Gogos hunt


Gogo's are still proving a popular search phrase for this website so i thought i'd put links to all of the bits on amazon

Series 1 - Single Pack - 10 Packs + 1 Free Pack - Sticker Album

Series 2 (Evolution) - Single Pack - 10 Packs - Sticker Album - Poster

Series 3 (Explorer) - Single Pack - 10 Packs - Sticker Album

Gogo's Crazy Bones 'Advance Special Edition' Metal Tin

The Gogo's Crazy Bones 'Advance Special Edition' Metal Tin is the perfect place to store all of your most treasured Gogo's Crazy Bones! The tin contains 10 brand new 'Advance Special Edition' Gogo's Crazy Bones characters which cannot be found anywhere else! Every collector will want these!

Gogo's Crazy Bones Official Handbook

Grab your Gogo's and get ready to enter a whole new world of Gogo's Crasy Bones fun! The Gogo's Crazy Bones Official Handbook is filled with profiles of all your favourite Bones, brilliant things to do and amazing games to play! The Gogo's Crazy Bones Official Handbook is the book you need to call yourself a true Gogo's fan! Gogo?s Crazy Bones Official Handbook makes a great stocking filler for every Gogo's Crazy Bones collector!

James Bond Blu-Ray collection


Amazon have reduced the price of the James Bond Blu-ray collection to just £49.97.

The pack contains 6 films from the collection :-

Dr No
For Your Eyes Only
From Russia With Love
Die Another Day
Live And Let Die
Thunderball

Planet Earth Bluray


Planet Earth [Blu-ray] has been reduced to just £20.97.

This is the perfect example of what a hidefinition picture should look like, it is simply stunning.

From the team behind the multi-winning Blue Planet comes this epic series celebrating the Earth as never before. Embracing the world’s incredible landscapes and fascinating wildlife, Planet Earth takes the definitive look at the diversity of our planet.

Four years in the making, with a budget of unprecedented proportions, Planet Earth has stretched the boundaries of natural history television. High definition photography, revolutionary ultra-high speed cameras and detailed images from the air enabled the series to capture the most amazing footage ever seen.

This stunning television experience combines rare action, unimaginable scale, impossible locations and intimate moments with our planet’s best-loved, wildest and most elusive creatures. From the highest mountains to the deepest rivers, this blockbuster series takes you on an unforgettable journey through the challenging seasons and the daily struggle for survival in Earths most extreme habitats. Prepare to be overwhelmed by the beauty of Planet Earth.

Including: Natural World: Desert Lions & Snow Leopards
The BBC’s flagship natural history series Natural World has consistently produced amazing wildlife stories with breathtaking imagery. These two gems from the series feature incredible footage of these rare, beautiful and magnificent big cats.

High School Musical 3 soundtrack


High School Musical 3 (Senior Year) Soundtrack is now just £6.98

Track Listings
1. Now Or Never - High School Musical Cast
2. Right Here Right Now - High School Musical Cast/Vanessa Hudgens/Zac Efron
3. I Want It All - Tisdale, Ashley & High School Musical Cast/Lucas Grabeel
4. Can I Have This Dance - High School Musical Cast/Vanessa Hudgens/Zac Efron
5. Night To Remember - High School Musical Cast
6. Just Wanna Be With You - High School Musical Cast
7. Boys Are Back - Bleu, Corbin & High School Musical Cast/Zac Efron
8. Walk Away - High School Musical Cast/Vanessa Hudgens
9. Scream - High School Musical Cast/Zac Efron
10. Senior Year Spring Musical - High School Musical Cast
11. We're All In This Together - High School Musical Cast
12. High School Musical - High School Musical Cast
13. Boys Are Back - US5

Micro Scalextric - Street Mayhem Set


Micro Scalextric - Street Mayhem Set is reduced to just £26.09, order now before the price increases on the 22nd January 2009.

Choose your challengers and get ready to race!

An exciting set with three great street cars so drivers can choose which 2 cars go head to head! Set includes Nissan 350Z, Audi TT, Porsche Boxter, chicane, straight and curved track and barriers, powerbase, hand throttles and transformer.

Age: 4 years +

Features
3 cars to choose from
Includes Audi TT, Nissan 350Z and Porsche Boxter
Includes straight and curved track
Complete with hand controllers, transformer and powerbase.

Video Creation Station


Video Creation Station reduced to just £17.39 from £99.99 (8th Jan to 22nd Jan only)

Create your very own videos with the awesome Video Creation Station! Put yourself in any scene or movie backdrop!

Plug the camera into a USB port on your computer. Set up the tripod and adjust it to height. Put up the green screen backdrop and jump in front of the camera to shoot your ideal moves for your video! Make sound effects or put music on in the background - create your very own sound track, because there's a microphone to pick up any audio! The light on the camera will help brighten your video images!

Once you've shot your video now you can have fun with the editing software!

Collect files from your computer, the internet and bonus CD! Using the easy editing tools on the software CD, cut out pictures and eliminate backgrounds. Add objects, images and new backdrops. Use the text and drawing tools to customise your images and also insert music and sound effects!

When you're happy with your final movie you can then upload it to the internet, email it to friends or burn a DVD! - home movies make great gifts for friends and family!

Video Creation Station is a wonderful way to encourage creativity and great for kids interested in making and staring in their own short films! You could be the next Steven Spielberg, Peter Jackon or you might even discover an acting talent your never knew you had!

THETOYSHOP.COM SAYS: 'Remove as many creases as possible from your green screen to get the best shots and make editing easier!'

Please note: Camera and software require a computer to function. (See below for computer requirements.)

iTeddy v2 £26.09


iTeddy v2 Now just £26.09 8th Jan - 22nd Jan 2009 Only.

A wonderful interactive cuddly bear with inbuilt media player!

This awesome I-Teddy allows children to watch cartoons, play music, games and so much more! I-Teddy has built in speakers or you can plug in headphones to listen! There are fun games which will help develop learning and the opportunity to view holiday pictures! The menu system is easy to navigate!

This adorable I-Teddy comes with episodes from the popular TV shows Roary the Racing Car and Fifi and the Flowertots!

The personal media player is detachable and can be used in isolation without the bear! Use the USB cable to hook him up to the computer! There is a 512Mb memory for you to store tunes, photos and more! This memory can be expanded with the SD memory slot! I-Teddy even comes with his very own t-shirt which can cover the screen on his tummy!

Keeps young ones entertained for hours allowing them to decide how they want to play and interact with iTeddy! Great for on the move, in the car, bed time or anytime! Kids will love this soft teddy which they can hug and use as an electronic console! The cuddly way to watch, learn and play!

Please note: Computer and internet access is needed to use me!

Fisher-Price Smart Cycle - Physical Learning Game System LESS THAN HALF PRICE


Fisher-Price Smart Cycle - Physical Learning Game System will be reduced to just £43.49 from tomorrow 8th January 2009 for 2 weeks as part of a VAT free promotion.

A revolution in indoor play! It's a stationary bike, a gaming system and a learning centre - all rolled into one!

It plugs straight into your TV and as your child pedals, favourite character friends guide them through games, learning discoveries and even exciting races. Keep them active even when the sun's not shining - watch as they improve their bike riding skills (hand/eye coordination). Multiple levels of play for different ages and stages! Includes Learning Adventure game cartridge, plus use the joystick for plenty of extra games and activities.

Baja - Edge of Control Playstation 3 £9.85


Baja Off-road: Conquer the toughest terrain Mother Nature has to offer in the definitive off-road endurance challenge.
Grit and Glory: Overpower hill-climb, circuit, and rally races on the path to Baja supremacy.
Supercharged Vehicles: Harness the horsepower of over 40 elite Trophy Trucks, 4x4's and Buggies across eight varied vehicle classes.
Epic Open Worlds: Stunning vistas, sheer cliffs, and towering mountains fill over 100 square miles of drive-to-horizon landscape.
Horizontal Racing: Suspension, torque and horsepower are perfectly balanced to create the ultimate edge-of-control racing experience.
Customization: Fine-tune the roar of your off-road machine with over 200 authentic vehicle parts.
Multiplayer: Power past the competition in 4-player split screen and 8-player online racing.

From the core founding members of the MX vs. ATV: Untamed comes the ultimate off-road racing experience: BAJA
. Conquer the toughest terrain Mother Nature has to offer and build the ultimate off-road vehicle in the most realistic, edge-of-control racing game ever created. Combining the best elements of the real-world sport with the right balance of arcade fun, BAJA transports players to the epic open worlds and unforgiving terrain found at the pinnacle of off-road racing. Stunning visuals, vertical environments, and unpredictable terrain are crossed in over 100 square miles of drive-to-horizon landscape. Master hill-climb, circuit, and rally races to earn career sponsorships on the path to off-road supremacy. Harness the horsepower of elite Trophy Trucks, 4x4's and Buggies to finally compete in the definitive off-road endurance challenge, the Baja.

Classic Dunst at discount prices


If your a fan of Kirsten Dunst you can pick up some great DVDs at discount prices this month courtesy of the Amazon Sale

Get Over It [2001] - £3.98

Get Over It has one of the most inventive title sequences for years: glum Berke (Ben Foster), dumped by his girlfriend, walks down the street oblivious to the singers, brass band and cheerleaders who are performing the title song behind him. Unfortunately the rest of the film does not live up to it's opening promise, but along the way writer R Lee Fleming Jr and director Tommy O'Haver create a pleasant enough adolescent, romantic comedy with some fine gags.

An accident-prone date's demolition of a sushi restaurant is a splendidly engineered piece of slapstick and Berke's permissive parents (Swoozy Kurz and Ed Begley Jr), who work as sex education experts, offer scene-stealing performances. Berke's pursuit of "his" Alison leads him into the school play--a musical version of A Midsummer Night's Dream. Kirsten Dunst plays the sweet-natured girl waiting for him to see sense, and manages to makes something charming out of a rather dull part. Martin Short overdoes things as the show's writer/director.

On the DVD: Get Over It is presented on disc in widescreen 2.35:1 and with Dolby Digital 5.0 sound, which does full justice to the musical numbers at the film's climax. It comes with an extended outtakes sequence--including many different versions of Martin Short's scenes, some deleted scenes and alternate takes and cast bios. --Roz Kaveney

Bring It On [2000] - £3.98

An unexpected box office hit in the late summer of 2000, Bring It On is a smart, snappy teen comedy that bristles with good cheer (literally) and lively, down-to-earth characters. Sunny, happy Torrance (Kirsten Dunst) is the new leader of the Toros, the cheerleading squad of Rancho Carne, an affluent San Diego high school that has lousy football players but one hell of a cheerleading team. National champions, they're the ones who bring in the bodies to the football games with their award-winning moves and sassy grace, and they're poised to take their sixth national cheer title. Torrance's new reign as cheer queen, though, is cut short when she discovers that her snotty, duplicitous forerunner was regularly stealing routines from the East Compton Clovers, the hip-hop influenced cheerleaders of a poor inner city school, and passing them off as the original work of the Toros. Scrambling to come up with a new routine for the Toros--and do the right thing by giving the Clovers their due--Torrance butts heads with the proud and understandably wary Isis (Gabrielle Union), the leader of the Clovers, who wants nothing to do with a rich blonde white girl, but does want to get her squad to the championships. Problem is, only one team can take home the national title. Who's it gonna be? The story may be fairly predictable (who's going to win the big championship?), but director Peyton Reed and screenwriter Jessica Bendinger have fleshed out their characters with formidable strength and provided them with sharp dialogue. Dunst is a radiant comedienne, projecting warmth, determination, sincerity, and a sublime airheadedness, and Union is an impressive dancer and counterpart to Dunst, matching her admirably despite her limited onscreen time. An excellent young supporting cast rounds out the film, most notably Eliza Dushku (Faith of Buffy the Vampire Slayer) and Jesse Bradford (Steven Soderbergh's King of the Hill) as siblings new to Rancho Carne, who become Torrance's best friend and potential new boyfriend, respectively. All in all, a pleasantly surprising and intelligent teen movie. --Mark Englehart, Amazon.com

Spider-Man Trilogy [2002] - £9.98

The first Spider-Man introduces us to Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire), and covers the genesis of the infamous superhero. Set against Willem Dafoe’s Green Goblin, it’s a deft, impressive and entertaining blockbuster, albeit one that takes a little longer than you’d like to get motoring.

Spider-Man 2 is the business, though. This is the one with Alfred Molina’s stunning Doctor Octopus, although he has to share the screen with the title character contending with his dual life, and the effect on his relationship with Mary-Jane (Kirsten Dunst). It could have gone wrong, but it’s so tightly put together that it’s one of the very best blockbusters of recent times.

Spider-Man 3, inevitably, can’t quite match the standard set, but you can’t fault it for ambitious. Mixing in Topher Grace as Venom, Thomas Haden Church as Sandman and James Franco as the new Green Goblin, it’s a lot to fit into one film, and that’s what bogs things down. However, when it does hit its stride, Spider-man 3 is a rip-roaring ride in its own right. --Jon Foster

Little Women [1995] - £4.98

The flaws are easily forgiven in this beautiful version of Louisa May Alcott's novel. A stirring look at life in New England during the Civil War, Little Women is a triumph for all involved. We follow one family as they split into the world, ending up with the most independent, the outspoken Jo (Winona Ryder). This time around, the dramatics and conclusions fall into place a little too well, instead of finding life's little accidents along the way. Everyone now looks a bit too cute and oh, so nice. As the matron, Marmee, Susan Sarandon kicks the film into a modern tone, creating a movie alive with a great feminine sprit. Kirsten Dunst (Interview with the Vampire) has another showy role. The young ensemble cast cannot be faulted, with Ryder beginning the movie in a role akin to light comedy and crescendos to a triumphant end worthy of an Oscar. --Doug Thomas

The Virgin Suicides [2000] - £5.97

Sophia Coppola's alternately dreamy and unsettling film about five suburban sisters who all mysteriously kill themselves (the voice-over tells you as much in the first five minutes) casts a witchy spell that lingers like drugstore perfume on a hot day. Beautifully adapted from Jeffrey Eugenides' icily perfect novel (perhaps the best, if not only, work of fiction narrated exclusively in the first-person plural), the 1970s-set film is constructed as the collective memory of the neighbourhood boys who worshipped the beautiful Lisbon girls, blonde sylph-like teen siblings whose beauty and self-destruction still haunts and perplexes the narrators, now grown men.
Why did they do it? Maybe because their Catholic mother (Kathleen Turner, magnificently clenched) locked them all up when near-youngest daughter Lux (the exquisite Kirsten Dunst) stayed out all night after the prom. Maybe it was due to a kind of pubertal feminine hysteria, set off by the first suicide of the youngest daughter Cecilia. Maybe they were infected by a more general malaise (the film fairly teams with images of dying elm trees, infested lakes and fetid nastiness). Or maybe they will just never know what it's like, in the words of Cecilia, to be a 13-year-old girl.

Coppola has a canny eye for 1970s kitsch and the tawdry, touching magic totems of girlhood (tampons, bright bikinis, half-used make-up) and coaxes terrific deadpan performances both from the younger cast and the veterans. (James Woods as the nerdy Lisbon patriarch is as delightfully cast against type as Turner.) For all the languid gloom, there is great wit in the observation of 1970s decor and playful touches abound: airbrushed flashbacks like vintage Timotei commercials; inserts to reveal Lux has the name of her date magic markered on her knickers; teeth and eyes that sparkle unnaturally with post-production tricks. The soundtrack hits just the right wistful ironic note with a mix of period tunes by Todd Rungren, Gilbert O'Sullivan and the like, complemented by the electronica of French pop band Air (whose standalone efforts for the film are also available on a separate CD. A film as unforgettable as first love. --Leslie Felperin

Wimbledon [2004] - £4.48

Professional tennis makes an unlikely but surprisingly effective backdrop for a lively romantic comedy in Wimbledon. Peter Cort (Paul Bettany, Master and Commander), once ranked 11th in the world, has slipped to 119th and is heading into his last Wimbledon tournament when he runs into Lizzie Bradbury (Kirsten Dunst, The Virgin Suicides, Spider-Man Trilogy), a rising star. The two strike up a whirlwind romance that gives his game new life--but she insists it's going to be nothing but a passing fling. Their affair heats up and Cort finds himself steadily rising through the competition while Lizzie stumbles... Of course, the ending is never really in doubt--but Bettany is a unique cinematic presence, pale and lithe, doubtful of life but also hungry for it. Thanks to him and the ever-engaging Dunst, Wimbledon is funnier, more suspenseful, and more touching that anyone might expect, turning a conventional flick into a genuine charmer. --Bret Fetzer

Elizabethtown [2005] - £2.98

Elizabethtown has all of the elements of a great Cameron Crowe movie, but none of the Cameron Crowe vision that made Almost Famous work. It's mostly a series of sweet moments, each capped with the right song at the right time; in fact, the soundtrack is the real star of the movie, and the right song is all there is to piece together a film that is much less than the sum of its parts.
From the start of Elizabethtown, big contrasts are evoked: death and life, success and failure are side by side, so we're told. When the movie starts, Drew Baylor (Orlando Bloom) is experiencing failure and death in spades: the shoe he spent eight years designing for Mercury (a thinly-veiled copy of Nike) has been recalled, costing his company $972 million dollars. On the verge of a suicide attempt, he learns his father has died, and Drew flies to Kentucky to retrieve the body to Oregon for cremation. On the red-eye to Louisville he meets Claire Colburn (Kirsten Dunst), a perky flight attendant with a charming flair for cute lines ("I'm impossible to forget, but I’m hard to remember," she chirps). Once in Elizabethtown, Drew tries to plan a memorial while dealing with relatives who have their own agenda in addition to his manic family back in Oregon, all while facing the reality that in a few days he'll be known nationally as one of his industry's most legendary failures. Yet still he manages to connect with Claire on an all-night cell phone conversation--complete with the requisite watching of the sunrise--and to strike up a furtive romance.

So we now have death and life side by side. But despite these dramatic shifts, what sets up to be a roller coaster ride of a film flattens out to a milquetoast middle ground with no real life of its own. Drew Baylor has suffered two tragic personal losses in the course of one day, but you wouldn't know it from Bloom's lethargic performance. There's not much to Claire either. Her whole character is made up mostly of cutesy quotable lines and mysterious little smirks. In the end, Elizabethtown is a film that doesn't know what it wants to be, and unfortunately there's no payoff, other than a few memorable lines and a great soundtrack.--

You can also preorder her new film How To Lose Friends And Alienate People on Blu ray for just £14.98.

How To Lose Friends And Alienate People may just be the first true British film--and a splendid one at that--to be set on American soil. The fearless actor Simon Pegg plays Sidney Young, a Fleet Street hatchet writer tapped to come to the States to join the literati, and glitterati, at a big, fat, glossy magazine--every resemblance of which to Vanity Fair is strictly intentional. Sidney is possibly the most annoying man in the Western world, tilting at nonexistent windmills. His character calls to mind many of the hapless charmers played by Hugh Grant--but Pegg, without Grant's raffish good looks, comes across as simply hapless. Which is perfect casting, since Sidney is supposed to be enormously aggravating, especially when he first lands in New York. In his first few days in the city, Sidney puts off the first magazine colleague he met (Kirsten Dunst, in a top-flight comic turn), wears a wildly inappropriate T-shirt on his first day of work, spritzes fast food onto the designer white suit of a relative of the publisher, and picks up a tranny hooker. And things go downhill from there. On his first magazine assignment, Sidney, checking captions for a photo page, calls a powerful publicist. "Is he the fat one?" Sidney asks the publicist about one of her clients. Silence. "Well, is he the one with the wonky eye, then?" Pegg is a scream as Sidney, playing quite a different role than his starring one in Shaun of the Dead. Dunst is delicate but steely, and her comedic timing, under the deft direction of Robert B. Weide (Curb Your Enthusiasm), is spot on. Great supporting work, too, by editor Jeff Bridges, whose enthrallment to the power elite, and silver mane, channel Graydon Carter; by Gillian Anderson, as a take-no-prisoners publicist; and by Megan Fox, a starlet cast as a bosom-heaving Mother Teresa. Sidney, and the film, will win you over, with a lot of laughter along the way.--A.T. Hurley

Synopsis
Names may have been changed to protect the innocent--and the not-so innocent--but this comedy adapts Toby Young's biting memoir about his struggles as a Vanity Fair employee. Brilliant Brit Simon Pegg (Hot Fuzz) stars as Young's alter ego, while Jeff Bridges is a Graydon Carter-esque magazine editor.

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