Not exact matches
Also inside... - Retroinspection: SNES - Perfect 10 games -
Classic Moments: The Legend Of Zelda: A Link To The Past - Ultimate Guide to Axelay - Spotlight On Street Fighter II Turbo - The Making of Super Metroid -
Classic Moments: Wild
Guns - Mode 7 heaven -
Classic Moments: Contra III: The Alien Wars - The Making of Super Mario World -
Classic Moments: Super Turrican - RPG heaven: The greatest SNES RPGs of all time -
Classic Moments: The Legend Of The Mystical Ninja - Spotlight on Super Mario Kart - The Making of Super Star Wars trilogy -
Classic Moments: F - Zero -
Top 25 SNES games
The 1962 film, still chilling today, had all the ingredients for success: accomplished director J. Lee Thompson (who also made Peck's 1962 adventure
classic, «The
Guns of Navarone»), a near - perfect cast,
top - notch material (James R. Webb's screenplay is based on John D. MacDonald's novel «The Executioners»), a Bernard Herrmann score, cinematography by Sam Leavitt, art direction by Robert Boyle and editing by George Tomasini.
It is an impressive feat, as Spring often seems on the brink of flinging itself into orbit at any minute, but the soulful and engaging turns from leads Lou Taylor Pucci and Nadia Hilker, and beautiful Italian vistas (fully taken advantage of through some gorgeous
top down helicopter establishing shots) and some real confidence from Benson and Moorhead to stick to their
guns makes Spring a unique and satisfying twist on both
classic romance and old school body horror.
Competitively, players can take to the skies for a
classic team death - match style affair, partake in a airfield raid or battle for
top gun via tournament play.