Ways to Download Full DVD Movies without Paying the High Price

by Davion W

If you are a movie freak and you can’t seem to get your fill of movies from the video rentals, then it’s time to shift your attention to a more practical way - download full DVD movies online.

You will definitely benefit a lot if you download full DVD movies. For one thing, you can save up a lot of money. If you are a huge fan of movies and you’re waiting for a movie to come out on the big screen, it may seem to be a lot of sacrifice waiting a little more before they finally release the DVD copies. But if you can be able to contain your excitement and wait, you will discover how much money you can save up. How?

You can choose among a lot of Web sites that will let you download full DVD movies. The price for DVD movie downloads ranges from $1.99 to around $14.99. Well, that is if you want to pay. But you can also opt to download DVD movies free-of-charge. Isn’t that cool? And what’s great about this is that you are ensured that the copies are directly ripped from the original DVDs so they are of good quality.

Just a few advices before you go on: Remember not to download full DVD movies right after seeing it on the big screen. Ever seen a copy that is quite tilted to one side and which has silhouettes of the audience at the bottom of the screen? You may even have come across with movies that have additional voices - voices of the audience commenting or laughing. That is the problem when you download a movie prior to the release of the DVD version.

Make sure that you are downloading the orginal DVD copy. Otherwise you’ll be doomed to these problems. Wait for sometime until the DVD version is released. You will have greater chances to get a the DVD copy. Get schedules of DVD releases on Imdb.com.

If you are pretty hard-up in finding the right Web site to download from, you can also install softwares that will let you copy unlimited DVD movies and other files. They have their paid editions but you can use their free editions so you don’t have to worry about that. The free editions can download full DVD movies as good as the pid editions do. But be warned of viruses, spywares, malwares and such that come with the files. Always check if your virus scanner is working. You don’t want to sound the death toll for your PC.

One thing you will love about having the opportunity to download full DVD movies is that you can keep a collection of your favorite movies. You may even chance upon good old movies that do not exist in the video stores anymore. To make them last longer, burn them to a DVD. It would be as if you’ve bought new DVDs - except that you didn’t pay anything.

Go to my entertainment blog and begin to download full DVD movies with good quality at once.

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High School Musical, Disney’s Greatest Franchise

by Steve Collins

If you have a preteen in your life, you probably have been hit with a lot of chatter about a movie called High School Musical. Even if you do not know a preteen, you cannot have escaped the amazing popularity of this film. Seldom has a made-for-television movie been such a hit, but Disney knew it had an enormous hit on its hands from the day of its premier, January 20, 2006.

High School Musical has enjoyed unprecedented success. The movie’s soundtrack was the best selling album of 2006. The show inspired books, an ice show, a video game, and a stage musical. Naturally, a sequel was produced and aired in 2007. High School Musical is so sensational that it has the distinction of becoming the first made-for-television movie with a theatrically released sequel: High School Musical 3: Senior Year will premier in October, 2008.

What is the fascination? The story follows much of the classic fundamental structure familiar in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Two high school juniors from varying cliques “click” with one another as they secretly audition for their school’s musical. Their backgrounds as basketball star and math whiz certainly do not lend themselves to performing in a musical. Their relationship and their auditioning prove to be disruptive elements within the school, and all sorts of devious behavior ensues.

The characters in this movie appeal to the preteen set largely because they are going through many of the same frustrations in finding themselves and then having the audacity to actually be themselves. The movie’s message, to have the guts to override the status quo, is freeing to young people. And, of course, the music rocks!

The release of a High School Musical remix on DVD includes some new bonus features. There are two music videos: “We’re All in This Together” and the never-before seen “I Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You.” There is also a featurette giving instructions for copying the moves and a behind-the-scenes look at High School Musical. For children in that hard preteen phase, this is a super DVD!

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Oliver & Company - The First Disney Movie With Attitude!

by Steve Collins

Oliver & Company was, as its tagline made clear, “the first Disney movie with attitude!” Inspired by Charles Dickens’s novel, Oliver Twist, the feature marked a new direction and a new resurgence for Walt Disney Studios. It was arguably the most successful Disney film of the 1980’s and would pave the way for the Disney Renaissance of the 1990’s, begun by The Little Mermaid. It was so successful that then-Vice President of Animation, Peter Schneier announced the company would release an animated feature annually.

Although the novel brings to light a selection of ghastly social ills and evils, the animated film was conceived as a light-hearted, animal romp, with the plot of the film following the titular Oliver, imagined as a cat, voiced by Joey Lawrence. Oliver is essentially pressed to join a gang of thieving dogs led by the irascible Dodger, voiced by Billy Joel.

The gang does the bidding of Fagin, voiced by Dom DeLuise. While the Fagin of the novel was a twisted caricature, the film portrays him as a reluctant ne’er-do-well with a heart of gold. When the gang botches an attempt to steal a car stereo from an uptown limousine, Oliver ends up in the care of Jenny, voiced by Natalie Gregory. Torn between his new found owner and his gang of friends, matters come to a head when Sykes, menacingly voiced by Robert Loggia, begins to pressure Fagin to pay his share.

It is interesting to note that Oliver is never bothered by the petty larceny committed by Dodger and the gang, as doing so would essentially condone the illegal behavior and paint the dogs as criminals. Instead, the film stresses Oliver’s desire to join a family and focuses on how the gang fulfills this desire. Oliver & Company was imagined of as a kind of guinea pig in terms of its use of music. Its success would set the template for future Disney movies to incorporate musical numbers. Essentially, all Disney movies since have been musicals. Furthermore, Oliver & Company was the first animated Disney feature to include product placement, including signs spotlighting Coca-Cola, Sony, Ryder Trucks, and USA Today. Disney claims this was done to make the film more realistic, as it is set in New York City, and refutes the claims that it was a deliberate ploy to place products.

Released in 1988, Oliver & Company became the 27th animated feature released by Walt Disney Pictures. It also was one of only five Disney animated films to be set in modern times. Originally titled Oliver and the Dodger, the film was the first Disney film to incorporate the use of computer animation. It was successfully re-released in theaters and to VHS home video in 1996 and made its way to DVD in 2002.

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