Showing posts with label prize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prize. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Total Film: The Modern Guide to The Movies Prove that you’re Tim Burton’s biggest fan to win exclusive Frankenweenie prizes!

Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie opens the 2012 London Film Festival on 10 October 2012, and we’ve got an incredible prize to give away to the director’s ultimate fan.

The incredibly lucky winner will collect a money-can’t-buy prize that includes two tickets to see the film at the opening night of the 2012 London Film Festival on 10 October 2012, including two tickets to the LFF after party, and two tickets to the official Frankenweenie press conference.

The winner will also bag a poster signed by the man himself and an exclusive The Science Of Frankenweenie book (this book is not available to the public for sale as it was exclusively produced for the cast and crew). And the winner will also take home some Frankenweenie merchandise, including plush toys, and a soundtrack.

Think you’re Tim Burton’s biggest fan? Head to our competition page now to enter!

But hurry, the competition closes on Sunday 7 October 2012. Terms and conditions apply, see competition page for full details.

Read our Frankenweenie review.

Source: Total Film Competitions

Will you be going to see Frankenweenie? Let us know, below…


Source : totalfilm[dot]com

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Couple sue Fox over their loss on game show ‘Million Dollar Money Drop’ 

A California couple has slapped Fox with a lawsuit claiming producers of a now-canceled quiz show tricked them out of a $580,000 prize.

On the premiere episode of Fox’s “Million Dollar Money Drop” — which ran for 12 episodes from December 2010 to February 2011 — contestants Andrew and Patricia Murray were asked by host Kevin Pollak what the most common computer password is.

They opted for the phrase “Password” and guessed wrong, according to the show.

Now the Murrays allege in a lawsuit filed Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court that the lone computer consulting firm, Imperva, that provided producers with the answer cannot be “considered a preeminent, well-known and reliable source to give a definitive answer to the question.”

-- Don Kaplan


Source : nydailynews[dot]com