
Robert Rodriguez presents a bold new chapter in the Predator universe, 'Predators,' directed by Nimrod Antal.
The film stars Oscar-winner Adrien Brody as Royce, a mercenary who reluctantly leads a group of elite warriors (played by Topher Grace, Alice Braga, Walton Goggins, Laurence Fishburne, Danny Trejo, Oleg Taktarov, Mahershalalhashbaz Ali, and Louiz Ozawa) who come to realize they've been brought together on an alien planet as prey. With the exception of a disgraced physician, they are all cold-blooded killers who are now being systemically hunted and eliminated by a new breed of alien Predators.
Out on Blu-ray and DVD is the crime thriller 'Brooklyn's Finest,' which is directed by Antoine Fuqua and stars Richard Gere, Ethan Hawke, Don Cheadle, Jesse Williams, Ellen Barkin, Wesley Snipes, Lili Taylor, Brian F. O'Byrne, Shannon Kane, Will Patton and Vincent D'Onofrio.
Burned-out veteran Eddie Dugan (Gere) is just one week away from his pension and a fishing cabin in Connecticut. Narcotics officer Sal Procida ( Hawke) has discovered there's no line he won't cross to provide a better life for his long-suffering wife and seven children. And Clarence "Tango" Butler (Cheadle) has been undercover so long, his loyalties have started to shift from his fellow police officers to his prison buddy Caz (Snipes), one of Brooklyn's most infamous drug dealers. With personal and work pressures bearing down on them, each man faces daily tests of judgment and honor in one of the world's most difficult jobs.
When NYPD's Operation Clean Up targets the notoriously drug-ridden BK housing project, all three officers find themselves swept away by the violence and corruption of Brooklyn's gritty 65th Precinct and its most treacherous criminals. During seven fateful days, Eddie, Sal and Tango find themselves hurtling inextricably toward the same fatal crime scene and a shattering collision with destiny. The film captures the volatile and deadly world of one of New York's most dangerous precincts through the eyes of the men and women pledged to protect and serve, as they face the wrenching choices that make them 'Brooklyn's Finest.'
'We Will Not Die Like Dogs' profiles AIDS activists from Nigeria, Uganda, Burkina Faso and Zambia. Honest and provocative testimonies of individuals living with the epidemic include two HIV-positive women fighting stigma and discrimination, a doctor working to care for HIV-infected children in rural villages and a reggae artist using his status and the media to spark awareness.
Conceived of by two African medical students at Yale who were tired of Africans portrayed only as victims to the epidemic and directed by international health specialist Lisa Russell, 'We Will Not Die Like Dogs' helped launch the National Black Programming Consortium's new television series AfroPop, which focuses on contemporary pop culture in Africa.


