I really loved the movie The Endless Summer II. I really enjoyed watching Jeff Booth in this movie. I also think Tom Curren was great!
I think Jeff Booth and Tom Curren worked wonderful in The Endless Summer II. The great supporting cast includes Jeff Booth, Tom Curren, Mike Diffenderfer, Sunny Garcia, Johnny Boy Gomes.
I left some information, immages, and video previews of The Endless Summer II below.
Summary of The Endless Summer II: Twenty-eight years after directing the hit documentary The Endless Summer, Bruce Brown went on a similar quest with two surfers to find the perfect wave. With a bigger budget and more sophistication in the production, this sequel is even more spectacular. What is lost in innocence--which The Endless Summer was rich in--is made up for in stunning looks at pristine beaches on exotic and even unlikely (for example, Alaska) shores. --Tom Keogh
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The Serpent's Kiss was an incredible movie! Both Ewan McGregor and Greta Scacchi were amazing! Maybe thats what makes the movie so good.The great cast includes Ewan McGregor, Greta Scacchi, Pete Postlethwaite, Richard E. Grant, Carmen Chaplin. The movie moves on like a dream and end leaving you wanting for more.
If you love watching Ewan McGregor or Greta Scacchi, you are deffinetly going to want to watch The Serpent's Kiss.
Fans of Peter Greenaway's arch and ornate films (The Draughtsman's Contract, Drowning by Numbers) may enjoy The Serpent's Kiss. A young Dutch landscape artist named Chrome (Ewan MacGregor) is hired by a homely but rich landowner named Smithers (Pete Postlethwaite, In the Name of the Father, The Usual Suspects) to turn his overgrown estate into a masterpiece of topiary and hedge mazes. But unbeknownst to Smithers, Chrome is fulfilling the will of Smithers's ardent enemy (Richard E. Grant, Withnail & I), who hopes to bankrupt the wealthy man and seduce his beautiful wife (Greta Scacchi). When Chrome falls under the spell of Smithers's enigmatic daughter, all plans go awry. The strong cast wallows entertainingly in this mix of jealousy, decadence, intriguing visuals, Machiavellian schemes, and heaving bosoms, with Grant performing with his usual lurid gusto. The sumptuous Restoration-era costumes enhance this meditation on art versus nature. --Bret Fetzer