Is it just me, or does Sammo Hung...(NRR)

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  • AserAser 2,351 Posts
    I live pretty close to First Markham Place (hwy 7 & woodbine) so I get them from there. The spot I frequent has 5 for $20 or 8 for $30.



    Pac mall has been kinda locked down w/ all the raids, it's getting rather dodgy at some spots. You have to tell them what you want and they pull it out for you in those bulk spindles. Not recommended, gwailos done blew the spot up.

  • HAZHAZ 3,376 Posts
    The spot I frequent has 5 for $20 or 8 for $30.

    Wow! Are these authentic releases or do they come in those cardbord slipcases?

    Peace

    h

  • DORDOR Two Ron Toe 9,899 Posts
    I live pretty close to First Markham Place (hwy 7 & woodbine) so I get them from there. The spot I frequent has 5 for $20 or 8 for $30.



    Pac mall has been kinda locked down w/ all the raids, it's getting rather dodgy at some spots. You have to tell them what you want and they pull it out for you in those bulk spindles. Not recommended, gwailos done blew the spot up.



    I'm out at FMP once in awhile. My gurls parents have a spot in there.



    I use to pick up my stuff at both malls you mentioned, but this one spot downtown is killin' it, so I only pick up there as of late. 6 for 20 and 9 for 30.



    And the covers are really well done.



    Yeah, pac was kinda busted last time I was there. It's kinda sad...



    Whats ur #1 food spot up there?









    I sat on my SPL box and ferked it up!

  • AserAser 2,351 Posts




    I don't think you'll beat those prices anywhere in the city, whereabouts in chinatown is this at. Would be nice to know but I'll be too lazy to trek that far just to get 1 extra dvd.



    Food court in FMP is awesome, I just had some Shanghai spicy beef noodles. Although I think I'll take the food discussion to pm before we get too sidetracked.



    my friend (occasional lurker) actually did an interesting piece on the bootleg phenomenon in the Globe & Mail a few months back...



    On Highway 7 just east of Woodbine Avenue, First Markham Place is the less

    architecturally exotic sister of Pacific Mall. It's anchored, like many

    suburban malls, by a Home Outfitters, a Golf Town and a Cineplex Odeon

    multiplex. Unlike most suburban malls, it also has, at current count, seven

    stores doing brisk business selling pirated DVDs.



    Last Saturday, the same day the Toronto Police was seizing 11,000 illegally

    bootlegged DVDs and making 10 arrests across town at the Downsview Flea

    Market, it was business as usual at First Markham: Cinephiles, hockey moms,

    Asian film aficionados and bargain hunters alike jostling to scan the racks

    and cardboard boxes, snatching up everything from flickering,

    camcorder-filmed copies of the current box office hit Wallace & Gromit: The

    Curse of the Were-Rabbit to pristinely duplicated Sopranos box sets.



    "No," a father says firmly, placing Pooh's Heffalump Movie back on the

    shelf. His son, about waist high with a brush-cut and glasses, picks it back

    up. "No," the father repeats. "It won't look good on a big screen." He

    points at the opposite wall, the wall with the more professionally packaged

    DVDs, and ropes his kid out of the shop.



    The seven stores - Image & Sound, Mainstream, Jadeite, DVD Palace,

    Musicalplex, Music CD VCD DVD and a new store which hasn't seen fit to post

    a name as of yet - operate without the cloak and dagger furtiveness their

    trade might suggest: Their storefronts are wide open for business, their

    counterfeit booty displayed unabashedly on the shelves, price lists spelled

    out on brightly coloured Bristol board. Although none of the owners would

    comment on record, the competition between the stores - particularly the two

    most prominent, Mainstream and Image and Sound - speaks for itself.



    For over a year, Image and Sound had been First Markham's go-to spot for

    pirated movies. In a space about the size of a small Radio Shack, it crams

    seven-foot shelves of DVDs, a varied selection of new releases, Asian films

    and art house flicks, and a helpful staff.



    Then, two months ago, Mainstream opened with a fresh bright-yellow paint

    job, a giant LCD screen suspended from the ceilings playing a constant loop

    of action movies and an aggressive push on five-for-$20 "clearout" titles -

    mostly poor quality, illegally taped copies of the latest theatrical

    releases. Mainstream is aptly named.



    Cardboard signs bearing percentages in black marker highlight some films: A

    Good Woman, 98 per cent; A History of Violence, 85 per cent; The Constant

    Gardener, 80 per cent. It's a measure - somewhat arbitrary - of the quality

    of the DVD in question. In the case of The Good Woman, a Scarlett Johansson

    vehicle, the 98 per cent will only hurt the non-English speaking buyers, as

    the just-below-perfect rating indicates its lack of subtitles. The movies

    without percentages, like The Merchant of Venice, are perfect duplicates of

    the retail DVD.



    The boxes at the front of the store carry approximately 360 titles, and on

    weekends, twenty dollar bills pass over the counter at a rate that suggests

    the movement of water. This Saturday, four people are working, with an extra

    body watching the surveillance monitor. It's a business of high-volume

    turnover. At $4 a movie, the titles sell themselves.



    Most of the other stores have followed suit. But Image and Sound's response

    has been an object lesson in how a mom-and-pop operation can fend off a

    louder competitor, even in the murky business of pirated goods. It's

    accepted the demands of the wider market, constantly expanding its stock of

    current theatrical releases. (Its newest releases include The Man, with

    Eugene Levy and Samuel L. Jackson, David Cronenberg's A History of Violence

    and the recent Al Pacino flop, Two For The Money.) But the store has

    balanced this with a passion, and eye, for great cinema. Its selection of

    art house films, B-movies and documentaries could stand alongside Queen

    Video or Revue Cinema.



    At Image and Sound, bad misspellings (such as "Comderalla Man," aka

    Cinderella Man, at Music CD VCD DVD) are at a minimum and all DVDs are sold

    in proper cases, as opposed to the colour photocopies and plastic bags of

    some of the other stores. On weekends it's a tight squeeze between the

    aisles as the shop has become known amongst First Markham habitu??s as the

    destination for picture-perfect copies of such obscure finds as Mathieu

    Kassovitz's 1995 cinema verit?? drama La Haine and a Criterion Collection

    edition of the 1970 Alain Delon heist flick Le Cercle Rouge.



    So far, both Mainstream and Image and Sound - and, to a lesser extent, the

    other five purveyors of piracy - are thriving. If the threat of a bust looms

    overhead, the store clerks seem unconcerned.



    And they continue to adapt. At Image and Sound, customers even call ahead to

    see if a title is in.



    Director Guy Ritchie's latest, Revolver, is in. Sadly though, the quality

    isn't there, so several young customers sate themselves with the much

    superior UK gangster film Layer Cake.



    "[Revolver] will be in Tuesday," the salesgirl says. "The first copy was

    missing the ending. This copy has it. But wait till Tuesday - it will be DVD

    quality."



  • yummmmmmmm. this makes my fong pei stinky

  • DORDOR Two Ron Toe 9,899 Posts
    Ha.. Great article...

    I'm more surprised by how many outdoor stalls I see downtown now. Dead of winter and dudes are selling flicks left right and center. I can understand summer with 10 tables set up and dudes even selling in lil Italy. But the dead of winter? I could care less if I was selling a crazy amount of copies. I wouldn't freeze my ass off like that.

  • DORDOR Two Ron Toe 9,899 Posts


    yummmmmmmm. this makes my fong pei stinky

    Damn.. Making me hungry...

  • wait for it
























    wait










    for


















    it



    nnnnnnnnnnnggggggggggnnnnnnnnngggggggggg


    hold it







    wait
































    pftAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH[/b]

  • DORDOR Two Ron Toe 9,899 Posts
    Somehow I knew you were setting that up...

    But somehow I'm guessing that you don't need to eat that to make ur farts stinky...

  • its a science my friend. years of research. i just make it look that easy.

    which reminds me, my homie hooked up a spanish xmas meal and i swear to buddha spanish chorizo [sin homo] is a helluva drug.
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