After finding out that his wife has blown their life savings on self-help gurus, Seymour teams up with his brother Danny, a filmmaker, to document how easy it is to start a fake self-help group and con people into believing just about anything. But once started, the Reboot Camp takes on a life of its own, and grows into a full-blown cult.
Son los años 70 y Renzo y su equipo de criminales causan estragos en las calles, dejando cuerpos donde quiera que vayan. La detective Womack no se detendrá ante nada para llevar ante la justicia a estos matones, aunque eso signifique infringir la ley.
A college ladies man accepts a challenge from his dorm buddies - sleep with the entire alphabet, A through Z, before graduation. The rules are simple: the rarer the first letter of the girl's last name, the higher the payout. All goes well until he falls for the "X". Now he's torn between his feelings for the girl and winning the bet for his friends.
Paul (James Van Der Beek) es un guionista completamente bloqueado, decide encerrarse en su apartamento porque tiene 18 días para escribir la historia que definitivamente lance su carrera. Su historia comprende personajes de su pasado, incluyendo a un payaso aterrador y desfigurado, los juegos de "cabin fever", etc. Y muy pronto se encontrará viviendo en un mundo donde le es muy difícil distinguir entre lo que es verdadero y ficción, la línea entre la cordura y la locura es tan delicada que acabará sufriendo consecuencias fatales. (FILMAFFINITY)
Few figures in professional baseball had a career quite like Pete Rose -- and practically no one who climbed so high fell so hard. Rose made his major-league debut playing second base with the Cincinnati Reds in 1963; nicknamed "Charlie Hustle" for his daringness and enthusiasm over the course of his career, Rose played in eighteen All-Star games, earned three World Series rings, broke Ty Cobb's record for career hits, and in 1975 was named Sportsman of the Year by both Sports Illustrated and The Sporting News. In 1984, after six years with other teams, Rose returned to the Reds, signing on as both player and manager at the age of 43; he continued to play until 1986, and stepped down as manager in 1989. That same year, a dark secret Rose had been hiding for years came to the surface -- Rose had for years been dealing with an addiction to gambling, and after falling deep in debt to bookies by betting on horse racing, he attempted to make the money back by betting on baseball.