A pair of films about a superhero quartet created when four humans take part in an expedition gone wrong is featured in this action-packed collection from director Tim Story. The fire-throwing Human Torch (Chris Evans), the unbreakable beast known as The Thing ($Michael Chiklis) and the elusive Invisible Girl (Jessica Alba) team up with the elastic Mr. Fantastic (Ioan Gruffudd) in the 2005 film Fantastic Four to take down Dr. Doom (Julian McMahon). In the 2007 follow-up, Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer, the crew gets back together a chilly supervillain (Laurence Fishburne) who is looking to take over the planet Earth. Andre Braugher co-stars in this interpanetary sequel as the antagonistic General Hager.
Add style to your gaming when you use this Microsoft Xbox blue controller. The wireless design lets you play from anywhere in the room, and an included microUSB cable lets you keep the controller charged and ready for use. This Microsoft Xbox blue controller includes rapid fire controls for accuracy when you play.
Bad Boys I and II are featured in this special digitally enhanced collection. Former video director Michael Bay had his first big hit with the 1995 action comedy, which also returned producers Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson to the big-budget, high-violence movies that they successfully churned out in the '80s. Mike Lowrey (Will Smith) and Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) are two Miami cops who watch as 100 million dollars in heroin, from the biggest drug bust of their careers, is stolen out of the basement of police headquarters. This puts them hot on the trail of French drug lord Fouchet (Tchéky Karyo), who leaves a trail of bodies in his wake and only one witness, Julie Mott (Téa Leoni), who quickly teams up with our heroes. In the 2003 sequel, Burnett and Lowrey have been assigned to head up a task force to investigate the illegal trafficking of ecstasy into the city. They discover that an underground gang war has been instigated by drug kingpin Johnny Tapia (Jordi Molla). In order to cut off the flow of the designer drug, they have to take down Tapia.
This movie collection celebrates His Royal Badness by bringing together three of the films he starred in: 1984's Purple Rain, a semi-autographical tale in which he plays a Minneapolis musician struggling to make it as a pop star while facing down his demons; 1986's Under the Cherry Moon, a black-and-white romance that finds the Purple One acting opposite Kristin Scott Thomas (in her big-screen debut); and 1990's Graffiti Bridge, a quasi-sequel to Purple Rain in which Prince fights for control of a club called the Glam Slam. All three movies yielded hugely successful soundtracks (the one for Under the Cherry Moon is known as Parade, and contains the monster hit "Kiss"), while the latter two films were actually directed by Prince himself.