Spider-Plant Man (2005)
Spider-Plant Man is a parody of Spider-Man, made for the Comic Relief 2005 appeal and aired on BBC One. It featured Rowan Atkinson as Peter Piper/Spider-Plant Man and Rachel Stevens as his love-interest Jane-Mary (parodying Mary-Jane Watson). Jim Broadbent also made an appearance, portraying Batman, and Tony Robinson as Robin.
Genre: Comedy
Actors: Jim Broadbent, Mackenzie Crook, Nick Frost, Peter Andre, Rachel Stevens, Rowan Atkinson, Simon Pegg, Tony Robinson
Tracy Morgan: Black & Blue (2010)
Tracy Morgan’s first stand-up special on the channel, Black and Blue. Performing at New York City’s Apollo Theater, the 30 Rock star let his demented brand of humor loose on…
The Final Girls (2015)
A young woman grieving the loss of her mother, a famous scream queen from the 1980s, finds herself pulled into the world of her mom’s most famous movie. Reunited, the…
Sassy Pants (2012)
Desperate to get out from under her overprotective mother, a home-schooled teen runs off to live with her dad, and forms a bond with his much-younger boyfriend.
Watching the Detectives (2007)
Neil, a self proclaimed film geek and owner of Gumshoe video, has always been content to live vicariously through his favorite films noir. But when he meets Violet, a real-life…
Lucky (2010)
A documentary about the American lottery and some of the industry’s biggest winners (and losers). Qang is a Vietnamese refugee, whose American dream materializes in the form of $22 million…
Everything Must Disappear (1997)
Robert Millard has based his industrial kingdom – based on all the noise technologies – thanks to his marriage with the wealthy and cantankerous Irene, he blithely cheat for years….
George Carlin: Carlin on Campus (1984)
George Carlin hits the boards with the former Hippie-Dippie Weatherman’s take on Brooklynese pronunciations of the names of sexually transmitted disease (“hoipes”), plus a prayer for the separation of church…
When Harry Met Sally 2 with Billy Crystal and Helen Mirren (2011)
Billy proposes to producers a sequel with (literally) a bite to his classic movie.
Monkey Business (1931)
Four stowaways get mixed up with gangsters while running riot on an ocean liner.