Scooby-Doo: Agence toutou risques, vol. 2 : Le fantôme de la télé
12th Apr 07
⭐98.00%
: 6
The Chimes
19th Apr 99
⭐70.00%
: 0
Amanuda Bhayam
14th Jan 21
⭐85.00%
: 0
The Man in the Overcoat
1st Jan 79
⭐80.00%
: 2
Good-bye Love
9th Nov 33
⭐55.00%
: 2
Buddhism, the Unspeakable Truth
13th Sep 22
⭐80.00%
: 2
Mandarin Peel
9th Aug 09
⭐60.00%
: 0
Tokyo Videos of Horror 3
6th Jul 12
⭐60.00%
: 0
Bir Ana Bir Kız
1st Mar 75
⭐60.00%
: 1
Wolves, Pigs & Men
26th Aug 64
⭐81.00%
: 2
Shark in a Bottle
12th Jun 00
⭐62.00%
: 1
The Sun Never Sets
31st Oct 20
⭐100.00%
: 0
Jeromín
19th Dec 53
⭐90.00%
: 1
Taxi Driver Stories
14th Aug 07
⭐60.00%
: 0
Create with Love ❤️ by Zaw Myint
November 16
⭐70.00% /
16th Nov 15 /
TV Movie, Documentary
After 32 years of heartache, bitterness and despair, it took just seconds for Guus Hiddink to exude a rare sense of calmness in the Socceroos dressing room. Four years prior to the now famous night on November 16, 2005, a fragile Australian team had been bullied off the park by Uruguay in its quest to finally break its World Cup drought. Intimidated from the moment they touched down in Montevideo in 2001, spat on by locals and then roared off the park by 60,000 manic fans in the Estadio Centenario, they had barely stood a chance. Now older, more mature and — with Hiddink in charge — more professional, things would be different four years on. That change in mentality flows through November 16, a gripping documentary from Richard Bayliss and Ben Coonan that depicts the Socceroos’ journey from West Germany in 1974 to the moment John Aloisi’s crisp spot kick struck the back of Fabian Carini’s net.