Fortune's Pawn

Fortune's Pawn
Paradox
Winter of 2005 was legendary and Standard Films was there to capture every moment. Filmed on epic snow conditions and unique terrain features, Paradox is a perfect blend of freestyle and big mountain snowboarding. Witness Jeremy Jones' craziest line ever. Check out the most insane helicopter kicker footage ever caught on film. Mads Jonsson breaks the world record for the biggest air in Norway. Explore Russia's untracked big mountain first descents. Paradox isn't a dime a dozen jib flick shot on video. Paradox is snowboarding!
Paradox
Paradox
Brenton Spencer
Homicide detective Sean Nault is a cop on a parallel Earth whose technology is powered exclusively by magic. Sean investigates a baffling series of murders committed by a means he's never seen before: science. With the aid of Lenoir, a member of the ridiculed subculture of "pragmatists" who believe science is more than the stuff of myths & children's stories, and the 130-year-old sorcerer Winston Churchill, Sean uncovers an ominous plot that will lead him to another dimension and the realization that, unless he prevents it, both earths could well be destroyed.
Paradox
Paradox
Stevo Chang, Fran Ervin
After his wife is killed in a hit-and-run accident by a mysterious Hooded Man, Theoretical Physicist Dylan Brandt builds a Quantum Suicide Machine to jump through parallel universes to find another version of his wife. Based on the ancient Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, where a man storms of the Gates of Hades to return his wife to the land of the living, Dylan transverses infinite worlds of the Multi-verse to find his wife. But with every jump, Dylan is thwarted by the efforts of the mysterious Hooded Man, until the rules of physics completely break down, threatening to destroy the universe and everything in it.
Paradox
Paradox
Jeremy Haccoun
Two men are stranded at the bottom of a well. One, with a serious injury to his head, thinks his has fallen in is own back garden in present-day Britain. But the other tells him they are really prisoners in a medieval dungeon. Who is right, and where are they really?
Paradox
