Ghost rider goes undercover download




















Ready or not, here he comes! He's got a sweet ride, but the car is haunted by a vengeful spirit named Eli, and it's hell on wheels!

When Robbie's East L. Hyde's drug-fueled gang violence, can he use this new power to put vengeance in overdrive -or will he submit to Eli's darkness?

All hell breaks loose as the Brothers Ghost Rider return! Johnny Blaze is the king of Hell, its first line of defense against demonic hordes trying to escape and lords of other infernal regions making a play for his throne - including a certain evil queen from his past! Meanwhile, Danny Ketch never wanted to be a Ghost Rider. And with the psychopathic symbiote Carnage targeting a third Ghost Rider, Alejandra Jones, he could be her only hope!

But when the inevitable happens and Rider battles Rider, who will Mephisto have his money on? A dead angel. A silver bullet. A kept promise. An man did you bring back memories watching your 70's outfit while doing the bench exercises ; Hope you're all dong fine these days. Reviewer: doowopbob - favorite favorite - May 21, Subject Nice work, Doug. Reviewer: sissyhana - favorite favorite favorite favorite favorite - June 12, Subject: Ghost movies are cool Damn that was good!

Hi everyone! I made a comedy mashup of this film for a laugh on YouTube. Some of the credits got cut off, and now that I see the director and star are actually still following this, I apologize and will add them to the YouTube page.

If they happen to see my re-edit of the film, with me co-starring as "Tracey Donnelly", I hope they will get a laugh out of it, which is all that was intended. Reviewer: ERD. Extremely creative and informative script using a ghost theme. Well directed and photographed. Reviewer: dramafan - favorite favorite favorite favorite - July 16, Subject: cool So after watching this and especially after Googling a bit and finding info about grown-up musician Doug Edmunds "Kevin" in the film , I am now a fan.

Reviewer: Leftraru - favorite favorite favorite - December 5, Subject: ghost good. Reviewer: whizkidforte - favorite favorite favorite favorite favorite - July 12, Subject: An Edu-Tragedy spoilers Kevin Bailey, a melancholy middle school newcomer, sees a curly-haired girl in white slacks on Bus After picking up a pencil she dropped, he notices that she is gone.

She perished at the accident scene last year and her family moved from their residence where the Baileys now reside. On the second day of school, Kevin sees Tracy again, thinking that she is badgering him. She hands him a pamphlet about bus evacuation, which can save his live and those of Bus He sees Tracy on Bus 77, now packed with kids. He tells her why he needs to read the pamphlet, but before she can continue replying to him, the bus driver becomes unconscious and the bus hangs over a cliff.

With the help of Tracy, Kevin helps the pupils out of the bus and saves his bus driver. This is a harrowing film, with the theme music creating a haunting air. It is filmed in , which is a reasonable date for a classic. I came up with the story and co-wrote the screenplay, which was originally titled "Cliffhanger. Instructional films like this can be boring, so that's why we added a ghost, a bus crash, and romance.

It's the last of these, I think, that makes the movie different. We turned a bus safety movie into a love story. It was used - almost a junker, really - but it ran well enough for our purposes.

We filmed on it for weeks and on the last day we crashed it. It was pushed off a cliff by a front-end loader, and it didn't go willingly. It took a lot of nudging to make it drop.

I wanted it to explode in flames on impact, but we had to work with Penn State's safety department on this and they wouldn't let us. We had to crash the bus "safely"! We also had to remove the battery so the acid in it wouldn't be a hazard to the crew that salvaged the bus. The cliff was in an abandoned limestone quarry that, as luck would have it, had become an auto recycling center, i.

I told the owner, Ron, he could have the bus if we could use his cliff. Because the bus landed on its roof, the transmission and tires weren't damaged. Ron said he could sell them, and I was glad he got something for helping us out. Right away I got in trouble with Penn State for giving away university property. Penn State has a salvage center for disposing of stuff it no longer needs, and I was chewed out for not using it. But they cooled down when I told them it would cost ten times more to drag the bus from the quarry to the salvage center than they could ever make selling it.

There are tons of actors in and around Penn State and its home, State College, but for the longest time we couldn't find the right person for the role of Kevin. Shooting was only weeks away, and every open audition had been a bust. Then someone suggested we contact Doug Edmunds, who they'd seen in rehearsal for a local production of "On Golden Pond.

He was great to work with, as was the girl who played Tracy, although she was so embarrassed she wouldn't come to the premiere. Doug was in every scene, and he could make even bad lines work. He gave up lots of weekends in return for very little money. Part of his pay was driving lessons in my truck on the university test track where we shot most of the film, even though he was only The test track was miles from the quarry. The last thing I wanted was a bunch of kids running around a quarry with 40' cliffs, so we shot those scenes separately and joined them in the editing room.

The crash happened on a cloudy day and the evacuation on a sunny day, and the shifts back and forth still bother me. The scene in the kitchen with Kevin and his mom was shot during a real thunderstorm not by choice and we had to do lots of takes. The actors kept breaking up because after the line, "She died last year in a school bus accident" there'd invariably be a clap of thunder. Here's some technical stuff for those who are interested: We shot the bus going off the cliff with four cameras, and two of them malfunctioned.

The main camera - the one that just had to get the crash from beginning to end - had a serious light leak. When I got the film back I saw huge flashes of light coming in from the left and right sides of the frame, and I was ready to jump off a cliff myself.

We decided to fix the problem as best we could by projecting the film and shooting it with a lens that was zoomed in past the light flashes. We did this on an Oxberry animation stand. This magnified the grain pattern of the film, and so this footage looks a lot grittier than the stuff shot with the other cameras.

But there wasn't much else we could do. Also, the super-slow motion camera had a shutter problem, and the footage shot with it sort of flutters.

Ironically, the stuff shot with our best, most expensive cameras turned out worst, and the best footage came from a cheap-o Bolex with a windup motor. The major problem shooting on busses is that it's too dark inside and too bright outside. Film sees contrast like this very differently from the way your eye would see it, and it doesn't look good. So what we did was cut and tape filters to the outside of every bus window to reduce the amount of sunlight coming in.

For the techies reading this, they were neutral density gels, N. Does the street bike have what it takes to beat the fast accelerating EV? Via: SuperBike Magazine. Via: Autoblog.

Share Share Tweet Email. Related Topics Motorcycles Supercars. Ania Szremski 19 Articles Published. Read Next in automotive.



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