We’re anxiously awaiting the September 12, 2008 release of Righteous Kill, which teams up two of the greatest actors of all time, Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. To celebrate, we’ve got a knockout prize package for one lucky winner of our Righetous Kill Giveaway.
We’re giving away 3 truly classic De Niro and Pacino films on DVD : The Godfather, Scarface and Heat. To top it off, we’re throwing in the official Righteous Kill movie poster, as seen in the below image.

Entering the contest is simple. You’ve got to be 18 years of age and provide your name and a valid email address (only used to contact winner) below. The winner will be contacted via email and will have 7 days to claim their prize. Make sure you get your entry in before September 19, 2008 11:59PM PST!
Movie Synopsis:
Academy Award® winners Robert De Niro (Raging Bull) and Al Pacino (Scent of a Woman) star as a pair of veteran New York City police detectives on the trail of a vigilante serial killer in the adrenaline fueled psychological thriller Righteous Kill, directed by Jon Avnet (Red Corner, Fried Green Tomatoes) and written by Russell Gewirtz (Inside Man). The cast also features hip-hop superstar Curtis Jackson (Get Rich or Die Tryin’).
After 30 years as partners in the pressure cooker environment of the NYPD, highly decorated Detectives David Fisk and Thomas Cowan should be ready for retirement, but aren’t. Before they can hang up their badges, they are called in to investigate the murder of a notorious pimp, which appears to have ties to a case they solved years before.
Like the original murder, the victim is a suspected criminal whose body is found accompanied by a four line poem justifying the killing. When additional crimes take place, it becomes clear the detectives are looking for a serial killer, one who targets criminals that have fallen through the cracks of the judicial system. His mission is to do what the cops can’t do on their own—take the culprits off the streets for good. The similarities between the recent killings and their earlier case raise a nagging question: Did they put the wrong man behind bars?













I can dig it
i’m in