MOVIES IN CYBERSPACE by Susan Granger

         Whether you're a film fanatic or just a casual movie-goer, the
Internet offers more information than you can use. So here are some of my
favorite websites, either for research or simply browsing. The Internet Movie
Database (www.imdb.com) is the single largest on-line storehouse of
information and is available in English, German, Italian, and Spanish.  If
you're interested in knowing what pictures are in the pipeline for the
future, try Coming Attractions (www.corona.bc.ca/films/homepage.html). If
you're into gossip and TinselTown news, log onto E! On-line
(www.eonline.com). Or if you want to post your own movie reviews - and get
paid for them - click onto the movie section of www.epinions.com - and
indicate you were referred by SusanGranger (no space between the first and
last names).
           If you'd like to write a movie script and want to download some
good ones onto a disc for reference, try Scripts-O-Rama
(www.script-o-rama.com). For movie posters, you can
click onto Movie Poster Warehouse (www.movieposter.com) or Rick's Movie
Graphics (www.ricksmovie.com).
           If you're into entertainment stocks and the biz, the movie
industry trade papers are Variety (www.variety.com) and The Hollywood
Reporter (www.hollywoodreporter.com).
           And if you want to buy videos on line, I recommend  Blockbuster
 (www.blockbuster.com), DVD Express
(www.dvdexpress.com) or Movies Unlimited (www.moviesunlimited.com)...for
that, simply click on the logo below.
          Just for fun, there's Movie Bloopers On-line
(www.moviebloopers.com) and The Big List of Movie Mistakes
(www.movie-mistakes.com). Plus Top 100 Movie Web sites
(www.hot100.com/movies). Smooth surfing!

If you're a theater buff, check out www.broadwayarchive.com, which
specializes in Broadway productions made for television. You can get some
prized videocassettes including Swoozie Kurtz and Geraldine Fitzgerald in
Eugene O'Neill's "Ah, Wilderness," James Earl Jones and Raul Julia in "King
Lear," Irene Worth in Samuel Beckett's "Happy Days," and many more.


http://www.classicmoviedrivein.com/