Title
Stats
Anna and the King
Bourne Identity
Bourne Supremacy
Breakfast Club
Breakfast on Pluto
Change of Habit
Chocolat
Death on the Nile
Evolution
Fawlty Towers, Vol. 1 - A Touch of Class/Builders/Wedding
Finding Nemo
Four Weddings and a Funeral
Good Will Hunting
House, M.D. - Season One
Insomnia
Judge Dredd
King Kong
Lion King
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Nightmare Before Christmas
Over the Hedge
Princess Bride
Quest for Fire
Rear Window
Sleepless in Seattle
Some Like It Hot
Spy Game
Sting
Three Musketeers (super edition)
Time to Kill
Uncle Buck
Under
V for Vendetta
West Wing - The Complete First Season
West Wing - The Complete Fourth Season
West Wing - The Complete Second Season
West Wing - The Complete Third Season
Working Girl
X-Men
Yesterday
You've Got Mail
Zoolander
Director: John Howard Davies, Bob Spiers
Starring: John Cleese, Prunella Scales
Genre: Comedy
Theatrical:   Rated: NR
Duration:
Summary: John Cleese has always maintained that "Fawlty Towers" was inspired by a real hotel that was run by a proprietor who treated guests as an inconvenience to running a business. No one in the world, however, can possibly match the sheer insolence and incompetence of Basil Fawlty, perhaps the most brazenly rude character in the history of customer disservice. "A Touch of Class," the series pilot, finds Basil bemoaning the riff-raff he's forced to deal with when he signs in a Lord Melbury. Immediately melting into an embarrassingly obsequious toady, Basil is blinded by nobility and becomes the perfect patsy for the old con man. In "The Builders," Cleese proves there are no limits to what lengths Basil Fawlty will go to save a few quid. Enlisting a resistant Polly in his plot, he quietly fires the respectable carpenters hired by his wife, Sybil, and brings in a cheap crew with a history of disaster. Sure enough, they wind up walling up the entrance to the dining room, sending an insanely outraged Basil into a frenzy as he tries to correct the blunder before Sybil returns. Davis Kelly ("Waking Ned Devine") costars as the genial but incompetent O'Reilly. Basil smells hanky-panky in the air in "The Wedding Party," when he signs in an unmarried couple and soon sees foreplay in every innocent kiss and embrace. Meanwhile, a sexy French antique dealer sends Basil into red-faced vexations with her flirtations and Manuel's birthday results in a drunken binge and a morning-after hangover that only adds to the bellhop's usual incompetence at the morning breakfast service. When Sybil overhears that "The Hotel Inspectors" are in the area, Basil makes an about-face in his brusque treatment of a demanding guest, falling all over himself to cater to the guest's every whim while he boorishly insults every other customer. When he discovers his mistake he makes up for lost insolence in a campaign of comic terror. "--Sean Axmaker"