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Star Trek 2.0: Premieres Tonight at 11PM ET/PT on G4. Tune In and Prosper. Watch "Star Trek", the original series, as you've never seen it before with G4's Star Trek 2.0, putting you in command of a Starfleet of interactive Trek features while you watch. For example, "Beam Me Up" is a real-time chat room where you can chat about the episode and see your commentary broadcast live. You can also learn obscure facts, stories, and little-known insider information about the show while you keep an eye on "Trek Stats," an ever-growing tally of classic Star Trek moments (such as Spock saying "illogical" or mounting "Red Shirt" deaths). There's also the "Spock Market" where you can buy (and sell) shares of Kirk or McCoy, and watch a real-time Star Trek Stock Exchange running on the right-hand side of the TV screen showing the gains and losses of each character's stock as they are affected by the events in each episode (e.g. Kirk's stock may increase if he scores with a female character). Star Trek 2.0 premieres tonight at 11PM ET/PT on G4.
Today's IMDb Poll Question Is: Which of the IMDb Top Ten Movies of the 90s is your absolute favorite?
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IMDb Movie of the Day
Shamelessly manipulative, so Hitchcockian it borders on plagiarism, and so creakily plotted you can almost hear the floorboards squeaking before anyone starts walking, What Lies Beneath is also a hell of a lot of fun. Filmed by Robert Zemeckis and most of his Cast Away crew during that film's production shutdown (so Tom Hanks could realistically waste away to almost nothing), this surprise summer hit of 2000 is loaded with all the standard cheap thrills: the suddenly-ringing phone, the mysteriously opening door -- and most intriguingly, a bathtub that somehow magically fills itself. While you're rolling your eyes, though, you'll soon enough find yourself tense beyond belief, just like Claire (Michelle Pfeiffer, gorgeous as always), the wife and mom suffering from empty-nest syndrome. With hunky hubby Norman (Harrison Ford, doing the stoic thing) off at work, she starts spying on the mysterious neighbors, and soon she's obsessing: did the moody husband kill the neurotic wife? Is the wife's ghost trying to send her a message? Well, there is a ghost, and there is a message, but to give away any more would send the fragile plot crashing to the ground, and the less you know, the more fun you'll have. And when you're not jumping out of your seat at the most absurd thing, What Lies Beneath offers a number of stylistic pleasures, as Zemeckis plays with the camera incessantly, indulging in some fab shots utilizing a glass floor (for that true what-lies-beneath feeling) and a harrowing sequence involving Pfeiffer and that menacing bathtub that might have elicited a murmur of approval from Hitchcock himself. - Mark Englehart
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