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					  <title><![CDATA[Where Can I Download Free Bootleg Movies?]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.articlesofadvice.com/articles/1080/1/Where-Can-I-Download-Free-Bootleg-Movies/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[Are you tired of paying the high price that department<br/>
stores charge for DVD's?  With dwindling budgets brought<br/>
about by the recent economy, most people today can no<br/>
longer afford to buy all of their favorite movies on DVD.<br/>
This is why many people now choose to <a target="_blank" href="http://www.freemoviednlds.com/Bootleg_Movies.html">download free bootleg<br/>
movies</a> and burn them onto DVD themselves. This process is<br/>
very affordable and allows you to add many movies to your<br/>
DVD collection for the price of one store bought DVD.<br/>
<br/>
The first question that most people ask when they<br/>
contemplate this process is: where can I download free<br/>
bootleg movies? The answer to this is very simple.  There<br/>
are in fact thousands of websites all over the World Wide<br/>
Web that allow users to download bootleg movies for no fee.<br/>
<br/>
However, the quality of these downloadable movies may not<br/>
be what you are looking for. Many websites house "bootleg"<br/>
movies at their very worse. These movies are generally of<br/>
very poor quality due to the fact that they are shot by a<br/>
person sitting in a movie theater with a camcorder. These<br/>
movies will almost always have a great deal of background<br/>
noise and the color and picture quality can range from<br/>
blurry and indistinct to downright unwatchable.<br/>
<br/>
Still, there are many websites that only house free bootleg<br/>
movies that are 100% DVD quality. With a little<br/>
investigative work you can quickly answer the question of:<br/>
where can I download free bootleg movies?<br/>
<br/>
Another route that many people will take is by using a<br/>
Torrent service. Torrents are downloadable movie files that<br/>
people all over the world share with one another over a<br/>
Peer to Peer network. The problem with downloading Torrents<br/>
is that they are 100% illegal. In fact, most Torrent<br/>
networks are watched closely by the FBI and movie studios<br/>
to assure that their films don't appear in the directory.<br/>
Private file sharing sites also exist and can present a<br/>
slightly safer alternative to the popular Torrent sites,<br/>
with just as large of a selection.<br/>
<br/>
What Do I Do Once I Have Downloaded The Movies I Want?<br/>
<br/>
Now that you know the answer to: where can I download free<br/>
bootleg movies, you will need to download the films you<br/>
want and place them in a file on your hard drive. Most<br/>
movie files are very large and take up a great deal of<br/>
space on your hard drive. Therefore, the next thing you<br/>
will want to do is burn these movies onto DVD so that you<br/>
can delete them from your computer and free up space.<br/>
<br/>
If your computer does not already have a DVD burner and DVD<br/>
burning software, then you will need to visit a department<br/>
store and purchase a DVD burner that is designed to work<br/>
with your computer. As for the software, most private file<br/>
sharing sites offer free downloads of complete DVD burning<br/>
software. Once you have downloaded this software you will<br/>
need to install it on your computer and review how the DVD<br/>
burning process works. From there you can begin instantly<br/>
burning every bootleg movie that you download.<br/>
<br/>
By doing this you will save yourself hundreds to thousands<br/>
of dollars each year. This is because you will be spending<br/>
less than a dollar for each and every bootleg movie that<br/>
you burn to DVD! ]]></description>
					  <author>no@spam.com (Neil Morrical)</author>
					  <pubDate>Mon, 31 Aug 2009 11:03:09 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Movies to Inspire Travel]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.articlesofadvice.com/articles/953/1/Movies-to-Inspire-Travel/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[Movies shape how we see the world. Movies also shape the<br/>
world we expect to see when we go out into it. Few things<br/>
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.ryanmurdock.com/">inspire us to travel</a> like a well chosen backdrop. It paints<br/>
romantic visions in our heads, visions that often linger<br/>
for years.<br/>
<br/>
Sometimes the reality of a place matches or exceeds our<br/>
vision, and sometimes it falters. In the end, anything that<br/>
inspires us to travel, to break the bonds of the everyday,<br/>
is a force for positive change.<br/>
<br/>
Here are a few films, old and new, that have inspired me to<br/>
travel or that kept me sane between journeys. I hope they<br/>
do the same for you.<br/>
<br/>
The Mosquito Coast (1986) - Based on the bestselling novel<br/>
by Paul Theroux. Disgruntled inventor Harrison Ford takes<br/>
his family to the jungles of Central America to found a<br/>
town and goes insane in the process. Filmed in the lush,<br/>
steamy jungles of southern Belize, the film and the book<br/>
inspired me to travel to Nicaragua's Mosquito Coast back in<br/>
2000.<br/>
<br/>
The Story of the Weeping Camel (2003) - The most accurate<br/>
film I've ever seen on Mongolia's south Gobi region. Apart<br/>
from a few minor scenes, the film was shot by following the<br/>
day to day lives of a family of nomads. As luck would have<br/>
it, the filmmakers arrived during the camel birthing<br/>
season. A natural drama ensued when a mother camel rejected<br/>
its calf, endangering the life of the newborn creature. The<br/>
reconciliation between the two camels, brought about by a<br/>
traditional shamanic ceremony, is one of the most moving<br/>
scenes ever set to film.<br/>
<br/>
The Tempest (1982) - A little-known film by John<br/>
Cassavettes, starring a very young Molly Ringwald, Susan<br/>
Sarandon, and Raul Julia. The Tempest is a loose adaptation<br/>
of Shakespeare' s play, filmed on a stunning Greek island in<br/>
the Ionian Sea. I first saw this back when cable TV was<br/>
new, during a free weekend preview of the movie channel. It<br/>
had me dreaming Mediterranean dreams long before I was old<br/>
enough to know where the Mediterranean was.<br/>
<br/>
Mountains of the Moon (1990) - Based on the life of Captain<br/>
Sir Richard Francis Burton. Burton spoke some 29 languages<br/>
and dialects, was a prolific writer and translator, and one<br/>
of the greatest explorers and travelers of all time. He was<br/>
the first European to enter the Ethiopian city of Harare,<br/>
was co-discoverer of the source of the Nile, and was one of<br/>
the few foreigners ever to make the pilgrimage to Mecca in<br/>
disguise. Burton was also a master of the sword. On one<br/>
expedition he fought off an attack by Somali tribesman that<br/>
saw him wounded through the mouth by a spear, the scars of<br/>
which are visible in all his later photographs. Whenever I<br/>
begin to feel like I've accomplished something, Burton's<br/>
example puts me to shame.<br/>
<br/>
Before Sunrise / Before Sunset (1995/2004) - The<br/>
quintessential traveler's films, Before Sunrise and its<br/>
sequel Before Sunset perfectly capture the feeling of the<br/>
all-consuming road romance. They go further in considering<br/>
what would happen if we said 'yes' instead of 'no' at that<br/>
one crucial juncture that could change the course of our<br/>
lives. Set in Vienna and Paris (respectively) , both films<br/>
are steeped in Old Europe's streets, and they capture those<br/>
rambling traveler's conversations better than any other<br/>
film I know.<br/>
<br/>
Summer Lovers (1982) - Every guy's Mediterranean dream - a<br/>
summer-long threesome on a beautiful Greek island. It's a<br/>
film about freedom, individualism, charting your own course<br/>
and creating your own personal morality. It explores what<br/>
it's like to completely let go of the preconceived,<br/>
immersing yourself totally in the present. Stunning scenery<br/>
and an absence of tan lines make this classic a winner.<br/>
<br/>
High Road to China (1983) - A little known and vastly<br/>
underrated film by Tom Selleck. This film captures the<br/>
spirit of high adventure and stubborn independence, and<br/>
includes jaw-drop footage of Central Asia and the<br/>
Himalayas. Plus, it's got biplanes in it. Who wouldn't want<br/>
to rip around the world in one of those?<br/>
<br/>
The Lover (1992) - Lush scenery of French colonial era<br/>
Vietnam circa 1929: crumbling moss-eaten architecture,<br/>
exotic street scenes, slow lazy ceiling fans, and lines of<br/>
afternoon light casting rectangles of shadow through<br/>
slatted wooden blinds. The film reminds us that sometimes<br/>
those blinds also conceal illicit pleasures. You can almost<br/>
feel the heat and humidity steam through the lens. And the<br/>
heat between the main characters doesn't hurt either... The<br/>
Lover perfectly captures the feeling of old Hanoi.<br/>
<br/>
The Dreamers (2003) - A shocking coming of age story set in<br/>
Paris in the turbulent summer of 1968. A young American<br/>
exchange student goes to the decadent City of Lights to<br/>
study French, where he falls into a bizarre love triangle<br/>
with a brother and sister and is drawn into their strange,<br/>
sheltered world. Though controversial when it was released,<br/>
the film is oddly enchanting rather than lewd, and it<br/>
conveys a vivid sense of what Paris must have felt like<br/>
during that turbulent summer of riots when social norms<br/>
were shattered.<br/>
<br/>
Lost in Translation (2003) - This film portrays the<br/>
dazzling disorientation of Tokyo and the loneliness and<br/>
exhaustion of culture shock better than any I've ever seen.<br/>
It reminded me of the many times I've been cast adrift on a<br/>
hostile shore, and it brought back so many vivid memories<br/>
of everything that's surreal about Tokyo, where.<br/>
<br/>
The Motorcycle Diaries (2004) - Based on the posthumously<br/>
published diary of Ernesto 'Che' Guevara, the film<br/>
chronicles his coming of age journey through South America.<br/>
Shot on location in Argentina, Chile, Ecuador and Peru. I<br/>
read the original book of Guevara's travel journals years<br/>
ago, and feared the film would be an overblown<br/>
foreshadowing of the world figure he would later become.<br/>
That wasn't the case. The movie stayed true to the road<br/>
trip lark of the book, complete with the sort of South<br/>
American scenery that'll have you lacing up your hiking<br/>
boots before the credits begin to roll.<br/>
<br/>
The English Patient (1996) - Romance and archaeology in the<br/>
Sahara desert in an age when high adventure was still a<br/>
possibility, and when parts of the globe remained<br/>
undiscovered. The film contains stunning desert footage,<br/>
and was based on the real-life search for the lost city of<br/>
Zezura. Yes, it's a bit of a chick flick, but if you love<br/>
the desert you only have to switch off the sound and feast<br/>
on the imagery.<br/>
<br/>
So that's it. Twelve picks to inspire wanderlust and<br/>
Vagabond Dreams.<br/>
<br/>
What are your special travel films? I'd love to hear about<br/>
them. <br/>]]></description>
					  <author>no@spam.com (Ryan Murdock)</author>
					  <pubDate>Fri, 14 Aug 2009 09:41:50 EDT</pubDate>
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