Subgenre Sampler
: 25139 Films to Buy & Rent
Go Further (2003)
- Dir. Ron Mann
Feat. Woody Harrelson
- A quirky, semi–stoned travelogue that gets on the bus with activist–actor Woody Harrelson and his entourage on a 'consciousness raising'…
Godzilla: Tokyo SOS (2003)
- Dir. Masaaki Tezuka
- More colossal mayhem from the never–ending franchise, with Japan vulnerable to a recuperated Godzilla, who will attack if government scientists…
Going for Broke (2003)
- Dir. Graeme Campbell
Feat. Delta Burke, Gerald McRaney, Elliot Page
- A superior telemovie about a woman's spiralling gambling addiction.
Delta Burke gets hooked to the slot–machine buzz, managing to lose her…
Goldfish Memory (2003)
- Dir. Elizabeth Gill
Feat. Fiona Montgomery
- Free–spirited take on the modern conundrums of romance, dating and lust set in a contemporary Dublin of gay, straight and bisexual cycle…
Good Boy! (2003)
- Dir. John Robert Hoffman
- Family comedy has a canine agent is sent to Earth (from the Dogstar) to find out why the planned invasion by dogs has gone awry.
Here he finds the…
Good Fences (2003)
- Dir. Ernest Dickerson
Feat. Whoopi Goldberg, Danny Glover, Mo'Nique
- Instructive race–relations telemovie about the stresses of prejudice on an upwardly mobile black family in the white, affluent suburb of…
Good Morning, Night (2003)
- Dir. Marco Bellocchio
- A dramatisation of events surrounding the kidnapping and murder of Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro in 1978 by The Red Brigades, as seen through the…
Good Pope, The (Il Papa Buono) (2003)
- Dir. Rick Tognazzi
Feat. Bob Hoskins
- Pope John XXIII – the 'Good Pope' – was perhaps the most progressive and influential of the Catholic church's 20th century…
Goodbye Lenin! (2003)
- Dir. Wolfgang Becker
Feat. Daniel Bruhl, Katrin Sass, Chulpan Khamatova
- This comedy of concealment set around the fall of the Berlin Wall was a justifiable success around the world, with a bittersweet mood of political…
Gozu (2003)
- Dir. Takashi Miike
Feat. Sho Aikawa, Hideki Sone, Kimika Yoshino
- Rebel iconoclast of Japanese cinema, Takashi Miike, unveils his creepiest film since AUDITION: a hellishly disorientating – yet markedly restrained…