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Display your flat-panel TV up to 68" on this CorLiving TAL-694-T TV stand, which features a wide, open shelf design to accommodate your soundbar and other components. The tapered construction allows easy placement in a corner.
This user is a My Best Buy® Elite Member, who has spent $1,500 on eligible purchases and is now getting 1.10 points per dollar. They may have received My Best Buy® bonus points for submitting reviews.
I bought this table to hold my Samsung 75" flat screen. It's rated to hold the size and 100+ lbs. I had my reservations because while the stand is mostly steel (the legs are wood), the shelves are glass. It's been a few weeks and it's still holding. If you're looking for something with a little more "class", go to a furniture store. I bought this table merely for function and to hide all the wires of my PS3, PS4, and Bose soundbar. So far it has served its purpose.
This user is a My Best Buy® Elite Member, who has spent $1,500 on eligible purchases and is now getting 1.10 points per dollar. They may have received My Best Buy® bonus points for submitting reviews.
Great movie. Always worth watching again to catch all the action. Haven't watched the extras yet. Can't wait to see where Marvel goes from here to bring the Avengers back together.
Predators is a great complimentary sequel to the original. Eventhough it lacks the big action star appeal and classic (cheesy) one-liners, Predators still delivers what you want from a sci-fi, action film: gunfights, suspense and a dash humor from a rich diverse group of dynamic, and stoic, characters. Adrien Brody is no Arnold, but he packed on some muscle for his role and it helps him deliver as the lead hero. Alice Braga does a great job playing a reserved, dedicated soldier. Danny Trejo does a wicked immitation of Danny Trejo. Walten Goggins does a superb job playing a sociopath. Topher Grace is very skillful playing the innocent wild card. Oleg Taktarov (15 Minutes), Mahershala Ali (House of Cards) and Louis Ozawa Changchien (numberous tv shows) are all way underused but play what little screen time they are given to their fullest considering they are cannon fodder. (The bushido scene between Hanzo and one of the Predators is immaculate and plays as though Hanzo is not just a hired gun, but well versed in his culture.) Haven't watched the deleted scenes yet. Not sure why they weren't available as an extended cut either. Regardless, enjoyed this movie and hope they make another.
Comic books movies lately have taken on a more serious tone. In Dredd, that's a good thing. After all, you can't dispense "judgement" with a PG-13 rating. Alex Garland's (28 Days Later, Sunshine) screenplay is great, depicting Dredd (a perfectly casted, Karl Urban) as a "seasoned" judge, taking rookie Judge Anderson (Olivia Thirlby) on her first assignment. From the moment Dredd's helmet is on, it's all business, carrying out judgements with the authority of RoboCop, assessing situations like a Terminator, all while schooling Anderson like that english teacher you hated in high school. With nothing more than the bottom half of his face revealed, Urban impeccably communicates Dredd's disdain for lawbreakers using nothing more than his gruff, guttural voice and his multi-faceted Lawbringer. All the acting and action is top notch. You won't see any movie cliches, red herrings or unnecessary Michael Bay explosions. You don't have to be a comic book fan to enjoy this movie. Sit back, press play and enjoy the judgement.
The plot is thin and most of the dialogue was written on a cocktail napkin. Steve Coogin (Hamlet 2, The Trip) and Michael Keaton (Johnny Dangerously, Beetlejuice) are excellent and greatly underused in their roles. If you're looking for a buddy cop movie that's entertaining and mildly funny watch Lethal Weapon or Running Scared instead.