Thu, 8 January 2009 Post By Online Shopping Store
- Easily reaches back
- Great to reach ankles & feet
- Soothes sore muscles
- Extra long handle
- Just add you favorite lotion
- Hangs for easy storage
- No mess
- Massaging action
- Measures 3.75 x 17.25 x 2 inches
- Body lotion
- Suntan lotion
- Bath gels
- Massage oils
- and more!
The Digital Photo Album that fits in your Pocket! WalletPix is a digital photo album that is the size of a credit card. It holds 58 wallet-sized photos in just one tiny device. It comes with the batteries included so you can start using it right away. Item is available in Black or White; color will be chosen for you. |
If John Mayer has ants in his pants--and, given his many projects and the amount of music he releases in any given year, it appears that he does--his fans aren't complaining. Nor should they be. The Village Sessions, a six-song EP that retools favorites from Mayer's highly regarded Continuum disc, is mostly a way to feel further connected to him; the hurt comes through on "In Repair" both vocally and via expressive acoustic guitar work, making the Continuum version sound clipped by comparison, and the kicked-back version of "Good Love Is on the Way" (the one song here not from Continuum, but from Try!, a 2005 live disc) dispenses with angst in favor of a more liquid groove. Overall, it's a study in intimacy and focus--for Mayer, there seems to be a certain magic within the four walls of L.A.'s Village Recorder, where he laid down these tracks. Then again, maybe not: Prolific as he is, Mayer is no wand-waver. His reputation for musical pureness proceeds him, and The Village Sessions is one more testament to it. --Tammy La Gorce |
2008 release recorded with the Mazeeka Ensemble, Ana Hina is new direction for Middle Eastern music icon and singing sensation Natacha Atlas. The album finds Natacha exploring a more traditional roots world, again infusing Oriental and Western music but looking to the past to uncover a rich history of musical collaboration. Working with top British musical director and arranger Harvey Brough, the band features outstanding musicians from around the globe and from different musical backgrounds. In the specially created arrangements, locked in the embrace of this exciting band, Atlas's voice is heard as never before, a priceless jewel in a rich and eclectic setting. World Village. |
Bill Evans, with virtuoso bassist Scott LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian, reinvented the jazz piano trio, creating stunning contrapuntal dialogues that merged luminous lyricism with layers of complex, elusive harmonies, its moments of limpid beauty suddenly giving way to surging rhythms. The trio's finest recorded moments, these performances were captured just 10 days before LaFaro's death in a car accident. The original releases--Sunday at the Village Vanguard and Waltz for Debby--are celebrated masterpieces. This three-CD set is a brilliant reissue--almost a revision--of that material, with superb sound from the newly remastered original tapes and all of the music presented in the sequence of the original five sets, adding a previously unissued take of "Gloria's Step," spoken introductions, and the band's incidental conversation. For those who know this music, it's a chance to hear it in a fresh way; for new listeners, it will come as a revelation at a bargain price. --Stuart Broomer |
This moody little sci-fi classic has it all over the competition when it comes to possessed tykes with telekinetic powers. Midwich's mysteriously hatched brood bores into the subconscious both with their eyes and with their creepy Hitler Youth-like presence. Based on John Wyndham's 1957 novel The Midwich Cuckoos, and starring George Sanders as the most skeptical of the "miracle" parents, Village gets off to a rousing start when the isolated town of Midwich is cordoned off after some invisible knockout gas descends from above. A few weeks later, every female of childbearing age is pregnant. Much anger and consternation ensue, especially in those families for which the blessed event isn't a blessing. Nine months later: a town full of blue-eyed, golden-haired cherubs with telekinetic and telepathic powers. The kids mature at an alarming rate and travel the streets in packs. Anyone who looks at them sideways meets with a violent accident. Barbara Shelley, Sanders's wife, is scolded by her child; a motorist who is deemed a threat winds up driving into a wall. The film is especially refreshing in these days of computer- generated visual effects. Director Wolf Rilla, working from a script cowritten by Stirling Silliphant, generates unease the old-fashioned way: through clammy atmosphere and character development. The opening sequence, in which the military attempts to figure out the extent of the Midwich epidemic, is especially unsettling. --Glenn Lovell |
Al Pacino cuts a noble figure in this very enjoyable drama by director Brian De Palma (Scarface), based on a pair of books by Edwin Torres. Pacino plays a Puerto Rican ex-con trying hard to go straight, but his loyalty to his lowlife attorney (a virtually unrecognizable Sean Penn) and enemies on the street make that choice difficult. Penelope Ann Miller plays, somewhat unlikely, a stripper who has a romance with Pacino's character. The film finds De Palma tempering his more outlandish moves (think of Body Double or Snake Eyes) just as he did with the popular Untouchables and Mission: Impossible. But while Carlito's Way was not commercially successful and never rises to the level of greatness, it is a genuinely compelling movie graced with a fine performance by Pacino and a surprising one from Penn. --Tom Keogh |
- 18/2 SPT-2 - 15 ft - 5 amp; 125 volt; 625 watt - PVC insulation - Flat wire - 2 conductor polarized - Can be easily strung inside tree to provide multiple outlets - Cord contains 3, three outlet receptacles located 11.5, 13.5 and 15 ft from plug - On/off switch located 3 ft from plug - Excellent for ceramic village and other decorations - UL listed - Sleeved - Green |
This lovely lamp is a stunning reminder of the beauty beneath the sea! A gracefully curling wave base bears aloft a pair of dancing dolphins, while overhead, a frosted-glass shade softly gleams with gently colored images of these frolicsome creatures at play. Resin base with glass shade. UL recognized. Uses one 15-watt "B" bulb (not included). 8 1/4" diameter x 15" high. |
Under a thick carpet of green-dyed yak fur and wonderfully expressive Rick Baker makeup, Jim Carrey is up to all of his old tricks (and some nifty new ones) in this live-action movie of Dr. Seuss's holiday classic. He commands the title role with equal parts madness, mayhem, pathos, and improvisational genius, channeling Grinchness through his own screen persona so smoothly that fans of both Carrey and Dr. Seuss will be thoroughly satisfied. Adding to the fun is a perfectly pitched back-story sequence (accompanied by Anthony Hopkins's narration) that explains how the Grinch came to hate Christmas, with a heart "two sizes too small." Ron Howard proves a fine choice for the director's chair with a keen balance of comedy, sentiment, and light-hearted Seussian whimsy. Production designer Michael Corenblith gloriously realizes the wackiness of Whoville architecture, and his rendition of the Grinch's Mt. Crumpit lair is a marvel of cartoonish, subterranean grime. Then there's Cindy Lou Who (Taylor Momsen), the thoughtful imp who rallies her village to recapture the pure spirit of Christmas and melts the gift-stealing Grinch's cold, cold heart. You've even got a dog (the Grinch's good-natured mongrel, Max) who's been perfectly cast, so what's not to like about this dazzling yuletide movie? The production gets a bit overwhelmed by its own ambition, and the citizens of Whoville (including Jeffrey Tambor, Christine Baranski, Molly Shannon, and Bill Irwin) pale in comparison to Carrey's inspired lunacy, but who cares? If a movie can unleash Jim Carrey at his finest, revamp the Grinch story, and still pay tribute to the legacy of Dr. Seuss, you can bet it qualifies as rousing entertainment. (Ages 5 and older.) --Jeff Shannon |
If not for Hostel, we'd never have been treated to the gory, horrific delights so lovingly captured with sadistic detail in Turistas. Together, these movies could be spawning a radical new Hollywood-pedigreed sub-genre of extreme horror. Like Hostel, Turistas concerns a group of American hardbodied kids on an exotic foreign vacation--this time in Brazil. After a suspense-filled opening sequence of a speeding bus careening off a dangerous mountain (it's also tinged with just the right kind of humor), the kids wander into the seeming paradise of a secluded beachfront resort where they think nothing of locals who lure them one by one to their gruesome and shocking deaths. Hey, they're here to party! These excruciatingly graphic scenes unfold in the lair of a madman doctor named Zamora, who harvests organs of the still-living as a way of exacting revenge on American turistas to "give back" to the locals they exploit with their capitalist dollars. One such scene has the donor undergoing surgery without the help of anesthesia wherein the lovely young "patient" has the chance to see her still thriving innards pulsing warmly on her well-formed chest to the tune of her own screams. This stuff is not for the faint of heart (or liver, or kidney, or lungs, for that matter). But there is a fair amount of nicely staged tension, especially a "foot" chase scene in a water-filled cave that will give claustrophobics a whole new way to experience nightmares. The two most familiar faces are Melissa George and Josh Duhamel, from TV's Alias and Vegas respectively. Fans of this new world of extreme gross-out horror should be thankful that TV has plenty of cute young bodies waiting for their big screen break, no matter how many organs they have to donate to get there. --Ted Fry |
Ever wonder what people are talking about across the room? With Listen Up, you can discreetly listen in. It's so powerful, you can hear even the softest whispers loud and clear. The amazing Listen Up is smaller than a credit card, so it fits easily in your pocket or clips to your belt. To use it, simply insert the earphones and adjust the volume to the desired level. It's that easy! Now you can turn a TV or radio down to low volume for other people in the room, and turn your Listen Up to high volume for yourself!Tags : Listen
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This amazing new applicator applies lotion smoothly and evenly with a gentle yet powerful massaging action. The extra long handle is perfect for hard to reach places. Just fill the reservoir with your favorite product. This Roll-A-Lotion has been precision designed to glide over the skin and release an even layer of lotion while it's 19 roller applicators give you a massage. When finished, place the air tight cover over the heads to keep the solution from drying out. Treat your body to the luxurious Roll-A-Lotion today. Features include: Fill with: |
When it comes to making an impression, it's important that you look your best. There's lots of evidence suggesting that appearance is related to success and the better you appear, the more positive the perception of who you are. Unsightly facial and body hair can really be a turn-off. What can you do that's quick, easy, and safe? Try Finishing Touch, the new penshaped hair remover that erases unwanted hair instantly and painlessly. The secret is micro-technology that literally erases the hair cleanly and safely. Includes eyebrow comb attachment Requires 1 AAA Battery (not included) |
Cruise the Web and remotely access your company network at extraordinary speeds up to 56 Kbps over standard phone lines with the lightning-fast Global Village 56K PC Card! The Global Village 56K PC Card delivers the ultimate in speed, versatility and convenience, on the road or in the office. Optimized for PowerBooks, the Global Village 56K PC Card includes features you just won't find with other 56K PC cards. Award-winning GlobalFax (TM) software, enhanced hot swapping, on-screen status display and more! Plus, this 56K PC Card features flash ROM and flash DSP technology, maximizing upgradability as standards evolve. It's the unbeatable value that's made Global Village the preferred brand of fax/modems among PowerBook owners everywhere. |
Hoods are one of the most important accessories for each lens you own. A lens hood provides multiple functions: it shades the lens from stray light, improving your contrast and image quality; in inclement weather, it can assist in keeping moisture or wind-blown debris off the lens; and it protects the front barrel from the inevitable impacts against walls, door frames, and other real-life obstacles.This hood is compatible with EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro USM. |
Corduroy is a perennial favorite here at the Village Hat Shop. Unfortunately for the last two seasons, we have been unable to find a manufacturer who could supply us in the quantities we required. Jaxon came to the rescue with these five point ivy caps in three beautiful colors.Olive is a medium brown, not a green tone. |
Great sheepskin Earmuffs. Ideal for winter weather. Get ready before the cool air blows on your Ears. Luxurious Comfort and Protection at an affordable price. Retails about $29.99 in stores. Our sheepskin products come primarily from sheep that were raised for their food value and not their hides. Sheepskin is a recycled by-product and no endangered species skins are used in our products. Please click the link below the Image to view more images of this item. The Plastic Band can be adjusted so you can comfortably wear it. Thanks for those great Feedbacks from our buyers who requested this feature. |
Merguez is a traditional North African spicy lamb and beef sausage. It is usually served grilled with couscous and harrissa. Pork-Free. This "All Natural" product is guaranteed free of antibiotics, hormones, preservatives, artificial ingredients and nitrites. Animals are fed with the purest natural feeds (No animal by-product). Many of Fabrique Delices products have been served at the White House, on the Air France Concorde and even to his Holiness John Paul II. |
