's, on the crossroads between solidarity of the founding generation to the individualism of the global generation.
The army setting is the singing group and not the Comando. Between singing in army posts to the The individual intersts start poping... but the solidarity for the group still wins with a happy end and a song for peace. This naive picture is placed on the right spot, of "what went wrong" with our ...
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A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001) Part 1
Watch the complete film at josephwouk.locals(dot)com.
Anyone who missed this Speilberg film made 24 years ago MUST see this film which is much more relevant now than it was then. - JW
David, an artificial kid which is the first to have real feelings, especially a never-ending love for his "mother", Monica. Monica is the woman who adopted him as a substitute for her real son, who remains in cryo-stasis, stricken by an incurable disease. David is living happily with Monica and her husband, but when their real son returns home after a cure is discovered, his life changes dramatically.
10/10
Can't re-watch it again
I was 13-14 when I watched this movie. It's a long movie if I recall it correctly. I was so moved by it's theme, so I watched it all. I had strong feelings of sadness and sympathy towards little robot David that wanted to be a real child and to have a mom to love him. And that little bear ... I cried during some scenes. I don't ...
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He revisits the improbable path from Einstein’s equations to the moment LIGO—an experiment he helped imagine and that contributed to his Nobel Prize—captured the sound of two black holes colliding more than a billion light-years away. Along the way, he explores puzzles that stymied generations: the nature of horizons and singularities, the mathematical insights of Schwarzschild and Penrose, and the profound divide between what an outside observer sees and what a falling observer experiences.
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