As Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) wash Dean's Impala, the brothers discuss their lack of success in finding the Darkness. Sam proposes taking a case in Quaker Valley, Oregon, where a local sheriff was found mauled in the woods. Believing it might be a werewolf attack, and wanting to get out on the road again, they decide to investigate despite a lack of solid evidence. On the road to Oregon, Castiel (Misha Collins) calls, telling Sam and Dean that he can't find any information on the case. Trying to help him recover from his experience in the previous episode, Sam and Dean insist that he rest, with Sam offering Castiel his room and Netflix to keep him occupied.
Despite Sam's objections, Dean pulls over to a roadhouse that he had an affair at several years ago. Telling Dean to have fun without him, Sam says that he is going to do more research on the case. In the morning, Dean discovers Sam with a girl, Piper, in the car, who departs after an awkward meeting. As she leaves, she accidentally drops her hairpin in the backseat. Teasing Sam about his one-night stand, Dean puts on Bob Seger's "Night Moves" as the brothers drive away from the roadhouse. Later, the two discuss their opinions about settling down; Dean says that one-night stands are all that hunters can ever have, while Sam still thinks that they might be able to achieve something more meaningful. Sam falls asleep in the backseat of the car, and seemingly awakens to the sight of a younger version of his father, John Winchester, sitting in the driver's seat. John tells Sam that he is there to deliver a message: that the Darkness is coming and that they are the only people that can stop it. Sam tells John that he needs to provide some clue as to how to stop the Darkness, but John merely states that "God helps those who help themselves." Sensing that John is not who he says, Sam asks who he really is, but before he can answer, Sam is woken by Dean. Sam tells Dean about his vision, but Dean merely dismisses it as a dream, telling him that he also frequently dreams about their father. Sam remains unconvinced, believing that it may be a message from God.
When Sam and Dean finally reach their location, they discover the corpse of the sheriff to be mauled and his heart missing. Dean coins the term "were-pire" to describe the creature that attacked the sheriff, while Sam gets a copy of the report from the sheriff's replacement, Deputy Donnelly. Donnelly recommends a restaurant to the brothers, who decide to check it out. When they get there, they discover that it is valet-parking only, and Dean is reluctant to surrender the car to the valet, Jessie. Jessie takes the car apparently to be parked, but leaves the restaurant and cruises in the Impala with her friend, who leaves her purse in the car. When she returns to the restaurant, Dean, oblivious to her adventure, grudgingly praises her for taking good care of the car. Dean takes Sam to the sheriff's office to ask if his wife had seen anything suspicious, while Dean returns to the area where the body was found, feeling something is not right with the crime scene photos. Dean is contacted by Castiel who tells him that the creature that attacked the sheriff might be a Whisper, and the only way to kill it is to shoot him with silver bullets or beheading. After Dean tells Castiel that he has discovered that the crime scene was staged, deputy sheriff Donnelly stops by and, after apparently friendly chat, attacks Dean. As Castiel explains the lore behind Whispers, Dean and the deputy fight around and on top of the Impala, until Dean decapitates him. Finding the sheriff's head to still be alive, Dean puts it in the freezer in the backseat and send a picture to Castiel for further research. Dean calls Sam, who says that he got jumped and managed to escape, taking the unconscious Mrs. Markham with him. As Dean goes to pick him up, he drops the machete that he used to decapitate the sheriff under the front seat.
Castiel calls back to inform them that the creature is a Nachzehrer, a ghoul/vampire-like creature. The only way to kill is by placing a Charon's Obul (a coin in ancient Greek mythology) or a copper coin in its mouth, to serve as currency to take it to the Underworld, and sever its head. He also adds that if they kill the alpha, the rest of the pack will return to being human. Sam and Dean realize that they need to find pennies minted pre-1982, as after that they were no longer made of copper. Sam goes to a market to get change, while in the backseat Mrs. Markham regains consciousness. Revealed to be a Nachzehrer, and that she killed her husband, she knocks Dean unconscious and drives off with him, abandoning Sam. She drives to the body of the deputy sheriff Donnelly and reunites him with his head, and he drives off with Dean and Mrs. Markham in the car.
When Dean regains consciousness, Donnelly tells him that he is building an army to fight the Darkness, who will kill everyone unless stopped. Dean finds Piper's hairpin and unlocks his handcuffs, and grabs the alpha, causing the car to smash into a roadblock. He finds Jessie's friend's purse in the car, which has pennies in it, places a coin in the alpha's mouth. Using the machete he dropped earlier and the door of the Impala, he decapitates the alpha and cures all of the transformed Nachzehrers. With Mrs. Markham's humanity restored, she asks Dean to help her find her children, to which he obliges, figuring Sam is somewhere nearby. Returning to the former Nachzehrer nest, where all of the creatures have returned to human form, Dean picks Sam up in the car as they discuss the impact the Darkness is having on monsters as well as humans. Agreeing to stop the Darkness, Dean tells Sam that they need to go home, to which Sam replies, "We are home," affectionately patting the Impala. As the brothers drive back to the bunker, "Night Moves" once again comes on the radio as the screen fades to black.
Rowena (Ruth Connell) is gathering witches to join her new coven dubbed Mega Coven. She also discovers that Crowley (Mark A. Sheppard) is alive after the witches reveal a recent event. When they try to leave, Rowena kills them.
Castiel (Misha Collins) informs Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) about the Darkness. Sam then suggest they seek Metatron, as he was God's Scribe. Crowley is notified of Rowena and orders her death. He is also shown to be guarding Amara (Gracyn Shinyei) to teach her about the world. While on a restaurant, Rowena and two witches are attacked by Crowley's demons but Rowena evades her death attempt.
An angel and a demon reunite in a pub and begin talking about the situations in Heaven and Hell, comparing it to God and Lucifer. Sam and Dean locate Rowena's location after a witch calls a spell. However, she only has Nadya's Codex and not the Book of the Damned and Rowena reveals to Dean that she contracted Sam to kill Crowley. Castiel is gone as he is still under Rowena's spell.
Castiel goes after someone but Sam and Dean manage to stop him in time and force Rowena to undo the spell. However, she escapes. Meanwhile, Crowley realizes Amara is out of control as she ingests too many souls and is shocked to see she's now a teenager.
Following the events of the previous episode, the Liars and their company find themselves trapped when Hanna (Ashley Benson) is kidnapped by "A.D.", the new stalker. Spencer (Troian Bellisario), teams up with Toby (Keegan Allen) in order to find clues inside the Lost Woods Resort, while Caleb (Tyler Blackburn) and Mona (Janel Parrish) investigate Mary Drake (Andrea Parker). Aria (Lucy Hale) and Ezra (Ian Harding) investigate Alison's house, while hiding from Elliott (Huw Collins). When "A.D." send a message with a photo, alerting that they only have 24 hours to save Hanna, the group get jeopardized and run against time, trying to find Charlotte's real killer—the only thing "A.D." wants most. Spencer later has a mysterious and particular conversation with Mary, who reveals that she already had seen Spencer's whole family.
Meanwhile, Emily (Shay Mitchell) goes to Welby State Psychiatric Hospital to see Alison (Sasha Pieterse), who is blaming herself for something. Worried, Emily drives to Alison's house and finds the sweater that a blonde girl was using the night Charlotte died. Emily gives the sweater to the group and Caleb flees, giving it to "A.D." in hopes of saving Hanna. Hanna has a dream with Spencer and later she uses her strength to run away from the place she was trapped inside. After running in the woods, Hanna finds Mary in a car.
In the end, Elliott applies an injection on Alison, revealing himself as a bad person to Alison and that he knows that Alison "killed" Charlotte.
Kumail, an Uber driver in Chicago, is a struggling stand-up comedian with a one-man show about his Pakistani American background. His immigrant parents want him to take the LSAT and continuously set him up with young single Pakistani women, expecting that he will follow their example of an arranged marriage, but he is uninterested.
After a show, Kumail has a one-night stand with Emily, a white psychology student, and they begin an unexpected relationship. Kumail does not tell his family, fearful they will disown him. After five months, Emily finds photos of the young women Kumail's parents have set him up with. When he tells her he does not know if they have a future, she breaks up with him.
Kumail gets a call in the middle of the night from Emily's friend who tells him that Emily has been hospitalized; she has a serious lung infection and must be immediately placed in an induced coma. Pretending he’s her husband, he signs the permission form for her to be put into a coma and then calls her parents, Beth and Terry. Aware of their daughter's messy breakup with Kumail, they tell him he is not needed, but Kumail stays and the three become closer as they deal with Emily's illness. Beth and Terry attend one of Kumail's stand-up gigs, during which a racist audience member heckles Kumail, causing Beth to defend him.
Surgery is ineffective and the infection spreads to Emily's kidneys. Beth wants to transfer Emily to a different hospital, but Kumail and Terry disagree. Beth and Terry argue, and Terry stays at Kumail's apartment. Terry reveals that he cheated on Beth before and regrets it.
Kumail's parents visit, angry that he is not taking their marriage suggestions seriously. Kumail tells them that he is no longer a practicing Muslim, does not want an arranged marriage, and reveals his relationship with Emily. His parents disown him. Immediately before taking the stage for an audition for the Montreal Comedy Festival, Kumail learns that the infection has reached Emily's heart. Distraught, Kumail tearfully recounts his fears about Emily's condition and fails the audition.
When Kumail mentions that Emily had an ankle injury that was slow to heal, the doctors realize she doesn’t have an infection but has adult-onset Still's disease, a serious but treatable autoimmune disorder. Emily wakes from her coma and, still pained from their breakup, Emily tells Kumail to leave. Nevertheless, Beth invites Kumail to Emily's homecoming party. Kumail tries to make up with Emily, but she refuses, not wanting to worsen Kumail's relationship with his family.
Kumail decides to move to New York City with two comedian friends. He tells his family about his plans and refuses to allow them to reject him. Emily discovers a video on YouTube of Kumail's disastrous audition and, realizing her own feelings, goes to find him after his show. Before she can explain, he tells her he is moving. Emily tells him she appreciates everything he did for her while she was in the coma and wishes him well in New York.
As Kumail prepares to depart, his parents visit. His father tells him they are still angry, but gives him a dish of his favorite food and asks him to stay in touch. As Kumail performs in New York, he is heckled by someone in the crowd; he sees that it is Emily. During the credits, photos of the real Kumail and Emily's wedding, which is attended by Kumail's family, are shown.
Nella Larsen introduces the educated mixed-race protagonist, Helga Crane, who struggles to find her identity in a world of racialized crisis in the 1920s. The novel begins with Helga teaching at a southern black school in Naxos which is meant to be a fictional mirror of the Tuskegee Institute. Helga is the daughter of a Danish mother, who died when she was an adolescent, and a West Indian father, who is absent. Her early years were spent with her Danish mother and White step-father who loathed her, and there began her torn relationship with her split identity. The novel gives us a glimpse into the dichotomy of biracial identity and the divergence into two vastly different worlds as the protagonist travels through uniquely different cultural spaces from the 1920s Jazz Age Harlem to Copenhagen, Denmark.
While teaching in Naxos, Helga Crane suffers from social angst as she is discontented with the social uplift philosophy delivered by a white preacher. The theme of mainstream white influence is further developed throughout the novel. She is repelled by the subjugate demeanor of her superiors with consideration to their attempts to whitewash her black counterparts and she criticizes the Booker T. Washington-inspired sermon that reinforces racial segregation and warns black students that striving for social equality will lead them to become avaricious. This incites her first endeavor of escapism where she quits her job and moves to Chicago. There, her white maternal uncle, now married to a bigoted woman, shuns her. The inimical encounter instigates her move to Harlem.
When in Harlem, Helga Crane becomes the secretary to a refined, but often hypocritical, black middle-class woman who is obsessed with the "race problem". She is then launched into her third hankering to flee. Crane visits her maternal aunt in Copenhagen. Although she enjoys the lavishness of her new voyage, she is treated as a highly desirable racial exotic which forces her to return to New York City. Close to a mental breakdown, Crane happens onto a store-front revival and has a charismatic religious experience. After marrying the preacher who converted her, she moves with him to the rural Deep South. There she is disillusioned by the people's adherence to religion. In each of her moves, Crane fails to find fulfillment. She is looking for more than how to integrate her mixed ancestry. She expresses complex feelings about what she and her friends consider genetic differences between races.
Throughout the development of the novel, though driven by the search for racial identity, Helga also rejects intimate relationships with every man she encounters at each destination. It isn't until she fully indulges in an intimate relationship that she is forced to exist in one space (Deep South) and becomes stuck.
Jack Samms' evening started normal enough. But then the mysterious masked stranger, known as Trick, pays him a visit. Within minutes, Jack is faced with a ticking clock after Trick reveals that Jack's estranged wife and her lover are buried in a wooden box - and will be out of oxygen in 75 minutes. With two cops hot on his trail, Jack must try to avoid being framed for his wife's murder while under Trick's constant watch. When a pay-off to Trick goes wrong, Jack must engage in a dangerous game of cat and mouse with the masked stranger in order to save his wife... and himself.
Barone Luigi Fontana is a rich and stingy producer of fine wines, as well as president of the amateur football team of Cerignola who, to crown a triumphant championship, is about to be promoted. The environment is idyllic with all the players linked together as brothers.
The balance is upset by the arrival of a Milan attorney who declares ready to buy two players, immediately creating the jealousy of others.
The plot — the conflict between the Komsomol, advanced collective farmer Fyodor and his young wife's parents, ardent opponents of the collective farm. A young woman caught between two fires: passionately loved one and family. Not daring to contradict the parent's will, she at first did not find the strength to leave behind her husband from home.
It's 1918, the height of United States involvement in World War I: Liberty Bonds are sold, German immigrants are suspected as traitors or saboteurs, young men everywhere succumb to the patriotism and propaganda, and enlist. In a small Texas town, Horace Robedaux feels the pressure. He does not want to leave his young wife Elizabeth and their young child Jenny, but Elizabeth's can't-do-anything-right little brother constantly talks about the war. Elizabeth's stern father, who opposed the marriage initially, now has plans to take care of his daughter and the child so Horace can fight for his country, but the Spanish flu influenza epidemic sweeping the town (and the U.S.) may change everyone's plans.
On Valentine's Day is the central film in Horton Foote's semi-autobiographical trilogy that also includes Courtship (film) and 1918. It is a nearly verbatim retelling of his stage play and the sets and costumes.
Toto is the actor of a penniless theater group: they arrive in a small town to offer their theatrical calendar to the mayor. Meanwhile, a professor: caught but shy, presents to the community his play, "The Rape of the Sabine Women", but the provincial inhabitants hate mortally the theater. The professor is in despair, but Toto willingly accepts the part of the work, just to eat something. At the end, the opera is performed at the theater, but it is a disaster, because the genre is drama, but Toto gullibility makes it a comic farce.
An important Italian scientist disappears in the Jungle, and his niece Laura sets off to find him. Toto, dance teacher, ends up in the wrong steamer trip, and discovers that the companions of the niece have a sinister plan: kidnap her. The ship, however, is shipwrecked on the island of the Jungle, and Toto is worshiped as a god by the natives, and is then received by the dispersed scientist, who sees him as "the missing link in the evolutionary chain of mankind".
Picking up exactly where the season 6 finale finished, Castiel (Misha Collins) proclaims himself to be the new God and tells Sam (Jared Padalecki), Dean (Jensen Ackles) and Bobby Singer (Jim Beaver) to bow and profess their love for him or be killed. When he sees that they only do it out of fear, he leaves to fix wrongs in the world. Sam begins to suffer hallucinations due to the torture he endured in Lucifer's Cage.
Castiel goes to Heaven and kills all the angels that sided with Raphael, before starting to chastise false preachers and hear voices in his head. He goes to Crowley (Mark A. Sheppard) to make a trade, he will receive souls and he will reinstate Crowley's position as King of Hell. Seeing he can't refuse, Crowley accepts. In an attempt to stop Castiel, the Winchesters and Bobby summon Crowley to give them information to attempt to bind Death (Julian Richings) so he can kill Castiel.
The ritual takes place and Death is bound. Castiel then appears, ready to kill them for their betrayal. Death then explains to Castiel that he consumed the Leviathans from the Purgatory, the first beasts created by God but locked in Purgatory as they were a threat to humanity. Castiel then disappears and while trying to punish a senator, the entities make him kill her entire staff. Death decides to help them stop Castiel, stating he will cause an eclipse to open a door to Purgatory so the souls can return.
Realizing his powers are beyond his control, Castiel goes to Sam and Dean for help. While alone, Sam is taunted by Lucifer (Mark Pellegrino), who tries to convince Sam that he never left the Cage and he's currently giving him false hope through mental torture. Dean and Bobby open the door to the Purgatory as Castiel lets out the souls. Once the door closes, Castiel returns to normal, but the Leviathans are revealed to have remained inside his body. Castiel, now possessed by the Leviathans, attacks Dean and says, "this is going to be so much fun".
At the time of the investigation, the newspaper was in deep financial trouble. The company, which also owns the ''Philadelphia Inquirer'', only had one lawyer at the time. The lawyer was bogged down with other legal proceedings and was unable to offer too much help to the women. So instead, when the city refused to give them access to search warrants, Ruderman and Laker convinced the custodian of the records on Christmas Eve to let them access the records.
Kaylah (Nse Ikpe Etim) is a successful fashion stylist that has many celebrities as clients. On returning home after styling one of her clients, she had a flat tyre in a remote village. Unfortunately for her, she encounters traditionalist looking for a female sacrifice for their gods. Michael (Jim Iyke) saves her from the ritualists. After exchanging pleasantries, Michael continues to stalk Kaylah everywhere to her distaste. Kaylah eventually got a police injunction against Michael that prevents him from being anywhere around her through the help of her police uncle (Ayo Makun). Kaylah discovers her boyfriend, Dickson (Anthony Monjaro) is a married man with kids. She tearfully ended the relationship upon the discovery and was emotionally down. Kaylah's younger sister, (Emem Inwang) gives her the gifts and writeups originally given to her by Michael in an attempt to calm her from the numerous heartbreaks. Upon reading the letter, Kaylah, now obsessed with the idea of getting Michael back, decides to find him and pleads his forgiveness. A flashback reveals that Michael wasn't actually following her but their pathways met coincidentally on numerous occasions. Kaylah makes romantic advances towards Michael who revealed that he was already engaged to Ella (Caroline Danjuma). Unbeknownst to Michael, Kaylah befriends Ella then cunningly visits Michael's home when Ella was supposed to be away in Abuja. Unfortunately for her, Ella barged into the house and a physical duel between both ladies erupted. Ella is killed before Michael returns home.
The 15-year-old Maya from Tel Aviv moves with her father Ehud to a remote village to manage the hotel ''North Star''. The hotel is currently owned by Gideon, Maya's grandfather and the father of her mother who died two years earlier. Arriving at the hotel, Maya tries to make a new beginning, and to build a new life. But Maya's new life is not free from complications. Maya must navigate through the everyday stresses of life of a teenager, and must protect herself from false friends. Complicating it is, that there is a new woman named Yuly in her father's life, that Maya finds difficult to handle. Fortunately, Maya finds new friends and falls in love with a boy named Sean. But soon after, Maya learns a secret that could not only turn their lives upside down, but also may lead to the closure of the hotel.
Moomal Rano is the story of Jamal and Nigar, modern day Romeo and Juliet frequenting a village haveli where they have been listening to folklore love tales since childhood. When Jamal & Nigar take the decision of being together, they aren't accepted as lovers and are opposed by the same person who taught them lessons of love. Eventually, both meet a tragic fate as they are shot dead in the name of Honor Killing (Karo Kari). Mohabbat ki Aakhri Kahaani exposes the dark truth of honor killing which is a real burning issue on both sides of the border.
After being arrested for criminal activities, two street musicians swap sexy stories with the other inmates.
Masamune Makabe was a chubby boy who had a close relationship with Aki Adagaki, a beautiful wealthy girl, until one day she cruelly rejected him and gave him the nickname "Pig's Foot". Seeking revenge against his tormentor, Masamune changed his name, began dieting and working out every day to become a fit and handsome, albeit vain, high school student. When he encounters Aki once again, she does not recognize him and he commits to seduce her into falling in love with him before embarrassingly rejecting her to exact vengeance. Masamune ends up allying with Aki's classmate and servant Yoshino Koiwai, who seems to know Masamune's nickname as well.
PCpt Ador de León (Fernando Poe Jr.), was killed in a drug bust operation after he was betrayed by his fellow police officer. His superior devises a plan for his twin brother, the provincial cop PLt Kardo de León (also played by Poe), who is Santa Marcela's police chief, to assume his identity. Kardo eventually outwits and captures the drug syndicate and corrupt policemen responsible for his brother's death.
Ninì and Mimi are two friends, itinerant players, who can not make a penny. It is performed at night, in various places, arousing only the laughter of the public, until Mimi is delivered the conspicuous legacy of his uncle. Ninì immediately takes the opportunity to re-launch the duo in nightclubs, but squanders all the money in goliardic parties.
The film sees journalist Jack Tomlins (portrayed by runner Tim Shieff) go undercover in a UK factory farm to investigate rumours of a MRSA superbug outbreak in the pig population. In his search for the truth, he makes some shocking discoveries and all hangs in the balance.
Three sisters—Nunung (Chitra Dewi), Nana (Mieke Wijaya) and Nenny (Indriati Iskak)—are being raised by their grandmother (Fifi Young) in Jakarta after their mother's death. Though the sisters' father Sukandar ( ) lives with them, he is too involved in his own work to pay them heed.
While the sisters are out with Nana's boyfriend Herman ( ), their grandmother tells Sukandar than she will not live to see Nunung, already aged 29, marry. He agrees to invite his colleagues to the house. When they come several days later, Nunung impresses all present with her piano-playing and singing. However, the men are all too old, and Nunung's grandmother insists that Sukandar find a younger man. Nenny, overhearing the conversation, suggests that they hold a party; this too is a failure, as Nunung takes no interest in the festivities.
Nana is then asked to take Nunung out with her, in the hopes that the eldest sister will meet a marriageable young man. At a party, while Nana mingles with several men, Nunung sits out every dance and eventually leaves with Herman. Asked why she has returned home, Nunung tells her grandmother that she felt too old among the younger party-goers and asks why she was told to go. Nenny, again eavesdropping, shouts out that their grandmother is hoping to find her a husband. Though Nunung is initially angered, she understands her grandmother's intentions.
The following day, Nunung is stricken by a scooter driven by Toto (Rendra Karno). Despite an injured leg, Nunung insists on taking a pedicab home; without her knowledge, Toto follows her. He later returns to apologize, and, though Nunung treats him harshly, is quickly accepted by Nana and her grandmother. Nana asks Toto to visit frequently, and over the next several days Nana pushes away Herman. Nenny, meanwhile, uses her sister's interest in Toto to become closer to Herman. When Nana announces that she and Toto are engaged, her grandmother is furious; if Nana marries before her sister, she says, Nunung will never marry.
After Nana and Nunung fight, their guardians decide that it is best for Nunung to go the home of her uncle Tamsil (Usmar Ismail) in Bandung and rest. While there, Nunung writes a letter to her father that Joni kisses her goodnight every day. This news sparks Nenny's titillation and Toto's jealousy. Nana insists that Toto choose between her and Nunung; Toto decides to go to Bandung and protest Joni's impropriety. He confronts Nunung and confesses his love for her. She spitefully tells him that she sleeps in the same room as Joni every night.
Herman, at the insistence of Nana, takes the remainder of the family to Bandung, where they meet up with Toto, Nunung, and Tamsil's family. As Tamsil introduces his sons, Joni is revealed to be a young child. Nunung and Toto embrace, while Nana and Herman make up.
An Ottawa born priest, Father Christopher Pennant, is given a parish in Barrow in Lambton County. He accidentally becomes embroiled in the love affairs of two of his younger parishioners. Elizabeth Denny, an orphan, seeks guidance from Pennant when she discover her fiancé Robbie Myers is having an affair with his teenage sweetheart Jane Richardson. Upon being discovered he affirms that he loves them both equally, something that everyone he speaks to doubts. Upset, Elizabeth goes to Jane and asks her to get Robbie to walk through the town, completely nude, to get a haircut. Elizabeth reasons that if Robbie loves Jane more he will do it but the humiliation of having done so will allow Elizabeth some measure of revenge. Jane is able to persuade Robbie to walk nude and Elizabeth ends their engagement. Feeling exhilarated by what he has done Robbie thinks it is in his best interest to marry Jane, but she tires of him soon after and after a final fight which turns physical she leaves Barrow forever, making her way to Toronto. Robbie then decides that Jane was crazy and he should marry Elizabeth after all. She consents to their re-engagement, but privately tells herself that she will only decide whether to go through with the marriage on the wedding day.
Meanwhile, Lowther Williams, the caretaker of the parish, arranges a series of miracles with his best friend, Heath Lambert for the benefit of father Pennant. Lowther hopes to discover what sort of a man Pennant is and whether he is up to the task of ushering his soul to heaven after he dies, something Lowther believes will happen imminently as all his male relations died at the age of 63 and he is currently 62. Heath and Lowther arrange for Pennant to see a group of moths flying a loop and the mayor walking on water. The sight of mayor Fox walking on water causes Pennant to think he has seen the devil. When the trick behind the illusion is revealed it triggers a crisis of faith. Pennant's crisis remains hidden and Lowther, upon reaching his 63rd birthday does not die and becomes morose because of it. Sometimes later Pennant encounters a third miracle; a talking sheep who tells Pennant that his desire to no longer see the miraculous is troubling. He tells Pennant that in the future if he wishes to see the divine again he should return to a cluster of three trees and chop them down whereupon the three trees will bleed, give honey and water.
The paths of two women, Ishani and Kamala cross accidentally, when Kamala saves Ishani from being molested. The two girls, finally come together to lodge a battle for all women. They dare to raise their voice against harassment and abuse faced by women. However, they are totally unlike each other. While Ishani is independent and free spirited, Kamala has always learnt to follow the norms set by society. Sokhi is the story of an ordinary girl who becomes extraordinary. Both Ishani & Kamala discover themselves anew. They prove that no one is born a fighter; but every woman has the power to derive strength from deep within. Both of them delve deep into their hearts and discover traits which none knew they possessed, and in the process develop a deep bond between them – a bond born of empathy rather than sympathy. It is more than friendship as they realize that in spite of their differing circumstances, both are victims of the social process and that they need to fight together. When one needs support, the other always reaches out – the hand of friendship and understanding is always extended as both embark on their new journey of life.
The young Polish prince Stephen goes on a mission together with the mighty Ursus, but they are captured by the Tartars.
During the days of his captivity Stefano falls in love with Ilia, a Tatar girl daughter of the chief. But the girl is already promised to the son of the Great Khan, so a duel arises between the two rivals.
The Tartar is mortally wounded, so Ursus, Stefano and Ilia take the opportunity to flee to the Polish camp where a battle soon breaks out, in which Stephen's people win.
The muzhik Rasputin becomes the favorite of the court of the Tsar of Russia after curing the Tsar's son. He seduced the tsarina, he is accused of witchcraft, and a plot is organized.
In 1635, Jacques du Parquet, the nephew of the well known explorer Belain d'Esnambic, enters a tavern in Dieppe, and falls in love with the daughter of the bartender, Marie Bonnard. He knows his noble family would disapprove such a marriage; besides, he is nominated for the post of governor in Martinica. He promised never to forget Marie, but as time goes by, she will accept to marry a rich and unscrupulous man, Monsieur de Saint-André. When her husband is appointed to serve in Martinica as General Commissioner, Marie demands to go with him. At her arrival, all sorts of trouble arrive: pirates take action against travelers and goods, rotten deals set the two officers against each other, and finally jealousy settles to make things worse. ''Written by Artemis-9 ( from Imdb.com )''
Professor Quignard and his team of researchers have been studying "PPM", an immunizing protein produced by penguins, for a Nobel Prize research project. Christophine, a shy and young PhD student who is secretly in love with Quignard, decides to inject herself with the penguin genome, in an attempt to advance the professor's research and to get closer to him. Amidst all the experiments she wants him more and more, whereas the professor is always concerned about the results of his experiments. It breaks her heart that even after all she has done for him, he is so indifferent towards her but she decides to keep her feelings to herself. The results finally lead him to his goals, and he is selected to win the Nobel Prize, but Christophine realises that her body is changing and reacting to the experiments, and she decides to stay alone, closing herself to everything. When the professor finds out, he tries every possible way to save her but he has no option left other than sending her to Antarctica to live with penguins. The professor then injects himself with the same drug that Christophine took and goes and lives with her in Antarctica, after having grasped his feelings for her.
The episode opens with St. Ambrose Hospital chief of staff Charlotte King (KaDee Strickland) hiding in a supply closet after being raped in her office. Alternative-medicine specialist Dr. Pete Wilder (Tim Daly) finds and examines her, diagnosing a broken wrist, eye socket and nose and a deep arm laceration, and admits her to the hospital. King lies to Wilder, telling him that she was injured in a mugging. Wilder calls the police; King attempts to contact her boyfriend, Dr. Cooper Freedman (Paul Adelstein), but cannot reach him because he is out drinking with Dr. Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorsone) and Dr. Sam Bennett (Taye Diggs). At the police station psychiatrist Sheldon Wallace (Brian Benben) interrogates Lee McHenry (Nicholas Brendon), who was found with blood on his clothes. After nurses photograph King's injuries, Dr. Addison Montgomery (Kate Walsh) realizes that King was raped and offers her a rape kit. During her pelvic examination, King refuses the rape kit and tells Montgomery not to tell anyone else about the rape. Freedman arrives with Shepherd and Bennett, and is surprised at the extent of King's injuries. During the CT scan, King and Shepherd bond over their shared drug addiction when King refuses pain medication. Shepherd admits drinking alcohol again, and King offers to take her to Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Shepherd sutures King's wounds, which causes King great pain; Freedman feels powerless, unable to protect her.
Interviewed by Wallace, McHenry admits being angry after discovering his girlfriend's infidelity but denies that the blood on his clothing is hers. Montgomery tries to convince King to report her rape; King refuses, telling Montgomery that she does not understand what it is like to be raped. Wilder uses alternative medicine to help King deal with her pain. Psychiatrist Violet Turner (Amy Brenneman) refuses to talk to King about the rape because of similarities to the fetal abduction she experienced a year earlier, and wonders if everyone in the practice is cursed. Bennett wants to go home and rest, which angers Montgomery. King attempts to compose a memorandum saying that she was attacked on the hospital grounds, but Freedman suggests that another member of the staff do it for her; she shouts at Freedman when he calls her a victim. After the argument, Freedman goes to King's office and weeps when he sees the aftermath of her assault. McHenry admits raping a woman, assaulting Wallace before he is pulled away by the police. In the ambulance bay, Bennett expresses his confusion about Montgomery's mood swings and suspects that she is hiding something from him; Montgomery asks him to promise never to leave her alone. After Freedman helps her dress, King says that she loves him and wants to go home. McHenry is held by the police for assaulting a police officer during his arrest and Wallace during his interrogation, but detective Joe Price says that McHenry cannot be charged with rape until charges are filed against him. The episode ends with King walking out of the hospital with Freedman's help; flashbacks of the rape reveal that McHenry was the rapist.
It tells the story of a divorced couple whose husband does not find an apartment. He will finally see his former wife, saying "I have 20% of the apartment so you redeem it, or I just live in my 20%".
At first glance the seventeen inhabitants of the old apartment building in Berlin Kreuzberg do not seem to have much in common other than their address. But nonetheless, when the old photographer Mr. Kempinski who invites his neighbors to his 80th birthday party, they are all strangely familiar. There is 60 year old Hannelore who dreams about distant countries and who currently shares her apartment with her lovesick niece, there is student Bona from the Ivory Coast who teaches French in the kitchen while his gay roommate enjoys life and love; the two adolescent sisters with their mother who has fallen in love recently, the middle aged married janitors and then there is the young couple whose daughter prefers sitting in the stairwell than going to school.
Two unemployed vagrants, one of small stature and the other of greater height, one day find a bottle by the sea. Inside a map, with the indication of a treasure hidden in an island. After alternating situations, they arrive on the island, but, despite themselves, they discover that the story of the treasure is an advertising invention. The little tramp overcomes the disappointment for the lack of enrichment with the love for his girlfriend.
The novel opens on the sixteenth birthday of protagonist Magnus Chase, who has been living on the streets of Boston since his mother Natalie's death two years ago. After learning that his uncle Randolph has unexpectedly sent his uncle Frederick and cousin Annabeth to search for him, Magnus breaks into Randolph's house to look for answers. Randolph catches Magnus and drives him to Longfellow Bridge, claiming that Magnus is the son of a Norse god, making him the target of an unnamed magical enemy. Randolph tells the boy that he must magically retrieve an ancient sword (Sumarbrander, or the "Sword of Summer") hidden in Boston Harbor to protect himself. A fire giant known as Surt appears, and begins to destroy the bridge. Magnus attacks Surt with the sword to allow other pedestrians time to escape. As he realizes that he is about to die, he manages to wound the giant and hurl the two of them off the bridge. He dies on impact with the water.
Magnus awakens in a place called Hotel Valhalla as an einherjar, where he is told he will spend eternity training for Ragnarök. He is introduced to the Valkyrie who brought him to Valhalla, Sam, and to his new einherjar hallmates. During Magnus' welcome feast, the three Norns pronounce Magnus a son of Frey and deliver a confusing prophecy. The hotel's ruling council banishes Sam the Valkyrie for apparently "wrongly choosing" Magnus. That night, Magnus's friends Hearth and Blitz arrive and reveal they are actually an elf and dwarf, respectively. They convince him to leave the hotel. In Midgard, the trio joins up with Sam. The group meets with the god Mimir, who tasks them with finding the Sword before Surt and bringing it to the island of Fenris Wolf. They retrieve the sword from the sea goddess Ran and journey to Nidavellir to secure a new binding for the Wolf. During the quest, Magnus experiences dream-visions of Loki, and once even of the goddess Hel offering to reunite him with his late mother—a proposal he struggles to refuse.
After a detour to Jotunheim, where they help the god Thor and Magnus discovers new magical powers, they finally arrive at Fenris's island. Despite being attacked by a group of Valkyries, some of Magnus' hallmates, and Surt, they successfully rebind the Wolf. Magnus has a brief vision of his father Frey before returning to Hotel Valhalla to stand trial for his disobedience. Before he can be punished, however, Magnus's hallmate X stands and reveals himself to be the god Odin, in disguise. Odin rewards each of the heroes in turn, finally offering Magnus a chance to return to life or choose a different afterlife. Magnus declines, but returns to Boston to speak with his cousin Annabeth. The two hold a funeral for Natalie Chase and exchange stories of each other's lives as demigods. Meanwhile, in the epilogue, Loki punishes Randolph for not being able to stop Magnus from rebinding Fenris. Loki implies that Randolph's family will be in danger if the man does not cooperate.
The illegitimate son of King Arthur and Morgan le Fay, Mordred has been raised in exile, overshadowed by his mother's desire for vengeance against Arthur. He is soon distracted from his studies under Merlin by his attraction to the fallen knight Lancelot.
Orphans Lida and Nadya have been living in the care of his uncle, who took them to the education of the children's home. Uncle sincerely dreams of a happy life for the nieces and girls, often in defiance of their own destiny, follow his advice. So big sister – Nadya – abandons his dream and doing everything to become the youngest actress, but years later she still comes to the theater.
Boston chef Davis Green experiences trouble with his girlfriend, Cassie, who asks for alone time as she cries. After he goes to a bar, a woman follows him home. Curious, he tells Cassie he is taking out the trash and investigates. The woman requests a hug and introduces herself as Alexis Green, his cousin. Davis says she must be mistaken, as his father is an only child. When Cassie sees them talking, Davis asks Alexis to leave. Though upset, she gives him her contact information before leaving. Davis sits in on his father's university lecture, a behavioral psychological class about nature versus nurture. Davis offers to cook his parents a meal, but his father, Ronald, condescendingly declines. After eating alone, Davis roots through his Dad's mementos, finding a picture that indicates his father may have a brother. His ailing grandfather becomes upset and refuses to discuss the matter when shown the picture, and his father warns him away from investigating further.
Davis leaves Boston and goes to the address Alexis left him in upstate New York. After checking out the family store and farm, he calls Alexis and asks to meet her. She introduces him to her two sisters and takes him to a bar. Alexis identifies a man with whom all three sisters have had sex, then impulsively cuts off his braided beard. As the man reacts angrily, Davis punches him, and the four quickly leave. After hanging out together, they crash at Uncle Josh's house, where the sisters live. Alexis undresses in front of Davis and gives him her bed, later joining him to cuddle. Davis, who intended to leave early before encountering his aunt and uncle, sleeps late and is woken by his aunt, who assumes him to be Alexis' boyfriend. The two play along until Josh reveals he knows the truth. Josh apologizes for missing Davis' childhood, hugs him, and asks him to leave. When Josh refuses to speak any further about his brother, Davis asks Alexis to drive him to town.
Upset, Alexis asks Davis if he is leaving because of their mutual attraction and suggests that he has come over to escape problems with Cassie. Taken aback, Davis explains that Cassie recently revealed that she had an abortion. Though he acknowledges their attraction, he says it is not the reason why he is leaving. Alexis talks him into investigating her father's hunting lodge before leaving. After finding 16mm footage of their fathers with a young woman and a bracelet, Davis and Alexis have sex. On the drive back to town, they stop to assist Cassie, who has come to New York to tell Davis his grandfather has died. Alexis and Davis convince Josh to come to Boston to attend the funeral. Ronald reacts coldly to his brother's presence but allows him to stay at his house. There, Cassie and Alexis clash as both attempt to spend time alone with him. When Alexis tries to make out with him, citing the excitement of possibly being caught, Davis angrily tells her off.
Everyone joins a dinner Davis prepares, and, urged by their families, Josh and Ronald eat together. When Alexis flashes the bracelet from her father's lodge, Ronald and Josh both demand she surrender it immediately. A fist fight breaks out between Josh and Ronald, and each accuse the other of murder. Alexis brags to Cassie that Davis is more attracted to her but Davis punches her out before she can reveal they had sex. The next morning, Cassie leaves.
Davis helps Josh dig a grave for his grandfather, and Josh says that the woman from the footage was their sister, Rebecca. She and Josh as siblings had a sexual relationship. Brother Ronald exposed them to the family and she committed suicide over the guilt. The brothers blame each other. Ronald tells Davis that Josh's side of the family is mentally ill, and Davis expresses his dislike for them. Later, he encounters Alexis and tells her to leave after kissing her. He tells Cassie that although he is attracted to his cousin, they did nothing sexually. She accepts him back.
Set between the novels ''Tarzan of the Apes'' and ''The Return of Tarzan'', the story opens after Tarzan hides the revelation of his true identity of Lord Greystoke from Jane Porter, since he believes she will be happier marrying his cousin William Cecil Clayton. Tarzan leaves Wisconsin and heads north into Canada, where he discovers a lost civilization of Vikings.
As described in a film magazine, Marie Callender (Talmadge) becomes engaged to a wealthy Lothario, but regrets it after Ernest Lismore (Tearle), who is in financial difficulties, rescues her from a burning building. She breaks the engagement but is left the wealthy man's fortune. Learning of Ernest's predicament, she poses as an elderly woman and proposes that Ernest marry her to save himself from financial ruin. He agrees, and after their marriage Marie poses as a painter in the bohemian quarter of the city to see if Ernest will love her. After several difficulties Marie removes her wig and Ernest happily discovers that she is the painter who won his heart.
Three Spanish girls get involved in the fashion business and experience the glam and the glitter and also may some money. They find out that business has a dark side and there are people who try to exploit the rookies.
An American pilot and a member of the "Delta Force" set off in pursuit of a terrorist group in possession of a tactical nuclear weapon.
The episode begins with a house's security system being disabled. Then a dark figure walks into a bedroom and murders the woman in the bedroom. The scene cuts to Jim Brass (Paul Guilfoyle) yelling orders at the police officers and trying to get rid of the press. Nick Stokes (George Eads) catches up with a suspect (Gil Bellows) and tests him for GSR which comes back positive so he is arrested. D.B. Russell (Ted Danson) enters the house and he notices that the technology seems to follow him and the lights turn on when he walks past them. Greg Sanders (Eric Szmanda) tells D.B. that he believes the house is a smart house. While Julie Finlay (Elisabeth Shue) is taking crime scene photos, Al Robbins (Robert David Hall) gives a brief belief of what he believes happened. When D.B. looks through the suspect's (revealed as the victim's husband Lee Berman) computer he notices a photo of a woman (Torrey DeVitto) but then the computer crashes. The scene cuts to Washington, D.C. where a woman (Avery Ryan, Patricia Arquette) from the FBI is sitting on the phone demanding a flight to Las Vegas because the Kitty case is involved in a murder.
At an airfield Avery arrives where a pilot complains about her wanting to stop at Vegas, she then tells the pilot things he doesn't like about himself and he quickly tells her that she can come.
In Las Vegas, Brass is interviewing Berman about his wife's murder. It is shown that Avery is watching the interview, Avery asks Conrad Ecklie (Marc Vann) if she can go in and interview. Avery starts to quiz Berman about Kitty. Berman demands his solicitors to leave the room but when Avery tells him that she knows when people are lying he calls his solicitors back in.
D.B., Julie, Nick and David Hodges look for Kitty in the database, Avery explains about the deep web and then gets one of her agents to log into Kitty's website and they use Hodges' name to log in the site. Avery shows them that Kitty is just a chat bot.
In his office, Avery talks to D.B. about the case and requests Finlay to assist her to review the computer. Avery manages to retrieve the data from Berman's computer and they learn that there was a two-way camera on the computer. Avery and Finlay conclude that Berman unknowingly made a sex tape. Avery notices Kitty massaging her jaw and investigates further.
In the morgue, David Phillips (David Berman) gives D.B. a bullet. while Robbins is performing the autopsy.
Morgan Brody (Elisabeth Harnois) tells D.B. that the bullet found doesn't match Berman's bullets. Berman is then released from custody and he walks past the police station reception and sees a woman (also DeVitto) who is identical to Kitty. Avery explains to the woman (whose name is Susan) that she is a person of interest. Susan tells Avery that she is on Friend Agenda. Avery notes to Susan that she has an "idiosyncratic medical condition".
Avery and Susan work out that Susan's top hit on her profile is the one who created Kitty. Meanwhile, Ecklie tells Berman to stay at the hotel where he learns that Berman doesn't have a dog so Nick takes the dog to Hodges while Greg is briefing how the killer knew the house. The three learn that the killer got a dog to fool the security at the house.
Brass finds the car rented by the killer and he and Nick go to the car where it was empty as a plane flies overhead they realize the killer has fled the country. Nick takes the evidence back to the office and briefs D.B. and Avery. There was a video of the murder where Avery realizes that her suspect was never in Las Vegas.
Avery and Nick look at Nebula1's (Cheyenne Jackson) first profile picture, and learn that he is agoraphobic and orders in a lot. They then learn that he is in St Louis due to them being able to make out the Gateway Arch in the background. When FBI agents raid his house they find computers with Kitty on them all and then Avery realizes it is a trap and they lose all evidence.
Avery organises a press conference where Susan tells her story. After the conference Avery is informed that Nebula1 has crashed Susan's profile.
In San Diego, Avery confronts Nebula1, he then attacks Avery and cuts her with his knife. Avery says her code word and he is then arrested.
At the end, Avery arranges for Susan's husband to come home. As she is leaving Avery tells D.B. about a bank robbery of three cents from 80 million chequing accounts.
In the final months of the Holocaust, Nina struggles to integrate 25 children liberated from Nazi concentration camps with the other orphans in her care in the east of France.
One morning, Travis wakes up in his apartment in Brisbane to discover the city has been covered in a three-foot layer of man-eating strawberry jam after it devours his flatmate Frank. The jam eats organic material; such as rubber, cotton and people and is repelled by inorganic material such as plastic. The jam also can extend part of itself towards any organic material it can sense.
Travis and his roommate Tim soon join up with Angela, a journalism student, and Don Sunderland, a game designer (who had previously appeared in ''Mogworld''.) While searching for supplies, Travis and Tim come across a giant goliath bird eater spider, which Travis decides to take with him, soon naming it "Mary."
The party decides to head to the Hibatsu Building, a large infrastructure in the middle of the city. While Tim believes they will need to rebuild society, Don believes they are merely waiting for rescue. Soon afterwards, a helicopter crashes into their apartment building, and the group recovers two American soldiers from the wreck; a female who names herself "X," and a male soldier who is named "Y." X lets it slip that they had mistaken Don's rescue sign for an organization named "HEPL," but denies it soon afterwards, leading Angela to become suspicious of their involvement in the jam-pocalyse.
Unable to return to the apartment, the group makes their way to the Hibatsu Building. They discover a sailing boat named the ''Everlong'', which they use for their travels. Along the way, Travis and Don stop by Don's office to pick up his "build," a hard drive containing his latest work. However they are ambushed by three men wearing bin-liners, who steal the hard drive and take it with them. Don and Travis realize they can move through the jam if they cover themselves with plastic.
The group tracks the plastic men to the Briar Center shopping center whereupon they discover a settlement of young people all wearing plastic coverings, who all engage in "ironic" behavior and worship "Crazy Bob." Their leader, Lord Awesomeo "ironically" executes somebody, leaving the group on edge. Tim becomes concerned with how the settlement is being run and discovers "Crazy Bob" to be the senile janitor.
Travis, concerned about Mary, feeds her a budgerigar he had found in a cage. He soon discovers the bird, named "Whiskers", had belonged to the "princess" of the settlement, Ravenhair, whose real name is Deirdre. It soon becomes apparent that anyone who tries to leave the shopping center is killed by the jam, and Tim takes the opportunity to assert himself as a replacement leader. Travis also overhears X stating she feels responsible for the jam, as well as disclosing something known as "the Sunderland issue." That night, Don and Travis flee the center; with Don recovering his build and accidentally disturbing Crazy Bob, with the two becoming trapped on the roof. They discover the cause of the deaths to be the work of Y, sniping anyone who leaves the center with arrows.
Don and Travis make it to the Hibatsu building and discover the settlement under a strict rule of bureaucracy. The head of divisions, named Kathy, instructs the two to return to the Briar Center as spies. Travis and Don return to the mall and manage to accidentally reveal themselves to a plastic person before learning that Tim is trying to usurp Lord Awesomeo as leader. After learning Y is the one killing the plastic people, Tim and the group take off in order to stop Y and gain political power.
After a long struggle, X manages to subdue Y and stop his murder-spree, learning that he was sent by the Hibatsu Building to "suppress" the plastic people. Angela and Travis also discover Y's identity card which shows HEPL stands for "Human Extinction Protocol Libra." Upon returning to the plastic people however, Crazy Bob outs Don and Travis as the ones who had disturbed him as well as Travis’ role in Whiskers’ death, causing the plastic people to turn on them and oust them from the settlement. After learning that the Hibatsu Building was the one who sent Y to kill them off, Lord Awesomeo declares war and "ironically" sends his people to their deaths. Y manages to stop Lord Awesomeo and send them both into the jam.
Hibatsu acquires what little remains of the plastic population, and the group moves to the building, where Don reacquires his build. However, the jam starts to rise around the building, in response to the number of people who reside in it. It consumes Kathy and causes the bureaucrats in charge to consider killing off people to reverse it. X discovers an aircraft carrier named the ''USS Obi-Wan'', which had been the one she and Y escaped from, abandoned out on the river. She and the rest of the group flee from the Hibatsu Building on the ''Everlong'', but Deirdre is left behind.
The group makes it to the carrier, but the jam suddenly destroys the ''Everlong'', separating Travis from the others. With X having hidden herself in a chest freezer prior to the event, Travis locks himself in with her to save them from the jam. X confides that she is responsible for the jam but the two are rescued before they suffocate.
After boarding the ship, Travis and the others are introduced to Dr. Thorn, a scientist who works for HEPL and was studying the jam and its effects. Don also makes use of the onboard internet connection to upload his build, while also finding out the jam had only covered Australia. Dr. Thorn reveals he could create a compound to neutralize the jam's effects if he had his flash drive, which had been given to Y. However, he is soon shot to death with a sniper rifle. Travis realizes that the shooter is Tim, who has locked himself in the bridge, intending to take the ''Obi-Wan'' out to sea.
Travis suddenly remembers that Don had taken Y's trousers after the helicopter crash, and realizes that this was "the Sunderland issue" mentioned earlier. Don discovers the flash drive in the pockets and uploads it. The gang discovers the truth behind the jam outbreak; it had been used for testing and was given to X and Y for transport. They had left it on the roof of their car and driven off, accidentally releasing it and causing it spread.
The ''Obi-Wan'' is attacked by the US Navy, who had set up a perimeter around the continent. X and Angela are consumed by the jam while trying to stop the ship and Travis manages to save Don's life. Travis chases after Tim, who had taken a life raft and manages to jump onto it as the carrier sinks. The two confide in one another; Tim had shot Dr. Thorn because he believed that jam was ultimately a good thing and did not want to give up his dream of rebuilding society. As the jam detects the two, Tim attempts to kill Travis to spare his own life, but Travis acts quickly and throws Mary onto Tim, startling him and sending him falling out of the raft and into the jam.
After some time stranded at sea (at which point he hallucinates that Mary is speaking to him) Travis is rescued by the US Navy, leaving him and Don the only two survivors left. Don uses the flash drive as leverage and he and Travis are sent to America. A few weeks later the jam is cleared away and Travis prepares to return to Brisbane to find Deirdre before leaving Mary in the care of Don.
A dispute breaks out in a small town over planned repairs to the historic clock.
A young Jesse Custer prepares the All Saints chapel for services. He later listens to his father, John Custer (Nathan Darrow), deliver a sermon to his congregation. Jesse smokes with his friends, including a young Tulip O'Hare (Ashley Aufderheide). John admonishes him and whips him in front of his friends, emphasizing that the others look to him for guidance. Later, Jesse's father wakes him in the middle of the night and takes him to Quincannon Meat & Power. Jesse waits in the hall while John goes into Quincannon's office. While waiting, Jesse steals an ashtray. Shouts are heard inside and John walks out. "Denounce him!" Quincannon (Jackie Earle Haley) yells after him.
Back in the truck, John tells Jesse that some people just can't be saved.
Lacey, a prostitute from Toadvine Whorehouse, flees through Annville and a field on a foggy night. Clive, one of Odin Quincannon's men, chases her with a gun, catches up with her, and shoots her with a paint gun. Suddenly, Lacey falls into a sinkhole and dies. The next day, as her body is hoisted out of the pit, Quincannon owner of the property gives a speech to his men, the girls, and Tulip (Ruth Negga), warning them to be more careful. Tulip is outraged at their apathy toward Lacey's death.
Meanwhile, Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) tries to tell Jesse about Fiore (Tom Brooke) and DeBlanc (Anatol Yusef) and warns him to flee Annville; his advice falls on deaf ears. Jesse visits Emily (Lucy Griffiths) to suggest raffling off a flat-screen TV to attract more people to church and alludes to a scheme that will boost attendance. Cassidy visits Fiore and DeBlanc at the Sundowner Motel where, in exchange for cash, he promises to convince Jesse to meet with them. Fiore expresses his doubts about the situation and takes out a strange-looking old telephone; DeBlanc, however forbids him from using it, saying they will be punished for coming down without permission.
Quincannon and Annville Mayor Miles (Ricky Mabe) discuss the problem of sinkholes, as well as Miles's recent meeting with the Green Acre Group, a sustainable farming company. Miles gives Quincannon a Green Acre brochure and suggests he consider a partnership, given that local tax revenues have decreased 58 percent in 10 years. Quincannon urinates on the brochure.
Emily arrives home with the new TV for Sunday's raffle and relieves Miles of babysitting duties. She agrees to have a drink with him when he points out how hard she works for everyone, especially Jesse. In her kitchen, Emily reminds him that she's never going to be with him. She then removes her pants and warns him to leave before morning.
The prostitutes and Quincannon's crew gather at Toadvine to remember Lacey. Tulip and Clive trade angry words. Mosie offers Clive a free hour on the house to ease the situation and advises Tulip to watch her temper. Tulip marches upstairs and whips a man who she thinks is Clive, causing him to fall through a window. When Clive comes to the bedroom door, Tulip realizes she attacked the wrong man. Down below, Cassidy grunts as blood spurts from his neck. Tulip cradles Cassidy in a car as a prostitute drives them to the hospital. She apologizes profusely and chastises herself for having anger issues. Cassidy asks her to kiss him, which she does. At the hospital, Tulip urgently begs a nurse to get a doctor only to turn around and find that Cassidy is gone. She follows a trail of blood and discovers Cassidy slurping blood from a bag.
Jesse visits Quincannon's office where they're building a model of the Alamo together. Jesse invites Quincannon to his Sunday service. Quincannon, who is an atheist, declines. Jesse tells Quincannon that if he comes to church on Sunday and does not leave a Christian, he'll give Quincannon his father's 20 hectares of land — the biggest plot in Annville that Quincannon doesn't own. On Sunday, Jesse stands before a packed house and tells the congregation that the world is turning to shit — and that it's all their fault. He vows to bring them back to God one by one and asks Quincannon to serve God. Quincannon refuses and starts to leave. As everyone watches, Jesse puts his hand on Quincannon's shoulder and employs the Word of God. "Serve God," he commands. "Of course I will, yes sir," Quincannon says. The room erupts in whispers.
Fiore and DeBlanc wait in the motel room. The phone contraption begins to ring. They stare motionless at the phone as it rings and rings.
The series follows a group of young female writers at the fictitious ''News of the Week'' magazine (representing the real ''Newsweek'' of the novel) in the revolutionary times of the women's movement.
Women in the newsroom ("The Pit") are relegated to low-level positions (the researchers). Many researchers are more talented and better educated than their male colleagues (the reporters), and do writing ("files") that the reporters incorporate more-or-less directly into their stories, often without adaptation ("rewrite"), and always without attribution ("byline"), yet are paid considerably less. These women have a sense that they're paid a lot less, and during the series it emerges just how much lower their pay is (about one-third of their colleague reporter's salary).
But also at issue is the fact that their writing is not recognized: on a rare occasion when a female researcher's writing is openly accepted (such as when a male reporter quits just before a deadline), the researcher's story is nonetheless published, but under the departed reporter's name only.
The noble Pantaleo Santa Paola dies suddenly, without writing a will. Immediately in the villa go his three grandchildren and three other relatives. All claim family assets, and at the end of the story reaches the poor Nicolino, who is also the nephew of Pantaleo. The Pantaleo ghost appears while the dispute rages and declares his true heir.
The plot follows Laia, a teacher working in a school in Kathmandu. She marries a local man, Tshiring, so she can remain in Nepal once her visa expires.
The series focuses on Luke Watson, a young boy who used to live a normal life with his parents. But after he starts turning into a werewolf, Luke and his parents are relocated to Scream Street, a town inhabited by monsters. Luke befriends two other residents of Scream Street, a vampire named Resus Negative and a mummy named Cleo Farr.
It is the year 1936, Italy is in a state of euphoria because of its new African empire. A war veteran returns home from the Second Abyssinian War bringing back a black woman. This situation breaks the monotony and unravels the secret turbulent life of his family.
The film starts with a court sentencing procedure due to crimes committed by various Carter High football team members. We subsequently learn about each of the player's background. One student transferred classes due to an incomplete grade, that could have caused his ineligibility to stay on the football team. In 1988, the Carter High Cowboys football team was involved in a public scandal while in the midst of a run in the Texas 5A state playoffs, which included a semifinal victory over Odessa's Permian High that would become a central event in the book (and subsequent movie and television treatments) ''Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream''.
'''Opening quote:''' "Said the dragon, 'Many knights have left their lives here, I shall soon have an end for you, too,' and he breathed fire out of seven jaws."
Two robbers break into a warehouse to steal copper wire and are killed by a dragonlike creature, a Dämonfeuer. Nick (David Giuntoli) and Hank (Russell Hornsby) investigate. They go back after the warehouse's owner is attacked. As they corner their suspect, Wu (Reggie Lee) is sprayed with oil and has to retreat. Nick ducks away as the man breathes out fire.
The suspect is identified as Fred Eberhart (Don Alder), an unemployed welder with no known address and a scarred face. His daughter, Ariel (Danielle Panabaker), works in a nightclub as a fire eater. Nick goes there. Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) is in the audience; he tells Nick that Ariel is a Dämonfeuer. He also tells him a Grimm was recently beheaded in Europe, possibly by Reapers, and advises him to watch his back.
Nick questions Ariel, then tails her to her home. She attacks him and pins him to the ground – and kisses him. When Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) calls, Ariel answers Nick's phone and pretends that she and Nick are fooling around. Nick grabs the phone back, but Juliette has already hung up, and he leaves abruptly. At home, Juliette grills him about why he was there without his partner, Hank.
Ariel calls Nick and promises to tell him everything she knows. He phones Juliette to say that he and Hank are going to see Ariel, together. Satisfied, Juliette laughingly promises a fire dance of their own when he comes home. Nick and Hank find Ariel's house is adorned throughout in copper wire. They leave hastily as a lightning storm approaches. Nick arrives home to discover Ariel in their bed. He demands to know where Juliette is. Ariel breathes out fumes and escapes, but then calls back on Juliette's phone, telling him to meet her – but with "no cops".
Nick drives while he and Monroe figure out what to do. Monroe realizes that Ariel has created a "classic quest scenario" and identifies an old train tunnel that must be Fred Eberhart's lair. They arrive and spot Juliette's car. Nick plans to keep Fred fighting while Monroe frees Juliette and takes her outside. Fred proves too strong, however, and Nick is forced to kill him, inadvertently giving him the dignified death Ariel had planned. Now, she says, it is her turn. Nick races out as Ariel chants a poem and ignites a plume of fire. Nick, Juliette and Monroe relax, assuming Ariel is dead.
Driving home, Nick apologizes but tells Juliette he cannot promise that things will get any better. In turn, Juliette cannot promise she can keep 'doing this', but in any case is too tired to talk about it now. Nick remembers his aunt's injunction that he leave Juliette, for her own good.
Meanwhile, Ariel walks out of the tunnel, unscathed.
Alessio, a young man seemingly ordinary, lives the relationships with the other sex in a traumatic way. In particular, he is persecuted by nightmares where he sees himself at the mercy of the women closest to him: his aunt, his sister and even her mother.
Princess Maria Pavlovna (Norma Talmadge) is at a grand ball in the palace of the Pavlovnas, given in honor of her engagement to Prince Michail Koloyar (Pedro de Cordoba). Marie reveals a democratic side in her kind treatment of the peasants, and is beloved by them.
In the midst of the gaiety, a Bolshevik mob led by Orel Kosloff (Stuart Holmes) invades the palace to ruthlessly kill and plunder, leaving the palace in ruins. Kosloff is actually a tool of an uninvited guest, Theo Kameneff (Charles Gerard), who is only a pretend Red, being paid by a foreign government to ruin Russia. The Prince makes one gallant fight after another to save Marie, and finally succeeds in sending her away in a carriage, but loses track of her as he makes his own escape.
Disguising himself as a peasant courier, who is a Red, with access to military centers, he searches for her. Michail is caught and ordered to be shot, but he escapes. She, meanwhile, using her jewels, manages to purchase a grocery store in the village of Volsk, to provide a hideout. She creates the peasant identity of Sonia Sazonoff to run the store as its shopkeeper.
By accident, Marie is discovered by the unscrupulous Kameneff, who is now in love with her, though he is unknown to her. He issues a mandate that all females between 17 and 32 must register, and Marie does so under her assumed name, supposing it is for good work.
The women are undeceived when they find a second mandate makes them national property at the disposal of men. They appeal to Marie at a moment when Kameneff is within hearing. She says she will make an appeal to Kameneff.
Once she is alone with him, he reveals his identity and offers to revoke the order if she will live under his protection. With indomitable spirit, she denies him. Instead, she secretly helps women escape to the border. An orgy of brutality follows. Kosloff rapes potter Vasili Lazoff's (Marc McDermott) daughter. Marie locks Kameneff's sister, Nadia Kameneff (Marguerite Clayton), in a room to keep her away from one of his lustful henchmen. He tries to break open the door with an ax, and Marie grabs a large whip and beats him. He throws the ax, missing her face by inches. He then wrestles her to the floor before being driven off by an ax-wielding Lazoff. Marie is caught aiding women to escape and becomes a candidate for execution. She is arrested and taken to Kameneff's headquarters. Lazoff becomes an instrument of vengeance and chokes the brutal Kosloff to death. Kameneff, meanwhile, has executed a group of women, including his own sister. Michail, despite being told that Marie is Kameneff's mistress, goes to her rescue, and reads her innocence in her eyes. Lazoff holds the pistol that Kameneff uses to commit suicide. Michail and Marie escape across the border, to enjoy new freedom and true happiness, though betrothed under the unlucky full moon (sic, confusing full moon with new moon; but, in the film, only a crescent moon is shown.) [Source: adapted and compiled from various sources at https://web.stanford.edu/~gdegroat/NT/oldreviews/nm.htm#variety, with additional information from Janiss Garza at https://www.allmovie.com/movie/v103825]
Christina is the neglected wife of Diego, an overworked doctor. Feeling more and more alone, she decides to begin a relationship with the beautiful Andrea, who is also the owner of an elegant bordello.
France, 1700. Young Susanna is raped by her stepfather. Her mother witnesses the crime and urges that Susanna be put into a convent, against her will. The monastery is a strange place since many nuns are oversexed. Some of them sometimes masturbate and flog themselves. The Mother Superior is sexually attracted to Susanna and makes advances. This arouses the jealousy of her former lover Sister Theresa, who starts scheming to regain her former position.
As the Mother Superior's tuberculosis grows stronger, Theresa takes temporary command of the monastery and abuses her power to make Susanna's life a living hell. Theresa spreads a rumor that Susanna is possessed by the Devil, and locks her in a rat-infested dungeon, then tricks the poor girl into drinking a substance that makes her feverish. She later orders some of the nuns to drag Susanna naked from her bed and whips her violently, claiming she is just trying to beat the Devil out of her.
The Monsignor hears word that one of the local nuns is demonically possessed and decides to investigate. He sends his personal exorcist to the convent, and Susanna is tied up and tortured and confined to a cell. At Theresa's behest, an exorcist even subjects Susanna to a douche by means of a vaginal syringe filled with holy water to clean the Devil from her body. When the Mother Superior dies, Susanna is accused of causing her death by witchcraft. Finally a trial is held in which Susanna is accused of being in league with Satan.
Sick from being drugged, Dane Thorson staggers out of a flophouse on the planet Xecho and gets back to his ship, the Free Trader (i.e. tramp freighter) Solar Queen, just in time for the ship's blastoff on its first mail run to Trewsworld. Once the ship is secured, Dane and the crew find a man made up to look like Dane lying dead in Dane's bunk. After storing the corpse in a freezer, the crew discovers that part of their cargo, creatures called brachs, has become sentient. They find a radiation source that seems to be responsible for the change and which may have also changed the lathsmer embryos that they are carrying. For the nonce, until they can solve the mystery of the dead man and the radiation source, they put the brachs and the lathsmers into Solar Queen's lifeboat and Dane, astrogator Rip Shannon and engineer Ali Kamil land it on Trewsworld away from the starport to wait.
The usually bird-like lathsmers are hatching and looking more like dragons. They manage to escape into the wild and Dane and Ali go looking for them. During the hunt, with the male brach assisting with his telepathic ability, Dane finds a crawler with the crew murdered and robbed of their cargo. Returning to the lifeboat, the two men find Medic Tau waiting there with Ranger Wim Meshler, who tells them that the crew have all been arrested on a long list of charges, including the murder of the dead man they found.
After explaining the situation to Meshler, the men note that the dragon-like lathsmers are still on the loose. Using Meshler's flitter, Meshler, Tau, Dane and the brach find the dragons and capture them. As they attempt to return to the lifeboat a control beam pulls the flitter to an enemy camp. There the men are captured and the flitter destroyed. With the aid of the brach, Meshler, Tau, Dane, and the brach escape into the night.
Following a crawler track, they find the enemy's main base with monsters, mutated animals, in force-field pens. They also discover that they are inside one of the pens and must evade two monsters. The brach turns off the force-field, allowing the men to escape but also releasing the monsters. The men and the brach steal a flitter and escape, flying it to Cartl's holding, a large farmstead where they can call the authorities in Trewsport.
Another holding is being attacked by the released monsters, so Dane, Meshler and the brach go to help the evacuation. The enemy brings down the flitter, but can't use it, so they plan to use Dane and Meshler as bait to draw in a rescue flitter which they can then steal. The rescue flitter brings a team of Stellar Patrolmen, Trewsport Police, and the rest of Solar Queen's crew and they defeat the crooks.
Dane guides the rescue party to the crooks' base and the Patrol captures it before the crooks' spaceship can blast off. Thus begins the unraveling of a galaxy-wide criminal empire. The crew of the Solar Queen are allowed to acquire the crooks' spaceship cheaply and they will use it for interplanetary cargo runs in the Trewsworld system.
There is a boar in the harsh yet beautiful Australian outback, an animal of staggering size, with a ruthless, driving lust for blood and destruction. Defending its territory, it cares for no one and kills with a raw animalistic savagery unlike any have seen before.
On the hot, humid ocean world of Xecho Dane Thorson has just finished his part in preparing the Free Trader (i.e. tramp freighter) Solar Queen to begin her run on an interstellar mail route. While waiting for the ship they are to relieve on the route, Dane, Captain Jellico, and Medic Craig Tau are invited to visit Xecho’s sister planet, Khatka, by Chief Ranger Kort Asaki. A jungle world originally settled thousands of years before by native-African refugees from one of Earth’s atomic wars, Khatka is a safari world, essentially a giant hunting ground where big-game hunters come to try their skill against large, dangerous animals.
On Khatka the three starmen discover that Ranger Asaki is being undermined by a witch doctor named Lumbrilo. During a ceremony in which Lumbrilo has disguised himself as the local version of a lion, Medic Tau, who has studied magic on many worlds, conjures the image of an elephant, thereby earning Lumbrilo’s enmity.
On a visit to see Zoboru, a new, no-kill preserve, the three starmen, Ranger Asaki, and the flitter pilot are stranded in the jungle when their flitter crashes. The men must walk back to their base while avoiding encounters with Khatka’s dangerous fauna. One such encounter tells them that they are being tracked and herded by Lumbrilo.
In a deadly swamp the men come to a camp occupied by a small team of poachers. There Tau confronts Lumbrilo, turns his magic back on him, and sends him screaming into the jungle, thereby solving Ranger Asaki’s problem. Captain Jellico and his men then return to the Solar Queen for what they hope will be a nice quiet mail run.
Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) and his wife Edith (Jean Stapleton) travel out of town one weekend to Tuckahoe, New York to attend the wedding of Carol Traynor (Marcia Rodd), the divorced daughter of Edith's favorite cousin, Maude Findlay (Beatrice Arthur). Carol, Archie and Maude are all mutually dreading the wedding for different reasons: Archie and Maude because they both hate each other, and Carol because she predicts that Archie will make bigoted comments about her fiancé, David Green (Robert Dishy), who is Jewish. Maude assures Carol that David will handle Archie with grace, as it is "a trait of theirs", and Carol points out her mother's own shortsighted views on Jewish people. She grumbles about the "archaic ritual" of marriage, but Maude points out that weddings come with gifts.
After Maude gets rid of an unhelpful plumber (Bernie West) and refuses his high fee, David stops by with information about the bachelor party. Maude's fourth husband Walter (Bill Macy), Carol's stepfather, questions her traditional "white" wedding, as she was married once before and already has a "dumb kid" named Phillip. Archie and Edith arrive, and Maude bluntly tells Archie about David, to which he reacts just as Carol predicted. When he learns that he must chip in for the bachelor party, Archie refuses to attend and declares his intentions to stay with Edith at the bridal shower, but the arrival of the other female guests drives him back to his motel.
After the bridal shower, Maude and Carol discuss their previous marriages, and debate who gave whom a shower for which event, while Edith goes upstairs to get Phillip a drink and tell him a bedtime story. David and Walter both return home in bad moods as the bachelor party was broken up by the cops for being too rowdy. Carol is upset to learn that there was female entertainment at the party, and further alarmed when David reveals that he bought a house without Carol's knowledge and expects her to quit her job and be a stay-at-home mother and housewife. She inadvertently makes an anti-Semitic remark in response, and though Maude futilely attempts to smooth things over by praising Jewish men, Carol and David argue and call off the wedding. Maude comforts Carol and breaks the news to Edith and Archie, and Archie (who returns to Maude's house from his motel) reveals that he was the one who (unknowingly) called the cops on David's bachelor party, leading Maude to blame him for the entire debacle and subsequently stomp on his foot. Carol assures him that it was not his fault, and he agrees with this and departs with Edith, leaving their wedding gift with Maude as "a deposit for the next one."
The action comedy takes place in a small provincial Russian city in the 1870s.
Young, beautiful and wealthy widow Kupavina dreams of happiness and love. She has no idea what passions boil around her. Many haunted her wealth, vast forests, beautiful name.
The imperious and ambitious landowner Murzavetskaya trying to take over the property Kupavina. By deception, fraud, intimidation Murzavetskaya trying to subdue the young widow. It also has plans to marry her of his dissolute nephew. And that it is almost possible. But there is more cunning, more shrewd and intelligent man, who for a long time and liked the pretty widow, and its capital. It Berkutov - Kupavina's neighbor. He enters into a decisive duel with cunning and fraudsters - Murzavetskaya and its obsequious entourage, directing for action at the right, advantageous only to him on track. As a result, he wins.
Based on the true life story of Jérôme Kerviel, a French trader who was convicted in the 2008 Société Générale trading loss for breach of trust, forgery and unauthorized use of the bank's computers, resulting in losses valued at €4.9 billion.
Kerviel was born in 1977 in a small fishing town in Brittany. He and his brother were brought up simply by their hardworking parents who were devoted to each other. He earned a master's degree in Finance.
In 2000, the Société Générale recruits him in the middle office. This "Secretariat" has the task of accounting for orders placed by traders to the legendary trading floor. The young Jerome Kerviel will learn fast, very fast ...
In flashbacks, Sophia Burset (Laverne Cox), formerly Marcus (M Lamar), a firefighter, pays for her sexual reassignment surgery by stealing credit card information from fire-wrecked houses. Sophia's wife, Crystal (Tanya Wright), while unaware of Sophia's crimes, fully supports her transition, although she requests that Sophia keep her penis so that they can continue to have sex. Sophia's son, Michael (Michael Rainey Jr.), however, is upset by her transition, and, upon discovering her credit card fraud, reports her crime to the police, causing her to be arrested.
In the present day, the prison switches Sophia to generic drugs and halves her dosages of estrogen in order to make up for budget cuts. After attempting to negotiate with prison counselor Healy (Michael J. Harney), she swallows the head of a bobblehead dog in order to see a doctor about her hormone therapy. However, the doctor decides to take Sophia off of hormones altogether, fearing that they are affecting her negatively. After fending off the proposition of prison guard Mendez (Pablo Schreiber) of hormones in exchange for oral sex, Sophia asks Crystal to smuggle in hormones for her; Crystal is disgusted with Sophia, telling her to "man up" for the sake of her wife and her son.
Meanwhile, mentally unstable inmate Suzanne (Uzo Aduba), called "Crazy Eyes", begins stalking Piper (Taylor Schilling). Piper is perturbed by the attention, despite using Suzanne to ward off her ex-girlfriend Alex (Laura Prepon). Piper decides to let Suzanne down easy by informing her about her fiancé. When Piper confronts Alex for "stealing her good life" by naming her in trial, Alex insists that she had no part in her being in prison. Piper decides to ensure this by asking her fiancé, Larry (Jason Biggs), who is dealing with his sexual abstention in Piper's absence, to find out whether Alex named her.
Miss Claudette (Michelle Hurst) receives a new roommate, Janae (Vicky Jeudy), who disrespects her expectations for cleanliness and privacy. Miss Claudette uses her power at the prison to remove Janae from her bunk, resulting in Piper moving into the bunk. Miss Claudette's code of conduct is violated when Suzanne vengefully pees next to Piper's bed.
'''Opening quote:''' "Soon he was so in love with the witch's daughter that he could think of nothing else. He lived by the light of her eyes and gladly did whatever she asked."
Renard (Sasha Roiz) meets with Adalind (Claire Coffee) in an art gallery, where he gives her a vial of blood, a vital ingredient for a love potion which he tells her use on Hank (Russell Hornsby). Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) tells Nick (David Giuntoli) that she doesn't like feeling unsafe in her own home, and wants to learn to use a gun. Bud (Danny Bruno) brings a gift for Nick and Juliette: a beautiful quilt. Adalind arrives at Freddy's (Randy Schulman) shop to buy ingredients. After she leaves, two men rob the store, looking for a drug called Jay. As they leave, Freddy bites one of them in the leg and is shot to death.
Nick and Hank contact Freddy's sister Rosalee (Bree Turner). Nick sees that Rosalee, like her brother, is a Fuchsbau, and she realizes he is a Grimm. Adalind uses the potion, mixed with a drop of her own blood, to make cookies. She gives them to Hank, telling him not to share them. Nick asks Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) to help with the investigation. Monroe meets Rosalee and they reveal their creature identities to each other.
The robbers return while Rosalee is in the store alone; she is attacked, but manages to escape. Nick sends Monroe to stay with her. The potion begins to affect Hank, who starts having erotic dreams involving Adalind. At the station, Sgt. Wu (Reggie Lee) takes one of the cookies to eat. When he goes to check on Monroe and Rosalee, he passes out, his face becoming badly swollen and disfigured by hives. Rosalee is able to save him using her knowledge of herbs.
Rosalee explains that Wu has ingested a Zaubertrank 23 potion, which when ingested by its target causes them to experience certain emotions regarding an intended other person. But anybody other than the target who ingests it will have an allergic reaction. Rosalee identifies her attackers, and Monroe and Nick go to the "Island of Dreams" (German: Trauminsel), a hangout where people smoke Jay. They find the robbers there and apprehend them.
Wu recovers but is now eating the foam from his couch. Nick takes Juliette to a firing range and is impressed by her skill. Hank continues having erotic hallucinations.
The main character of the story, Stemmka, through an inheritance, becomes the owner of a Berlin brothel, called "Pension Schölermann". In order to refresh the "establishment", Stemmka immediately hires two attractive young ladies. One of these, Marlies, whose fiancé Werner is stuck in East Berlin and was prevented from escaping to the West. Not only is the brothel used for erotic encounters, it becomes the meeting place of the intelligence services. Among the clients are a West-German nuclear scientist, a Stasi officer, a representative of the CIA and his communist opponent from beyond the Iron Curtain.
Marlies wants to rescue Werner from the power of the Stasi and therefore agrees to cooperate with the GDR. For this reason, she passes on the secrets she learns from pillow talk to the communist enemy. Her spying ends when her fiancé escapes from the east to the city's western sector. Now they can turn the tide and help the Western Allies smash the East German ring of agents.
In Lisbon, Professor Zandor developed a groundbreaking formula on behalf of the industrialist Bardot: He succeeded in producing a steel mixture that is completely bulletproof and, as a result, makes conventional weapons ineffective. In doing so, he gets all kinds of agents from different countries on their toes, but also crooks who are not only after the formula for the fantastic alloy, but also after Professor Z himself. One day, the brilliant scientist is kidnapped straight from his laboratory, and those present, Ellen Green, Zandor's assistant, and Mr. Bardot himself, are witnesses. Zandors client now fears that the groundbreaking formula could be leaked to a foreign power. The most important nations then send their best people to the Portuguese capital, including Jack Haskins from the USA and Pierre Genet from France. Both men have known each other for some time and sometimes cooperate, but have also appeared as competitors.
The events have led to the fact that now Lisbon is not only a fairground for spies, but also various dark figures arrive on site, including a certain Johannsson, the head of a gang, as well as the opaque Jenny Renoir and the unscrupulous killer Peterson. Local Commissioner Oliveira has his hands full to ensure that his Lisbon does not turn into a battlefield anytime soon. France's agent Genet finds out how dangerous Johannsson is when, on arrival, he barely escapes an attack by Johannsson's men and is saved thanks to Haskins' mission. Haskin receives the first trace of Zander through a letter he discovers in Ellen's handbag. He is in danger himself, but cannot track down the professor. A splendid party that Bardot is hosting one evening brings everyone involved together for the first time: Haskins, Genet, Johannsson, Ellen Green, Jenny Renoir, Commissioner Oliveira and Mike Danham, a Bardot employee. In the course of the evening, Bardot becomes the victim of a sophisticated assassination attempt. Haskins and Genet discover clues that suggest a connection between the murder and knowledge of the formula of the invention. They also find out that an affair is simmering between Bardot's wife and Danham. Haskins confronts the two and coaxes them to admit that Mike is Bardot's killer. Before Haskins can find out more about the crime, the couple is shot by Johannsson.
The gang boss flees headlong, and a wild chase ensues, in which Haskins takes Johannsson. Haskins and his French colleague use a ruse to determine the true role of Ellen Green: She is her British colleague, the agent from London, and was smuggled into Zander's environment as his assistant. She is behind the "kidnapping" of Zander in order to actually protect him from the villains. Johannsson manages to free himself and, with the help of his people, to determine Zandors whereabouts. However, Ellen Green escapes in a car with her protégé, the professor. However, Johannsson's people deposited a time bomb there. Johannsson's men pursue the refugees. Professor Zandor is fatally shot in the chase. For their part, Haskins and Genet chase after Johannsson. They manage to save Ellen just in time from the car exploding. However, they cannot find the formula. Apparently the professor destroyed them beforehand. And so the military balance of terror is preserved.
Donald Becker (McCarren) makes A move to Manhattan from Grand Island, Nebraska after an abrupt breakup of a three-year relationship. Robby Harrington, (Arnaz) Becker's childhood chum had been living in New York for years and invites Donald out for a change of pace, and secures him employment and to hone his photography skills with seasoned model photographer Chandler Corey (Richard Dawson). On Donald's arrival to the Big Apple his innocence is exploited as a man attempts to steal his luggage outside of the telephone booth. Co-Producer Alan King makes a cameo as a cabbie Manny Shiller and scares away the thief and bestows some much-needed knowledge to the guileless Becker. While taking a break from being in a relationship, Donald cannot help but notice the dozens of beautiful young women New York has to offer in the swinging seventies. But Becker's swing needs a big push to get off the ground, yet he finds friendship in the company of Sally Claybrook (Armstrong) who is currently in an off and on relationship (presently off) with married man Frank Cavanaugh (Rudolph Willrich).
Upon arriving at Harrington's apartment, (413 E 68th street) Becker cannot get in and valiantly tries to gain entrance without a key or knowledge of new fellow tenants. Donald buzzes the residence of Cavanaugh/ Claybrook and serenades Sally with On the Banks of the Wabash, Far Away and still fails. When Donald finally gets into the apartment he's surprised to the stunning glamour of Harrington's playmate and his promiscuous attitudes. Robby tries to update Donald's fashion and confidence to the New York lifestyle in a trendy fashion store where they meet Pam (Fobesy Russell) and Denise (Hollis Winick). Denise eventually ends up in bed with Pam and Harrington, and Becker sadly walks the streets wearing his new ensemble but quickly reconfirms that this is not who he really is, as he sees a mannequin in the window wearing the very same clothing articles. As Becker states in a bar with Claybrook "I look like a runner-up in a John Travolta look-a-like contest".
The bar scene is a pivotal point in the film as Sally shares a recording of an on the spot interview with Howard Cosell, and inspires Donald by saying, "You know anybody will talk to you with a tape recorder in your hand, it makes you look like you know what you're actually doing." The Cosell interview is for Sally's thesis on pop art and its relationship to society. Donald meets Terry (Denise Flamino), a gorgeous young woman in the bar, grips the tape recorder and microphone and tries Claybrook's technique and gets her number. This bumps up Donald's confidence and he courageously goes to the source on what makes women tick, and the best way to approach them. Unfortunately this confidence ultimately blinds Becker as he swoons Cynthia Miller (Deborah Raffin), an alluring model and girlfriend of his employer (Chandler Cory) of four years. When Donald informs Robby of his dinner date, Harrington tells him, "That's terrific I'm very proud of you, you're making great progress, now break the date, is it worth your job?" Becker responds, "It's worth my life!" Donald calls from Studio 54, to tell Robby how well it's going, Harrington tries his best to stop Donald from going any further, but to no avail, the two hit the dance floor in a spectacular liveliness which really defines the New York Disco scene.
Donald has the best night of his life, then has the worst day when Chandler humiliates Becker while firing him. Donald takes to the hubs to record audio for his book on how to pick up girls, even though both Sally and Robby discourage him from doing it. In the midst of Becker getting more material for his book he sees Claybrook infuriatingly leave the apartment exclaiming, "I'm a failure and a fraud" because the notes for her thesis are just culminating with no signs of fruition. Donald takes her apartment key from her secret spot (a humble loose bannister knob) and organizes the archives and bestows all the credit to Max, her dog who isn't the best watchdog. Sally invites Donald up to the roof for a surprise picnic, Donald having undeniable romantic feelings for Sally, and he believing they're mutual, he finally pushes to know what's the story between her and Cavanaugh. While finishing the typing of "The End" of his book, Sally hysterically knocks on the door with wine and flutes to celebrate the triumph of her thesis. The two end up spirited by the wine singing "On the Banks of the Wabash, Far Away", the very song which introduced the two. Donald makes a move on Claybrook, and the two become an item.
With multiple manuscript rejections and red wine to soften the fall, Claybrook cheers up Becker by scratching off Cavanaugh's name from the mail box. Donald receives a letter to meet with Dana Greenberg, editor (Polly Bergen) and throws oil on the fire by assuming Dana Greenberg is a man, believing only a man would be interested in his book. Ms. Greenberg hated the book and only sent the letter to personally insult and reject Donald. Sally cheers up Donald by singing "The Sons of Nebraska" (an old collegiate football fight song), then introduces Donald to a printer by the name of Nathan Perlmutter (Abe Vigoda) who begins sentences with "Based on my experience" and instructs Becker on taking ads out in magazines to bring his book exposure, then getting the orders for the books first, then printing them. Perlmutter instructs the two not to go to the post office for a week. Yet every day the two meet at the post office only to witness lint in the box. On the day the rent is due on the p.o. box, Donald asks Sally if he could go alone. Donald receives a note to report to the postal carrier, and is reprimanded on having his mail pile up. As excited as Donald is to announce the news to Sally's door, that jubilation is halted as Frank Cavanaugh opens the door, making things difficult and complicated between the two as Donald cannot fully celebrate his success with Sally. Becker's star keeps climbing as press and beautiful women clamor for him, even the venomous Dana Greenberg sees Donald's book and stardom skyrocket, and decides to gain a reprieve with him. Soon enough Harrington and Becker's apartment become too crowded with overstock of his book, Donald seeks a more suitable abode to complement his successful jet-set lifestyle and his best friend Robby. With all of his success, he still sulks and wishes things with Claybrook worked out. While back at the old apartment Donald stands in the center of a maze of boxes packing his book in envelopes, Sally comes to tell him that she's leaving to Chicago for good with Frank Cavanaugh. She gets a cold and unfeeling "goodbye" from Donald and the two get into an argument that has Sally storming off, toppling the maze of boxes.
Donald visits with Dana Greenberg to discuss the paperback right to his book, once again she insults his book while insisting he be a spokesman on "swinging singles" "the definitive expert on picking up girls". Donald insists his book is not silly and he couldn't be spokesman for anything, "I didn't write this book for swinging singles, they don't need one. I wrote this book about loneliness and how to find somebody". During the meeting Donald realizes that he's done being petty with the Cavanaugh/ Claybrook situation and wants to profess his undying love for Sally, by telling Greenberg, "You know I suddenly have a yen for frozen yogurt" (the celebratory meal Sally and Donald shared when their success came together). Donald races through security at the airport but it's too late, as he sees Claybrook's airplane pulling away from the terminal. Sad and dismayed Donald accepts the truth and heads back to his new apartment to find Sally and her luggage in the outside patio. The two innocently converse about things. Sally says, "A lot of the old stuff went away today." Donald asks, "For good?" Sally responds, "For very good."
Young descendant of the pirate Henry Morgan, who left him a rich heritage, wants to find the treasure of his ancestor. On the way, he meets his distant cousin, also Henry Morgan. Together, they will find dangerous adventures, unknown lands, and love.
It has been a month since Phil took the duck eggs the found in the episode "The Day Alex Left for College", and he is preparing a "duck village" for them to hatch idespite the rest of his family's suspicion of the egg's viability. Claire then calls Mitch and Lily over to help with the duck village, but Mitch capitalizes on Luke's driving instructor's cancellation and instead agrees help him with his driving, leaving Lily to assist Phil with the project, much to her vexation. Phil takes Lily out to improve the duck village after it proved to be a hazard to the eggs, and retells the story of how he acquired them to Lily. This piqued Lily's curiosity as to why the eggs were abandoned, and projects the eggs' "orphaned" state onto her situation of being adopted.
A couple of college frat boys are renting the upstair apartment of Mitch and Cam's residence and Cam tries to befriend them by inviting them down to his apartment to play catchball and chugging different types of alcoholic beverages to their amusement due to his need to always be liked; thus triggering Mitch's displeasure. Things go even worse when the frat boys convince Cam to take part in a prank in which he pretends to be a pizza man and steals a goat. Mitch catches him walking home while helping Luke drive and tells him that he is likable as he is and that he doesn't have to change so that people will be fond of him, which gets him to change his behavior.
Manny has a new crush on a girl named Chelsea and he wants to ask her out; meanwhile Gloria attempts to meet her favorite actor by stalking her to a hotel. However, when she sees her, she loses her confidence and acts uncannily. Manny sees Gloria actions and loses confidence, but later considers it as a learning experience and calls Chelsea to ask her out onn a coffee date on Gloria's advice, to which she says yes.
Claire pitches new closet ideas to her dad and his creative team for the first time, only to be rejected since those ideas have been pitched already in the past. Discouraged, she goes to a lunch meeting with Jay and a client when Jay apologizes for being too harsh on her in the meeting as he is tired of having to hear mediocre business ideas, and encourages her to keep trying. Later, she shares her ideas with the aforementioned client, only to grab the blueprint for Phil's duck village filled with birdseeds; this makes a swarm of birds fly to her table to eat them, ruining the meeting. As she arrives home, Phil asks her to tend to the eggs; just then the eggs starts to hatch, prompting Phil to head home. When he does, all the eggs have already hatched; worse, the ducklings imprint on Claire and follow her around the house.
Alex (Ariel Winter) welcomes Phil (Ty Burrell) for the first time since she enrolled in Caltech. While Phil is absent, Claire (Julie Bowen), Haley (Sarah Hyland), and Luke (Nolan Gould) decide to get rid of the three ducks they have in their house, since the ducks are a hassle to have around. But Claire changes her mind after she realizes how much the ducks remind Phil of their own children. Phil has a similar experience while visiting Alex, when she tells him that she does not want to participate in a freshman ritual that she views as frivolous. Phil realizes he is trying to impose his own college experience on his daughter, and apologizes. At the same time, he brings Alex the clothes needed in order for her to participate, which she does. By the time Haley, Luke and Claire come home, Phil has also a change of heart about keeping his children to himself, and helps them to release the ducks.
Manny (Rico Rodriguez) recruits Gloria (Sofía Vergara) and Cameron (Eric Stonestreet) on a heist to steal blood peppers to make their hot sauce. By suggesting and planning the heist, he also wants to prove to his mother that he can be a rebel, not just a goody-two-shoes boy that other people see him as. His plan works, but Cameron behaves selfishly by making decisions about Gloria’s sauce business without Gloria’s knowledge. Gloria puts her foot down, and eventually manages to convince Cam to create his own sauce without leeching off anyone.
Meanwhile, Jay (Ed O'Neill) helps Mitchell (Jesse Tyler Ferguson) to organize Lily’s (Aubrey Anderson-Emmons) first sleepover with her friends from a Vietnamese dance troupe, a difficult feat since Mitchell and Cameron aren't always welcomed by the Vietnamese parents. Mitchell decides at first to be the “cool daddy” who allows the girls to do whatever they want, but after being unable to take it, he reaches out to Jay to help him make the girls as exhausted as possible. Mitchell and Jay then get Cameron and Gloria to make the girls bottle some hot sauce, much to a parent’s displeasure. At the end of the day, Jay succeeds in his sleepover mission as every girl—and Mitchell—falls asleep by 7:45 PM.
Claire and Gloria are going away for a spa weekend after Claire finished a big job for said spa; Phil and Mitchell are going to see a movie while Jay and Cameron are going to a sports bar together to watch a boxing match, leaving Manny and Luke to babysit Lily at the Dunphy's house.
At the spa, Claire's phone alerts her that the smoke alarm was set off. This worries her, and she tries to phone Luke but can't get through; but Gloria reaches Manny who tells her that they burnt chocolate chip cookies baking them. Claire calls their bluff as her oven is broken, and despite Gloria's reassurance that everything is fine, Claire decides to head home anyways, making Gloria leave as well.
Meanwhile, Phil and Mitchell wait in the line to the movie when a client to whom Phil sold a house comes up to them and offers them two gummy bears laced with pot. Neither of the two have done pot, and are excited to experience it for the first time; they are told that the marijuana will take effect after 45 minutes post-ingestion. No sooner has Phil timed his clock for 45 minutes when the smoke alert comes through. When he also can't get through to Luke, he and Mitchell decide to rush home to check and get back in time to enjoy their movie without anyone noticing.
At first, Jay and Cameron awkwardly try to make small talk unsuccessfully; but their mutual disagreements with two other people in the bar soon bonds them by making them place bets and playing games for money against the aforementioned duo.
Arriving home, Claire and Gloria find Manny painting a portrait of Luke and nothing else, and Luke explains they were actually making chocolate chip pancakes that burnt and set off the alarm. Claire still holds her suspicions, and they are cemented even more when she finds a red solo cup tainted with the smell of alcohol. At the same time, Phil and Mitchell arrive home and Claire orders them to search the house. While checking the basement, the pot kicks in for Phil and Mitchell and they struggle to maintain their composure. When Phil and Mitchell discovers the partygoers in Luke's room, he and Mitchell decide not to tell the truth since otherwise, they will have to miss the movie and Claire will find out that they are high.
While they were doing that, Claire convinces Luke and Manny to turn on each other to no avail. Just then, she hears what she interprets as the sound of a party; when she goes outside to check, Claire and Gloria find Jay and Cameron playing table tennis against the guys they met in the bar. Claire almost gives up when a partygoer falls out of the window, crashing into the tennis table and the party is exposed. The parents then call Luke and Manny in to be punished, while Phil and Mitchell's secret gets out. The episode ends with Lily being forced to run on a treadmill to try and wear her out from her sugar high she got from Luke and Manny's soda bribe in return for her keeping the party a secret.
''Redcon'' is set in a world where World War I, referenced to as the "Great Unification War" in-game, never ended. A dictatoral state simply called The Empire State leads a war against a rebel nation named Krux, led by the traitorous Master General and former mentor to the player, Franz Erhard Kranz(later into the game, Krux's nemesis, Fuhrer Adler Grimm, calls him "Franz"). The protagonist of the game is Strike Commander(In full named "Strike Commander Triumphant"), who is tasked by leading the offensive against Krux.
Strike Commander is given command of a small fortress in a war against Krux. He proves to be a capable leader and defeats Krux forces in several battles. He eventually defeats Krux units that tried to destroy a dam that would flood the gambling town of Pompey and kill The Empire's General Staff (equivalent of the Cabinet of the United States) along with Fuhrer Adler Grimm, the dictator of The Empire, which would effectively end the war. Strike Commander leads an offensive against Krux even though general Kranz warns him that they are not enemies and mocks him for his naivety to trust the Empire. After a long campaign, Strike Commander Triumphant defeats the Krux army and presumably kills Kranz. Fuhrer Grimm congratulates him for victory but says that the Empire needs a new enemy, since war is profitable for the Empire and unifies the people, and labels Strike Commander as a traitor. Strike Commander's executive officer, the Lieutenant Bella Warren, joins Grimm, although Strike Commander's Field Sergeant attempts to join the Strike Commander. Strike Commander succeeds Kranz as leader of the Krux, even adopting his flag (a black "X" on a blue background), and starts an offensive against The Empire. He defeats all Imperial generals in the General Staff. Adler Grimm celebrates the death of his "idiotic generals" and takes Bella to Pompeii. Once he leaves, Bella hints that she abandoned the Strike Commander to spy on the Fuhrer for the Strike Commander. The Strike Commander then prepares to destroy the dam that would flood Pompeii and kill Grimm the same way as Kranz tried in the beginning of the game. The ending of the game suggests that the Strike Commander Triumphant will fail in the same way that Kranz did and the cycle of perpetual war will continue.
The date is May 10, 1974, and John Parsons (Raphael Sbarge) is an orphaned teenage boy living in rural New Mexico. For ten years, he has lived in a cabin on the Saunders Ranch, along with his 19-year-old brother Chris, who serves as his legal guardian after the deaths of their parents. The cabin has no running water or electricity, and is heated by a wood-burning stove.
With some reluctance, Chris agrees to allow John to accompany him to round up a herd of wild mustangs, a dangerous task that Chris agreed to perform to reimburse ranch owner Bea Saunders for a horse named Friday, which she agreed to sell to him for John. Chris becomes concerned over John's recklessness when trying to break a particularly wild one, and decides to mount it himself. He manages to stay on for a few minutes until the horse throws him to the ground, causing Chris to land on his face and die instantly.
John carries Chris' lifeless body to Bea's cabin, telling her what happened. Will, the local sheriff, arrives and summons an ambulance, and offers to return John to his cabin. Bea refuses, saying she's selling the cabin, despite pleas from Will and her father to let John stay due to his age and the fact that he and Chris fixed it up over the years. She remains firm, stating that John is not her problem and that the cabin is hers. Will finally relents and tells her he'll return to take John.
John overhears this from another room and unknown to anyone, returns to the cabin on his own. He packs a bedroll and some personal items, and as he's getting ready to leave, he prepares to blow out a lit kerosene lamp on the kitchen table. In a fit of rage-fueled grief, he angrily smashes the lamp to the floor, causing a fire to break out and quickly spread throughout the cabin. He tries to escape with Friday, but Will catches up with him later and takes him into custody. Casey, one of Will's deputies, types up a confession for John to sign, but he refuses. Casey then takes a handcuffed John to a pauper's field, where a large crowd has gathered for Chris's meager county burial. While there, Casey presents John with an engraved pocket watch that Chris had intended to give him for his upcoming 16th birthday.
The sheriff returns to the Saunders ranch to try and persuade Bea to drop charges against John of felony grand larceny and willful destruction of private property, but she refuses. John is then faced with a series of unfortunate circumstances...now that he has no family left, there is no blood relation to take responsibility for him. While others have offered to take him in, the judge determines that he cannot be turned over to non-licensed foster parents, and the few who are licensed would not be willing to take him in due to the charges. With no options left, the judge reluctantly sentences him to the Sierra Mesa Industrial School for Boys, ordering him to remain there until his 18th birthday.
John and his fellow incoming inmates are introduced to David Royce (Ritter), the facility's new superintendent. Unlike his predecessors, Royce is an idealistic leader who believes that his charges are not simply hardened criminals, but also victims of circumstance like John. A teacher at the school, Angela Brannon (Thomas), shares Royce's views and they join forces to inspire change at the underfunded facility.
However, their efforts are rebuffed at every turn by legal red tape and a corrupt system. Meanwhile, John also is exposed to the real-life brutalities of prison life, such as rape, drug abuse, sadistic guards, indifferent teachers, and psychopathic inmates. John also slowly begins to lose hope for his future, much to the dismay of Brannon and Royce, who both see him as different and push hard for him to do better.
When it appears that Royce begins to succumb to the cruelties of the bureaucracy controlling the prison, he decides to come into a darkened ward with the youngest inmates one evening, and takes a seat as the boys rest. One rises from his bunk and embraces Royce, who takes him into his arms. Then one by one, more boys get up from their bunks and sits, lays or cuddles next to him, with the exception of Tyrone, a six-year-old troublemaker who refused to provide Royce with information regarding a glue-huffing incident that nearly killed two other boys aged nine and twelve. Tyrone remains in his bunk and weeps.
Fighting tears, Royce sees this as a sign that he must not give up his fight for change, and returns to his duties more determined than ever. Brannon tries one last ditch effort to redirect John back to the person he was prior to incarceration. This culminates in a showdown between John and an influential inmate nicknamed Chaser, whom Tyrone had been supplying with homemade glue that led to the earlier incident, and runs the prison population. John fights Chaser and wins, but his victory is short-lived...the incident results in an institutional transfer from Frank Bernard, the state Director of Institutions, with whom Royce has a negative history. Bernard orders John transferred to Dennison, a maximum-security facility. Royce tries to intervene, even going so far as to put in a call to the governor, but fails.
Brannon mentions to Royce that she and her brother own a ranch "on the other side of the Rockies" that needs hands, and that one who knows horses could teach the others...and that she could be back in class Monday morning. Seeing a possible way out for John, and at the risk of their careers, Royce arranges to switch the night guards overseeing John, Joey and Tom, two other inmates due to be transferred to Dennison. Royce enters John's cell and hands him a set of keys, telling him to unlock their cells at 3 and gives further instructions. When John asks him how he'll know what time it is, Royce hands him a pocket watch - the same engraved one John received at his brother's funeral.
John and Tom make it to a waiting car - and Brannon. Joey runs back to the infirmary to try and retrieve Tyrone (who was injured by Chaser and his gang over the glue incident), but he is unable to get to him and is left behind. Brannon provides John and Tom with a change of clothes and drives to the ranch. Tom hangs back, but John reaches out his hand. Tom shakes it and they walk off towards the ranch, looking back at Brannon for one last time. A voiceover from Royce says both survived and were given new names and identities, and the escape was never discovered.
The film is inspired by the true story of a fourteen-year-old American boy who died by suicide in the wake of a dramatic sequence of serious acts related to school bullying and cyberbullying. Bonded to this story are those of other young gay, lesbian, and transgender teenage victims of homophobic attacks, who have been killed or induced to commit suicide in different parts of the world. On May 17, 2071, sixty years after the death of the protagonist and during the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia, a group of artists gather together to create a commemorative performance that will last the whole day.
Lucien Marguet, nicknamed "Lulu" is an investigator of the second class in the judicial police in the Paris head office. He is a field officer, so passionate about his work that he sometimes sacrifices his family responsibilities with his wife, a doctor, and his ailing mother. After his superior cancels a drug stakeout so he can use the stakeout van to drive home, even though he has been drinking, Lulu shows his contempt for him in front of their colleagues and is thrown out of the brigade.
After a period dealing with minor public complaints in one suburban police precinct, he joins a suburban police team fighting drug trafficking. The film covers their operations, their relationships with colleagues and informants, and the challenge of working with insufficient equipment and supplies. Lulu is obsessed with getting results: others on the team are more interested in slacking off and enjoying themselves. He has few close acquaintances apart from a prostitute who is HIV positive and a drug addict whose prospects are limited.
It is the morning of the day of Zoe Hanna (Sunetra Sarker) and Max Walker's (Jamie Davis) wedding, and a hungover Zoe stumbles into the living room to discover she's slept with another man. She gets rid of her one-night stand and prepares to marry Max with a guilty conscience. Before she goes to the registry office, she reveals to her friend, consultant Dylan Keogh (William Beck) that she has been unfaithful to Max and cheated on him. Dylan agrees to keep her secret and Zoe leaves the emergency department (ED) to marry Max. At the registry office, Zoe gets cold feet and tells Max she cannot marry him. When Max asks why she does not give him an answer, and instead goes ahead with the wedding. Max's mother Greta Miller (Kazia Pelka), stepsister Robyn Miller (Amanda Henderson) and friend Lofty Chiltern (Lee Mead) are present at the time of wedding.
Receptionist Louise Tyler meets with Laila Bertrand (Hannah Barrie), the patient that caused Louise to leave the nursing profession after blaming her for the death of her baby, at a bar. Laila shocks Louise when she tells her she is pregnant again, and believing Louise has only visited her to ask for her forgiveness, a defiant Laila leaves the bar. However, Laila trips and falls over a table and onto shards of broken glass. Louise calls for an ambulance to escort Laila to the emergency department, however she flees the scene of the accident before the paramedics arrive, fearing she will be blamed for the accident. At the emergency department, Dylan treats Laila and informs her that she is not pregnant; the bloated lump on her stomach has been caused by excessive alcohol drinking. Laila forgives Louise, relieving Louise of her guilt. Dylan and clinical nurse manager Rita Freeman (Chloe Howman) then become isolated after a patient displays symptoms of a contagious disease; Dylan is annoyed as he plans to walk Zoe down the aisle. Dylan soon diagnoses the patient with malaria.
At the wedding reception, Zoe and Max are greeted by friends and colleagues, including Dylan and Rita. Max soon notices Zoe and Dylan sharing looks and confronts Zoe, who confesses to cheating on him. Max is heartbroken and ends their marriage, devastating Zoe who flees the reception. She goes to Dylan's boathouse and tells Dylan that she plans to leave; they drive the boathouse away, passing the venue. At the venue, Max begins heavily drinking and when Louis Fairhead (Gregory Forsyth-Foreman) comments on Max and Zoe's marriage, they begin to fight. Lofty and Louis' father, Charlie Fairhead (Derek Thompson), attempt to intervene, but Lofty is pushed into a flame heater, sparking a fire at the venue. Guests begin to flee the reception, while others attempt to control the fire to no avail.
Max fears Zoe is still inside the reception and calls her; she answers. As Dylan tries steering the boat away from the fire, embers float onto the boat, igniting a blanket covering gas canisters and paint. Dylan panics as the flames burst and grow, before agreeing with Zoe to jump from the boat. As they prepare to jump, Dylan returns inside the boathouse to collect his "lucky" talisman, leaving Zoe to jump alone. Zoe flails in the water as the weight of her dress begins to drag her underwater. The boathouse then explodes twice as Zoe shouts for Dylan, shocking those at the venue who are watching.
The event begins on ''The Golden Girls'' one-hour episode "A Midwinter Night's Dream" (season 7, episodes 20 and 21) as a full moon on Leap Day falls upon the household which prompts Blanche to host a men-only Moonlight Madness Party and strange happenings abound: all the men are attracted to Dorothy while none are attracted to Blanche; Rose proposes to Miles after winning a free honeymoon to Paris and Sophia has fun with a witch's hex cast on Dorothy and goes through all the necessary steps to try and release her from it. The full moon and festivities prompt other strange happenings: Dorothy and Miles find themselves sharing a passionate kiss, and Blanche's necklace disappears while she necks with a British man named Derek. Carol and Barbara Weston (from ''Empty Nest'') are featured in the episode: Barbara shows up to confront Sophia, who attempted to cause a fight between her and Carol to break a curse, and Carol invites herself to Blanche's party.
The event continues on the ''Empty Nest'' episode "Dr. Weston and Mr. Hyde" (season 4, episode 20) as Dr. Harry Weston throws out his back and goes off his rocker after taking the wrong medicine that makes him act very strange. Barbara thinks their dog Dreyfuss may be masquerading as a repairman – after all, she's never seen the two of them together. Rose Nylund (from ''The Golden Girls'') drops in on the Westons for some advice about romance.
The event ends on the ''Nurses'' episode "Moon Over Miami" (season 1, episode 20) as Charlie Dietz (from ''Empty Nest'') and Blanche Devereaux (from ''The Golden Girls''), both affected by the full moon, turn up at the hospital: Blanche seeks Dr. Riskin's advice about a tonic for her sexual dry spell and a desperate Sandy considers dating Charlie. Greg encourages his co-workers to pursue their romantic fantasies and an astronaut arrives with a lump on his head.
Mirroring the plot of ''Twilight'', ''Life and Death: Twilight Reimagined'' follows 17-year-old Beaufort Swan as he leaves the sunny environment of Phoenix, Arizona where he has spent most of his life with his mother, Renée Dwyer, to the gloomy town of Forks, Washington to spend the rest of his high school career with his estranged father, police chief Charlie Swan.
Even though Beau never had many friends in Phoenix, he quickly attracts attention at his new school, and is quickly befriended by several students. Much to his dismay, several girls in the school compete for Beau's attention.
As Beau walks into biology class, a fan blows his scent towards Edythe Cullen. Beau sits next to Edythe on his first day of school, but she seems repulsed by him, hurting his feelings in the process. She disappears for a few days, but warms up to Beau upon her return; their newfound relationship is interrupted after Beau is nearly crushed by a van in the school parking lot. Edythe saves Beau, stopping the van with only her hand.
During a trip to La Push, Beau tricks a family friend, Julie 'Jules' Black of the Quileute tribe, into telling him the local tribal legends and he finds out why, although the Cullens have lived in Forks for two years, they have never really been accepted by the townsfolk. Julie mentions the Cullens, and says that most of the reservation believes that they are vampires, though she doesn't think so. During a trip to Port Angeles, Edythe rescues him again, this time from a band of gangsters intent on killing him. Beau asks her if what Julie said about her family is true. Edythe admits that she and her family are vampires, but says that she and her family only drink animal blood to keep themselves from turning into the monsters, unlike other vampires.
Edythe and Beau's relationship grows over time and they fall in love. Their foremost problem is that to Edythe, Beau's scent is a hundred times more potent than any other human's, making Edythe struggle to resist her desire to kill him. However, despite this, they manage to stay together safely for a while.
The seemingly perfect state of their relationship is thrown into chaos when another vampire coven sweeps into Forks and Joss, a sadistic tracker vampire, decides that she wants to hunt Beau for sport. Edythe's family plans to distract the tracker by splitting up Beau and Edythe, and Beau is sent to hide in a hotel in Phoenix. Beau then gets a phone call from Joss in which she says that she has his mother, and Beau is forced to give himself up to Joss at an old ballet studio near his mother's house. Upon meeting her, Beau discovers his mother wasn't at the dance studio and was safe all along. Joss attacks Beau, but Edythe, along with the rest of the Cullen family, rescue Beau before Joss can kill him. Unfortunately, Joss has already bitten him and the venom has spread too far into his system, resulting in Beau becoming a vampire. The Cullens fake Beau's death for his privacy, and he continues his relationship with Edythe and they get engaged.
Sometime later, the Quileute wolves confront the Cullens, believing them responsible for Beau's death. Beau and the Cullens manage to convince the wolves to believe the truth after a conversation with tribal elder Bonnie Black. When the wind blows Bonnie's scent to Beau, he manages to stay in control of himself, much to Edythe and Carine's surprise. With everything resolved, Beau and Edythe are free to enjoy their love together "forever" and get married in the future.
Although Chu Koo-lik (Chocolate) (Michael Hui) believes himself to have outstanding abilities, he has only reached the rank of Inspector despite working many years in the police force. Along with his cowardly assistant, Egg Tart (Ricky Hui), Chocolate is often occupied with nothing at the police station. One day, Chocolate's superior, Captain Wu (Roy Chiao), arranges his newcomer daughter, Kiu-kiu (Anita Mui) to work under Chocolate. However, Kiu-kiu and Chocolate dislike each other. Because Captain Wu deeply loves his daughter, he assigns simple cases to Chocolate, increasing Chocolate's dislike for Kiu-kiu.
Chocolate later receives a missing person case. Although he initially was uninterested, as the investigation goes on, the case suddenly took a dramatic turn, and full of mystery surrounds. Chocolate is determined to solve this case, with Kiu-kiu and Egg Tart under his wing.
The tale is set in Dunbeg Bay (Doonbeg), County Clare. Jack Dogherty was a fisherman who also scavenged goods by occasional beachcombing. He long yearned to meet a merrow (mermaid), as his father and grandfather had done before. He finally got a glimpse of a male merrow, then discovered he could regularly observe the creature at Merrow's rock on windy days. One such day he was driven to seek refuge in a cave, and came face-to-face with the merrow, who called himself Coomara (meaning "sea-dog" ). It had green hair and teeth, a red nose, scaly legs, a fish-tail, and stubby fin-like arms. They spoke at length about their abilities for drinking alcohol and their cellars, and how they both scavenged bottles from shipwrecks.
Coomara arranged a meeting a week later, and arrived carrying two cocked hats. The second hat was meant for Jack to use, since it conferred the wearer the power to submerge in the ocean, and Coo meant to invite Jack to his undersea home. The merman made Jack grab his fish-tail while he dived into the deep. The merman entertained his guest in his shack, which was dry inside with fires going, although the furnishings were crude. The seafood meal was magnificent, and they enjoyed the fine collection of spirits. Jack was then shown a collection of cages (much like lobster pots ) which Coomara revealed contained the souls of drowned sailors. Coomara meant no harm, and thought he rescued the souls from the cold water to a dry place. But Jack was horrified and resolved to release the souls.
Jack threw a rock in the sea to summon Coomara, for this had been the signal they agreed upon. Jack had coaxed his wife Biddy to leave the house and go on a religious errand, and was now inviting Coomara to his home. Jack offered spirits from his cellar, and planned on getting the merman drunk while he sneaked out with the cocked hat and go rescue the souls. The first day he did not succeed because Jack himself got overly drunk, forgetting that he did not have the coolness of the sea above his head to moderate the effects of alcohol. The next day, he offered the mermaid the powerful poteen he obtained from his brother-in-law, and watered down his own drinking. Jack succeeded in releasing some souls, but his wife returned and became witness to the merman. Jack told his wife his story and was forgiven for the good deed.
The merman seemed not to notice the souls had gone missing. He and Jack met many times after that and Jack continued to release souls. But one day the merman would not respond to the signal of the rock cast into the sea, and was not seen anymore.
Tech company Astro-X has used their revolutionary energy system to stabilize the atmosphere and prevent the formation of sharknadoes, using cheap, clean reactors dubbed Astro-Pods. To celebrate the five year anniversary of the eradication of sharknadoes, Astro-X founder Aston Reynolds announces that he will be hosting the grand opening of his shark-themed hotel, "Shark World", in Las Vegas.
Fin Shepard has moved to a farm in Kansas named "April's Acres," where he lives with his mother Raye and his young son Gil. Fin travels to Las Vegas with his cousin Gemini to meet up with his son Matt, who has recently returned from deployment in Iraq. When Matt and his fiancee, Gabrielle, marry and skydive from a plane, a sandstorm develops, which cannot be defused by Astro-X. It absorbs the water and sharks from a giant tank located in Reynolds' hotel, creating a sharknado that floods the streets of Las Vegas. Fin, Gemini, Gabrielle, and Matt work together to survive the storm until it retreats into the desert.
After being rescued from the moon by Astro-X, Colonel Shepard has become an employee at Astro-X, working on the development of a weaponized mech suit with the aid of his granddaughter Claudia and a scientist at Astro-X named Wilford. However, both Colonel Shepard and Claudia are unaware that Wilford has reconstructed his daughter and Fin's wife, April, into a cyborg in order to save her life, following her death at the hands of a space shuttle's debris. Wilford has also told April that Fin and their family, who believe April to be dead, were killed by the debris in order to keep her safe inside of his laboratory.
Fin, Gemini, Matt, and Gabrielle decide to take a train back to Kansas, but the Las Vegas sharknado follows them and destroys the Hoover Dam. In order to lessen the amount of casualties by the flood, Reynolds blows up the Grand Canyon. Fin and the group meet up with Reynolds at an Astro-X facility in Arizona, where Reynolds attempts to recruit Fin to his side in order to recover from the negative publicity created from Astro-X's failure to stop the Las Vegas sharknado; however, Fin rejects this offer. He and the group end up in a small town in Texas, where they acquire a set of power tools to fight off an approaching sharknado.
The sharknado strikes an oil field and ignites, becoming a flaming tornado of fire dubbed a "firenado". The firenado strikes an electric transformer and turns into a "lightningnado", which reroutes its course for Kansas. Meanwhile, April learns of her family's survival and angrily confronts her dad and escapes his lab. A sharknado touches down in Yellowstone National Park and becomes a "lavanado", while a "hailnado" touches down at Astro-X's headquarters in San Francisco, from which Colonel Shepard and Claudia flee. When their car is picked up by the storm, April rescues them and reveals she's alive, to their surprise.
At the Kansas State Line, Fin and the group acquire a red-and-white self-driving car that is a 1958 Plymouth Belvedere named Christine, which they use to travel to April's Acres. There, an approaching sharknado forces Raye and Gil into their underground bunker before the sharknado becomes a "cownado", which later merges with the lightningnado. Fin and the group arrive to fend off the sharks, during which Gabrielle is killed. Fin, Gil, Gemini, and Matt seek shelter in the farmhouse, which is carried by the sharknado to Chicago. Reynolds uses new isotopes in his Astro-Pods to destroy the lavanado and the hailnado.
Colonel Shepard obtains a newly refurbished mech suit from Wilbur and convinces Reynolds to fly him, Claudia, and April to Fin's location in Chicago. There, April rescues Fin and Gil from the wreckage, while Astro-X agents find Gemini and Matt under the rubble. On board Reynolds' jet, April reunites with her family, allowing her to meet Gil for the first time. Meanwhile, Reynolds struggles to diffuse the lightningnado due to its electricity blocking their attempts. The situation worsens when the lightningnado strikes the Perry Nuclear Power Plant in Ohio, transforming it into a deadly "nukenado" filled with radioactive sharks.
Reynolds realizes that the only way to diffuse the nukenado is to transform it back into a regular sharknado so that the Astro-Pods will work on it. He also suggests that the engines of Col. Shepard's mech suit can be used to power a device to remove the radioactivity from the storm by drawing massive amounts of water into it. Fin realizes that the only location with enough water to work is Niagara Falls, so they travel there with the nukenado on their tail. Nearing the falls, Reynolds volunteers to jump from his jet in a squirrel suit to set off the device, which will reverse the water flow upward into the nukenado and cool it.
However, the device fails to have sufficient power, and the land below Reynolds cracks, sending him off the cliff into the water below. Colonel Shepard volunteers to pilot the mech suit to complete the plan, but is swallowed by a shark before he can put it on, as is Claudia and Matt. Fin puts on the suit and flies into the storm to fight through and reach the device. He manages to use the suit's power supply to activate the device, but he is severely injured in the process. Niagara Falls is reversed into the nukenado, neutralizing its radiation and rendering it a normal sharknado. The Astro-Pods are activated, destroying the storm.
Fin becomes unconscious and falls over the cliff and is swallowed by a shark, which is promptly swallowed by three more sharks and a blue whale in quick succession. Gil uses a chainsaw to cut open the whale and sharks, revealing Colonel Shepard, Claudia, and Matt all alive. Together, they pull out an unconscious Fin, who they revive using April's power supply and two sharks as an improvised defibrillator. Suddenly, the Eiffel Tower falls from the sky. Nova, who was earlier mentioned to be vacationing in Paris, emerges from the tower, causing the Shepards to realize that the sharknado crisis may now be a global problem.
It has been over 500 years since the human race almost went extinct at the hands of the fearsome and mysterious "Beasts". The surviving races now make their homes, towns, and cities up on floating islands in the sky to keep out of reach of all but the most mobile of Beasts. Only a group of young girls, dubbed the Leprechauns, can wield the ancient Dug Weapons needed to fend off invasions from those dangerous creatures. Into the people's unstable and fleeting lives, where a simple call to certain death could come at any moment, enters an unlikely character: a mysterious man who lost everything in his final battle five hundred years ago, and had awakened from a long, icy slumber. Unable to fight any longer, the man, Willem, becomes the father those kids never had, caring for and nurturing them even as he struggles to come to terms with his new life, in which he feels the pain of helplessly waiting for his loved ones to return home from battle that his 'Daughter' once felt for him so long ago. Together, Willem and the leprechauns gradually come to understand what family means and what is truly worth protecting in their lives.
A lifelong Carolina farm girl who's saving her first kiss for the wedding, now in her early 20s, Grace has dreamed all her life of the day when "Mr. Right" slips a Princess Cut diamond on her finger and swears to love her forever. Tonight may be that night as Stewart has something special planned after 15 months together! But when things don't go as planned, and romance crashes down around her, it launches her on a quest, aided by her father, to understand what it means to truly love another person. Will Grace finally discover love or ruin her chances for happiness forever?
Joselito is a boy, with a prodigious voice, who spends most of his time in the mountains taking care of a flock of sheep. One fine day he discovers that the fruit of his work ends in drunkenness for his father and decides to try his luck in life through music, for which he associates with the cunning Peppino.
You awaken to receive a letter from your Grandmother, containing a key for a small dollhouse. Upon opening the door you are met with a doll-sized girl by the name of Sophie; who explains that your Grandmothers were best friends. Sophie is thrilled by your sense of fashion and invites you to help her struggling boutique in 'Beaumonde city'. Using your fashion skills and her social skills the two of you now work together to make the city a more fashionable place to be.
Unlike the previous games, Fashion Forward allows the player to work and be paid as a hair stylist and a make-up artist alongside managing the fashion boutique.
''Till I Met You'' follows the story of three friends — Iris (Nadine Lustre), a girl; Basti (James Reid), a boy; and Ali (JC Santos), a closeted homosexual — who eventually fall in love with each other and find themselves in an unusual love triangle. As conflicts arise, they are led into difficult situations whether to fight for their love or save their friendship.
The episode begins with Alan Tracy talking about flying to Halley's Comet in his sleep. He is then woken up by Scott Tracy and Grandma Tracy. Grandma informs him about a broadcast to do with Halley's comet. Alan starts to state facts about the comet which he already has done multiple times according to Scott. The broadcast begins with Francois Lemaire and his wife visiting the comet where he decides to go inside the comet's tail. Scott yells at the broadcast about it being a bad idea, John Tracy pops up stating that they have a situation.
John briefs Alan and Scott on the details of the emergency and they dispatch in Thunderbird 3. When flying in space Scott tells Alan that Lemaire's ship is still intact but Alan is more interested in the comet. Scott reminds Alan that they are on a mission and they have to be focused on that.
On Lemaire's ship, Francois is trying to look at his ship's controls and his wife fires the emergency beacon which Thunderbird 3 pick up and Alan informs Scott. Francois discusses about all the times he has needed rescued. Alan and Scott are unable to communicate with Lemaire. Scott takes a pod vehicle to go and rescue Lemaire. Scott finds it hard to bypass the rocks until Alan told him to think like he is playing a game. When Scott reaches the ship he still fails to communicate with the ship so he decides to dock with the ship. Once docked Scott finally communicates with Francois. Scott orders Francois and his wife to put on their space suits. Suddenly a large rock hits the ship, Alan becomes worried when he can't communicate with Scott. Scott manages to reach Alan who is relieved to hear from Scott and informs him that they are on the comet.
Scott enters Lemaire's ship to assess the damage, Francois remembers Scott from the last time he's been rescued. Francois isn't impressed when Scott breaks the ship apart to try and find a way to get the ship running again. Francois threatens to sue International Rescue for the damages. Scott contacts Alan to collect them. Scott, Francois and his wife jump over bits of the comet until they see the ship get destroyed by the comet. Alan comes in to land near them and he then leaves Thunderbird 3 so he can stand on the comet. The comet shakes and Francois is knocked off and Alan goes to rescue him. Scott sends Alan his space-board. Alan surfs back into Thunderbird 3 and they then take off. When leaving the comet, two of Thunderbird 3's gets hit so they can't return to Earth for 36 hours. Francois is complaining about there being no food, Scott informs them that Brains made ration bars for long journeys and that the bars are in the bin.
Six months off retirement from the Paris police, Commissioner Joss is faced with a troubling case. His lifelong friend, Inspector Gouvion, was the only survivor when a valuable consignment of gems was lifted by a violent criminal known as Quinquin, who killed not only the rest of the escorts but the three men in his gang as well. Then Gouvion is shot dead in his apartment: it could be accident or suicide, but Joss is sure it must be murder. Despite huge efforts, he can't find Quinquin but he does find the body of one of his murdered colleagues. This was Léon, whose attractive sister Nathalie works in a night club.
She admits to having known Gouvion, in fact to be being kept by him, and it was to fund his passion for her that he co-operated with Quinquin. That ended with his death, and Joss is determined to avenge his foolish old friend. So is Nathalie, who has lost both brother and lover, but when she goes with a gun to Quinquin's hideout, he shoots her too. For Joss, the wraps are now off and he is going to get Quinquin dead rather than alive. Putting heavy pressure on his sources, he learns that Quinquin is going to rob a mail train and take the proceeds to a deserted sugar refinery. Waiting there, he personally finishes off Quinquin and in a gun battle his men kill the rest of the gang.
At the heart of the play lies the love quadrangle. Natalya Petrovna, the wife of the rich landowner Arkady Sergeich Islaev, falls in love with Alexey Nikolayevich Belyaev - a student, teacher Kolya Islaeva.
Mikhail Aleksandrovich Rakitin - a friend of the family, has long loved Natalya Petrovna. Verochka - a pupil of Natalya Petrovna also falls in love with Kolya's teacher. Belyaev and Rakitin eventually leave the estate ...
Opening quote: "Sing my precious little golden bird, sing! I have hung my golden slipper around your neck."
Nick (David Giuntoli) plans a romantic weekend with Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) in a cabin at Whispering Pines, where he plans to propose to her. Hank (Russell Hornsby) is still obsessed with Adalind (Claire Coffee), to the point of stalking her and watching her house. He sees her kissing a man, Peter (Michael Sheets), and leading him inside her house. Hank later threatens Peter at gunpoint, telling him never to see her again. (It is later revealed that the encounter was orchestrated by Renard (Sasha Roiz), and that Adalind despises Peter.)
At Whispering Pines, Robin (Azura Skye), is trying to escape her husband, Tim Steinkellner (Josh Randall), but the man she is meeting is delayed. She races home and is confronted by Tim, who takes her inside and force-feeds her a concoction including earthworms. They are revealed both to be Wesen. Nick stops there to ask directions; he sees nothing, although Juliette becomes suspicious. Nick and Juliette's cottage is next door.
Later, Juliette prompts Nick to report a domestic disturbance to the sheriff, who checks on the house but takes no action. While in the local supermarket, Nick sees Tim manifest as a Wesen. He calls Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell), who identifies him as a Klaustreich. They are abusive, but women are strongly attracted to them. When Monroe was in high school, a Klaustreich got a friend of his pregnant. She gave birth to his “litter” at prom, and when her parents called the police, he slashed her face before leaving town. (Monroe says that the Klaustreich did not escape justice, implying that he himself took care of it.)
Nick learns Robin is a Seltenvogel, an extremely rare Wesen. Monroe and Rosalee (Bree Turner) tell him that Seltenvogel are prized because they grow an egg-shaped object composed chiefly of gold in their necks.
Tim kills a store clerk, who was the man helping Robin to escape. Nick discovers the corpse and calls the sheriff. He then rescues Robin, who is now in “labor”, and takes her to Juliette at their cabin. The sheriff arrives and a terrified Robin tells them he is Tim's cousin and part of the scheme. Robin flees into the woods; Nick follows and finds her. Over the phone, Monroe and Rosalee guide him in extracting the stone from Robin's throat. Tim and the sheriff find them, but Nick threatens to break the egg (making it worthless). Juliette arrives and fires her gun as an added distraction. Tim grabs the egg and runs, but he trips and the egg shatters. Nick arrests them.
At home, Nick finally proposes to Juliette. She declines, saying that, although she loves him and wants to marry him someday, he has been too closed off lately. In the final scene, Hank and Adalind chat after a romantic dinner, as the restaurant closes around them.
A young couple is killed in a hotel that used to be the home of Lizzie Borden. Sam and Dean quickly find all the paranormal signs in the hotel are fakes for the tourists. However, one of the hotel owners is killed, along with a man miles away from the hotel who is found by Sydney, the babysitter of his son Jordie. Sam becomes suspicious when Dawn, the victim's wife and Jordie's mother, has an unemotional reaction to her husband's death.
Dean meets Len (Jared Gertner) a Lizzie Borden fan who says he saw a girl named Amara wandering outside the hotel a few nights ago and he hasn't felt normal since he met her. Dean realizes Amara ate Len's soul. Suspecting Dawn to be soulless as well, the Winchesters track her down and find her and her lover dead in a house with Jordie tied up. Sydney captures the Winchesters explaining she also met Amara, who said she wanted to help Sydney. Sydney has felt blissful ever since her soul was taken, Amara helping her not care about her abusive childhood.
Sydney killed her enemies and Jordie's parents for being abusive and plans to offer the Winchesters to Amara as a gift. Len saves the Winchesters by killing Sydney. Len can feel himself turning darker the longer he is without a soul so he turns himself in for all the murders to stop himself. The Winchesters send Jordie to an aunt and are concerned about Amara growing stronger. Amara watches them as they leave promising to see Dean soon.
Amara eats a girl's soul and then returns to Crowley's (Mark A. Sheppard) lair. He chastises her for sneaking and risking herself and uses his powers to lock her in her room. After the Lizzie's murders, Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) discover that Len has been killed by one of Crowley's demons and discover he is holding Amara.
Castiel (Misha Collins) spends his time watching daytime talk shows but during a news report, discovers that the cameraman is Metatron (Curtis Armstrong). He locates Metatron, who is stuck as a human and films tragedies to sell to the media for money. Sensing a rage within Castiel, Metatron constantly mocks him, hoping to be killed since he hates being human. Finally, Castiel makes Metatron reveal something: in order to create humanity, God had to sacrifice his only kin: the Darkness, His sister.
Sam and Dean discover that Crowley holds Amara on an asylum and track it down. Sam goes after the demons and Dean arrives at Amara's room. Dean plans on killing her but Crowley arrives and uses his powers to hurt Dean. Amara is now revealed to be even more powerful than Crowley and hurts him, sparing his life and breaking their connection. Amara knows Dean won't kill her because of their link and says she'll soon be strong enough to exact her revenge on God and disappears.
In the bunker, Castiel tells Sam and Dean that he spared Metatron's life as he is no longer a threat. Just then, Sam receives a vision of Lucifer's Cage when he was the prisoner along with Lucifer and Michael. The episode ends as Amara walks through the street, finally freed.
Kidlat, a jeepney driver in a village in the Philippines, dreams of becoming an astronaut and making it big in the United States. His dreams take him as far as Europe and to a series of events that will show him that his idealisation of what Western and European culture has to offer is far from real.
Jerry was born in Santa Isabel Island, a part of the Solomon Islands archipelago. Jerry's owner was Mr. Haggin, who worked as a plantation guard and used Jerry to chase black slaves. Higgin gave Jerry to Mr. Van Horn, Captain of ship ''Arangi'', under condition to return the dog if something bad happens. The ship was engaged in delivering so-called "reverse" slaves who worked for three years on a plantation. During a stop on Malaita island, ''Arangi'' was attacked by the natives, who killed the captain and skipper. Jerry was kicked from the ship, which was looted and burned. A native boy found Jerry in the sea and delivered the dog on the shore. Later, Jerry was brought to a village, where tribe chief Bashto decided to use Jerry for improving the breed of local dogs. Jerry received a taboo status and began to live among the tribesmen.
Jerry led a fairly quiet life until local sorcerer Agno decided to use the dog for a sacrifice. To overcome its taboo status, Agno arranged Jerry to attack a holy bird megapoda, which also had a taboo status. Jerry stole the bird eggs, which were kept for chief Bashta. Jerry was spotted while killing the fourth bird. The bird's taboo status was higher than that of Jerry; therefore, the dog could be sacrificed. However, old blindman Nalasu bought Jerry for a pig to protect himself against an expected vendetta.
Later, the village was destroyed by British as a part of punitive operation to retaliate for the loss of ''Arangi''. Nalasu got killed; Jerry escaped and hid in the jungle. Having stayed there for a long time, Jerry began to look for people. Out in the beach, the dog saw a distant ship and plunged into the sea, thinking it is ''Arangi'' and hoping to see his beloved Captain Van Horn. The ship was the yacht ''Ariel'' traveling around the world. People on board noticed the dog and saved it.
One of the crewmen recognized the dog and announced that it is a dog of Mr. Haggin form Santa Isabel Island. Later, the yacht arrived at Tulagi harbor, where a commissioner who knew Mr. Haggin sent him a message. Mr. Haggin sailed to the island with dog Michael, who was the brother of Jerry. The brothers—Jerry and Michael—met each other just to be separated ten days later. Jerry stayed on the yacht ''Ariel'' with its owner, Villa, while Michael stayed on the island. They met each other once again several years later in California.
Jean is a long-distance lorry driver whose usual run is from Paris, where he lives with his unsympathetic wife and children, to Bordeaux. A favourite stop is La Caravane, a roadside restaurant where he is attracted to Clo, a pretty and affectionate young woman who is estranged from her family and survives by waitressing. Anxious to be with him, she gives up her job and goes to Paris, where she finds work as a chambermaid in a sordid hotel used by prostitutes. She also finds that she is pregnant, which the hotel manager resolves by sending her for an illegal abortion. Jean meanwhile has been sacked, partly because his tachograph showed too much time spent at La Caravane, and as soon as he finds another job he arranges to take her home in his lorry. But septicaemia has set in and, though he stops on the way and calls an ambulance, she dies.
Joselito is a boy who lives in a small town in Seville. He has a sister named Carmela whom he woos "El Quico". As the child has a prodigious voice, her sister's boyfriend wants to take advantage of her since he wants to marry her, to which the boy refuses. Finally, meeting a blind girl named Alicia will make Joselito participate in a radio contest to be able to pay for the operation that can restore his vision.
On the evening of March 21, 1972 in Santa Monica, California, a teenage girl named Jill Johnson is babysitting the children of Dr. Mandrakis at his house. The children have been put to bed upstairs and Jill is downstairs in the living room doing her homework. She receives a telephone call from a man who asks her if she has checked the children. Jill dismisses the call and goes back to her homework. The anonymous caller dials back several times. Eventually Jill calls the police, who inform her to keep the caller on the line long enough for them to trace the call. After the stranger calls again, the police return her call, advising Jill to leave immediately because the calls are coming from a phone inside the house. Jill runs to the door as a light comes on at the top of the staircase, and the stalker's shadow appears. The scene segues to a close-up of a detective who is investigating the matter. A policeman explains to the detective that Jill is unharmed, but the children were murdered by the killer several hours earlier.
In the marshes of San Fernando (Cádiz) lives María del Mar (Marujita Díaz) and her spirited brother, between fishing and fishing they dedicate themselves to singing and looking for love.
This was not the first of the many films starring the singer Antonio Molina, who became one of the most sought-after artists of the time, in it he sings, among others, I want to be a matador, María de los Remedios and Mar Blanca are already turning off two stars, Fisherman of couplets, Goodbye to Spain.
The series follows the story of the Szczygłów family's removal firm, starting from New Year's Eve 1899. It seems that every time they do a removal, an object gets lost. Each episode is centred around this object. The series was intended to follow the Szczygłów family right up to the year 2000, however only episodes up to 1941 were ever produced.
The State Security Service detains the photographer Gwendoleit, who as courier was supposed to bring counterfeited documents and numberplates to Leipzig and moreover to get active there as photographer. Because the State Security Service neither knows, with whom Gwendoleit wants to meet in Leipzig, nor what the photo subject was, the security agent Alexander Berg takes up the identity of Gwendoleit, although he actually planned tripping to Oberhof for winter holidays.
In Leipzig Helma Sibelka appears and hands over a deposit for the passports and the numberplates to Alexander. Berg refuses the delivery of the passports, that she only will get when the full amount is paid. Helma visits her husband, the engineer Manfred, in the guesthouse, where she finds him with the secretary Vera Gorm. For Manfred the marriage is going to break down, for a long time he is planning his coup without his wife.
Alexander, who takes his position in the Hotel Astoria, does only have a few clues, what the affair is about. In a few days the Leipzig Trade Fair will start. Beside that he gets an encrypted letter, in that he is asked by a "Dora" to remind his "business partner" of a delivery "black velvet". Soon it is clear that a certain doctor Oranke is hiding behind "Dora". "Black velvet" is identified by the security agents with the demanded "snap shot" Manfred is speaking at a meeting. Actually Manfred demands Alexander soon to take the snap shot - from his working room, from where a blind controlled crane can be seen, which will be the sensation on the Leipzig Trade Fair. Crane operator Manfred manipulates the machine, so that the monitors break down and the test run becomes a disaster. Alexander films this with his camera. Soon the connections are getting clear: Manfred was offered a position by doctor Oranke, who was living in Hamburg. But previously he is supposed to damage sustainably his company and the economical prestige of the GDR by the enhanced attention in the context of the trade fair. The security agents want nevertheless play for time to find out, who Manfred wants to take with him on the second demanded passport, because it will not be his wife. Soon after Alexander discovers Manfred battered to death.
He is requested by an unknown person to come to Manfred's office. Here he meets Vera Gorm, who in reality is one of the masterminds of the operation. She reveals to Alexander that Manfred actually should handle the crane with acid, so it had to collapse at the trade fair opening day, but he was going to duck out. She had to kill him. The acid however was transported in a box with the inscription "black velvet". Alexander makes himself suspicious, because he doesn't know certain facts, and is exposed by Vera. By an accomplice she let him bring to the cellar rooms of the building, while she is going to destroy the crane with acid. Here she is detained by Alexander's men and also Alexander, who was able to take out the accomplice, appears. The case is solved.
Soon after Alexander is already sitting in the train to Oberhof. A female fellow passenger is spraying on perfume - with the brand "black velvet".
Karim, an engineer in a company, was about to reveal information about his employers evildoings, when he is caught up in a traffic accident leading to his death. But Karim hasn't disappeared yet and has one chance to complete the mission he started.
A 14-year-old drug-runner called Montana (McKell David) gets haunted by crime lord Lazarus. Facing death, he is rescued by ex-Serbian Commando Dimitrije (Lars Mikkelsen), a man with a dark past who wants to destroy Lazarus and his criminal empire. Dimitrije trains Montana to be an assassin, and they plan their revenge on Lazarus to wipe him out for good.
On October 30, 1962, young Grace (Sophie Elliott) knows her father (Glenn Lefchak), who is a high-ranking military officer, is afraid that the United States and the Soviet Union are about to unleash nuclear attacks on each other's homeland. He takes her and her mother (Geneviève Steele) to a fallout shelter. A tragic accident, however, separates the girl from her parents, and she is trapped in Bunker #6 where Lewis (Daniel Lillford), a kind technician at the shelter, looks after her.
Ten years later, the nuclear fallout shelter Bunker #6 is still the home for Grace (Andrea Lee Norwood). When Lewis, her mentor and father figure, dies, she is left to take charge of a small group of survivors in a deteriorating underground shelter. The group is unaware of any other survivors of the nuclear holocaust that has enveloped the Earth.
Grace's daily task is to monitor the communications room and try to establish contact with others who have survived the war. One day, she hears a scratchy message from Bunker #8, but her efforts to tell the others about the discovery is met with dismayed reactions as the radio sets remain dead.
Alice (Molly Dunsworth), Grace's arch rival for control of the bunker, is upset and demands that the radio monitoring be stopped. Grace receives motherly advice from Mary (Shelley Thompson) but events begin to take a strange turn with Eric (Jim Fowler) and Joe (Glen Matthews) at odds over Eric's attempts to leave the shelter.
Grace seemingly sees her friends murdered as she starts to hallucinate. Her thoughts of what lies in the outside world beyond the heavy blast doors of the bunker leads her to make a decision that may prove to be fatal.
Michael, an Irish terrier, was born and raised in the Solomon Islands. The dog now works as a slave hunter aboard a schooner on a mission to recruit native islanders for work. One day the captain accidentally leaves Michael on a beach and sails away. Michael was then abducted by Dag Daughtry, a steward on another ship, who initially planned to sell the dog for money. However, later he got attached to Michael and takes the dog to a trip around the world.
In the late 1990s, somewhere in China's Tibet Autonomous Region, a motorcycle-riding Tibetan named Gonpo sells his father's prized Tibetan mastiff to a dog dealer without his father's permission. Mastiffs are in demand by Chinese businessmen, and they are becoming rare. When his father finds out, he immediately goes to the dog dealer to return the money and retrieve his dog. At first, the dealer refuses but eventually agrees when police officer Dorje (who happens to be the old man's son-in-law) explains the nature of the family conflict. The old man states that the dog has been a good animal in herding the family's sheep. Since the dog has been in his care for 13 years, he wants to ensure a good life for the animal.
After recovering his mastiff, the old sheep herder joins Dorje for a tea and meat snack at a local eatery. Eventually the topic of conversation evolves around the police officer's young son who just turned 3. At that point, the old man states that the sooner one has children, the sooner one is happy, and there is nothing else like it. He then asks Dorje for advice about Gonpo, his hooligan son who tried to sell the dog. Gonpo and his wife Rikso have been together for 3 years without having children. Concerned, the old man asks where in the city can Gonpo and Rikso get help for this, and Dorje suggests they go to the city hospital.
With some hesitation in obeying his father, Dorje agrees to go to the hospital with Rikso but upon arriving, he changes his mind in accompanying Rikso and asks her to get her sister instead. After the appointment, Gonpo is informed that there is no problem in Rikso that prevents her from having children. There is a meaningful pause as Gonpo quietly absorbs this news.
In the middle of the night, a scuffle is heard around the house, and noises indicate an attempted theft of the mastiff. Thinking of what is best for the animal, the old man decides to release him to the mountains in the hope that he can live the rest of his life in freedom. Unfortunately, the old dog is captured by the same dealer from before, and news of this reaches the old man to his chagrin. The surprise comes when the old man learns that Gonpo is in jail for going to the dealer and punching him out in order to retrieve the dog. Dorje eventually returns the dog to his owner.
At the jail, the old man visits with Gonpo and shares a cigarette with him. The two men share a quiet moment during which time Gonpo reveals that Rikso had gone to the hospital and was determined to have no problems in conceiving children. Tenderly, the old man offers to bring Gonpo a beer (secretly) while he serves his time in jail.
While tending his sheep with his faithful mastiff and gazing upon a scenic landscape of Tibetan mountains and tundra, the old man is badgered by 2 men who offer to buy the dog. Exasperated, the old man repeats several times that he is not interested in selling, and eventually the men leave him alone. In the final poignant scenes, the old man decides to end his dog's life by strangling him on his chain, and in minutes his mastiff is dead. Slowly and with a heaviness in his step, the old man walks away (from the camera). The end.
Years after an accident that leaves a young teenage girl disabled, the group of friends who were responsible meet at a remote manor in the countryside for a class reunion where they are targeted by a masked killer hellbent on revenge.
Kostas is a powerful tycoon with a beautiful wife is cheating on him with a young playboy. Unbeknownst to Kostas, the two lovers plan on killing him.
The film analyzes the history of comedy and how the television and film industries have stereotyped African Americans throughout a multitude of generations. Quincy Newell, Executive Vice-President of Codeblack Entertainment, was the producer and co-writer with John Long on the project. The documentary was a selection of the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, and eventually acquired by Showtime. Newell himself has stated "the intent of the film is to spark meaningful discourse."
The Valenzuela family live in Los Angeles in a multi-generational household. Lee and his mother Lucia differ on how to deal with the problems that arise including alcoholism, teenage rebellion and immigration difficulties. The Valenzuela family is totally assimilated in U.S. American culture, and that's the way the patriarch, Leandro Valenzuela, or “Lee” as Leandro prefers to be called, likes it. He's moved on from speaking Spanish and the ways of the old country. As he proudly says, “We’re not Mexicans. Mexicans live in Mexico. We’re Americans.” Lee is right in that he and his family will face many of the problems and challenges all Americans face, that all human beings face – unemployment, homelessness, alcoholism, teenage pregnancy, abortion, immigration, childhood obesity and others. But Lee will also face another problem in that he has forgotten his native language and moved away from his culture, ultimately losing part of who he is and where he comes from, and he will learn that maybe this is not such a good thing. Welcome to a story about real Americans... Los Americans.
'''Opening quote:''' "Forgive me for the evil I have done you; my mother drove me to it; it was done against my will."
Nick (David Giuntoli) continues studying the key his aunt gave him. He and Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) go on a double date with Hank (Russell Hornsby). Nick is shocked to discover that Hank's date is Adalind Schade (Claire Coffee), the person who tried to kill Aunt Marie.
Captain Renard (Sasha Roiz) is approached by a bodyguard, Thomas Woolsey (Marti Matulis), who is under orders to escort him to his cousin, Anton Krug (Basil Harris). Anton states that the "family" needs the key or it will be forced to find Nick and retrieve it. Renard refuses and kills them both. He then meets Catherine Schade (Jessica Tuck), Adalind's mother. Nick confronts Adalind in the restaurant, but Hank interrupts to inform him of the murders of Krug and Woolsey. As they investigate, Nick notices Wu (Reggie Lee) eating a chapstick.
At the station, Wu passes out. Renard uses the distraction to steal a phone that could incriminate him in the murders, changing the SIM card before returning the phone to Nick's desk. Nick discovers from Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) and Rosalee (Bree Turner) that Hank has been given a love potion spell which, depending on his state, will be difficult to counteract. They realize Wu ingested the same potion and administer (and test) the antidote on him.
They get to Hank, but Adalind has altered the spell and the antidote will not work. Adalind calls Nick, telling him to give her the key or Hank will die by morning. Rosalee learns that the blood of a Grimm will kill the Hexenbiest spirit in Adalind and cure Hank. In the woods, Nick attacks Adalind and then kisses her, causing her to bite his lip and ingest his blood. The spirit leaves Adalind, leaving her a normal person. Hank wakes up.
Adalind returns to her mother's house; Catherine and Renard dismiss her as powerless and therefore useless to them. Renard acknowledges that he has underestimated Nick, who has thus proved himself valuable. The episode ends with Nick continuing his research on the key. He uses it as a stamp, and notices that the imprints of its sides fit together to form part of a larger image or map.
In Kolkata, prisoner Kaththi Seenu (Chiranjeevi), a petty criminal, helps the police capture an escaping prisoner, but he himself escapes afterwards. He goes to Hyderabad and decides to escape to Bangkok. However, he drops this plan after meeting and falling in love with Subbalakshmi (Kajal Aggarwal), his childhood friend at the airport, who dupes him into believing that she gave him her phone number realizing that he has a crush on her. Later, Seenu and his assistant Malli (Ali) notice a doppelgänger of Seenu named Shankar (Chiranjeevi), being shot by a group of thugs. They admit him to hospital, following which Seenu decides to impersonate the injured Shankar to escape from the police. Under the name of his doppelgänger, Seenu and Malli enter an old-age home run by Shankar with the aim of collecting 25 lakhs (which is meant for the inmates of the old-age home) for their Bangkok trip, until he learns about his doppelgänger's mission.
Shankar is a post-graduate in hydrology from the arid village of Neeruru in Rayalaseema, who had discovered groundwater under some lands of the village which could be used as an irrigation source not only for the village, but for the entire Rayalaseema and the neighbouring areas as well. But, an MNC owned by Aggarwal (Tarun Arora) cheated the villagers into giving their lands for the construction of a factory. Shankar was arrested by the police, and the six villagers commit suicide so as to convince the issue with the media and release of Shankar. On learning of the plight of Shankar and the villagers, Seenu decides to fight for their cause while still under the name of Shankar. The people of the old home and Seenu go to the jury and try to convince him to go in favour of them, but Seenu starts stating rules and scares the main jury person (whom Aggarwal had bribed). Seenu then sends a person (disguised as a hairdresser) to Aggarwal and makes him lay a fingerprint on Aggarwal's neck. After that Aggarwal sends 50 men to kill Seenu, but he soon defeats them using the coins the Lion Club member gave when he was attending a ceremony for him.
Meanwhile, the real Shankar gains consciousness and finds himself in the Kolkata prison where Seenu was locked up. With the help of the man who Seenu helped capture, who has heard his story and has plans to kill Seenu in revenge for getting him caught and thrown back into prison, he soon escapes along with the prisoner's henchmen.
Not knowing that Shankar and the henchmen are headed for Hyderabad, Seenu makes efforts to convince the media to bring the plight of the villagers to the national consciousness, but the media is not interested as they feel that it is not sensational news. A few days later, at the high court, the judge declares the verdict in favour of Seenu and the villagers, but adds that Aggarwal has claimed that certain villagers who are working abroad have shown their support for the factory. If they cannot prove that their support was faked by Aggarwal within the next five days, the verdict will then go in favour of Aggarwal and the villagers will lose their lands. Since the villagers, who have denied supporting the factory, are abroad and cannot come to Hyderabad within five days to rebut Aggarwal's claims, and the verdict is to be decided within five days, Seenu decides to take drastic measures to sensationalize the issue. He, Lakshmi, Malli, and the inmates of the old-age home block water supply to Hyderabad by sitting on the pipelines which carry water to Hyderabad. With the plight of the Hyderabad people due to lack of water supply having gained national attention, Seenu comes out of the pipeline after a few days and highlights the villagers' plight in an emotionally charged speech to the media, which is telecast nationwide and moves many people.
Meanwhile, Shankar and the henchmen reach Hyderabad, but Shankar is soon kidnapped by Aggarwal's henchmen. While in Aggarwal's custody, he sees Seenu's speech on television and is moved by the efforts made by his doppelgänger to help the villagers. On the night before the verdict, Seenu's bluff is exposed, but he assures the old men that he is genuinely interested in their cause, that Shankar is alive and that he will rescue Shankar from Aggarwal and hand him back over to the villagers with the assurance of a positive verdict. Seenu goes to Aggarwal's office, where Shankar is being held. He rescues Shankar and fights Aggarwal. Shankar kills Aggarwal when he is about to kill Seenu. The next day, the verdict is declared in favour of Shankar and the villagers. The Kolkata police find Seenu and arrest him. Seenu assures Lakshmi that he will be back shortly.
The film opens with the death of a young woman named Margaret East in Amityville, New York. Margaret lived in a Bohemian boarding house, and her death is being investigated by Hank Denton, an obnoxious man who is referred to as both a detective and an FBI agent. All of Margaret's friends find Denton rude and annoying, except for Sentinel Ernie, who convinces her mother, Aphrodite, the boarding house's owner, to let Denton stay at the Amityville Boarding House, which is being haunted by both a demon and Margaret's ghost.
Denton repeatedly experiences strange dreams and hallucinations while investigating Margaret's death, and becomes convinced, though without any real evidence, that there is cult that is operating out of the boarding house. When Sentinel tries to seduce him, Denton attacks her before ejaculating all over the room while staring at a Keith Hernandez baseball card. Later, Denton and Brigitta, the lesbian lover of Bermuda, Aphrodite's other daughter, are led to a cemetery by a figure that they presume is Margaret. A gravedigger and another resident of the boarding house convince Brigitta to hold a séance, which is attended by Denton. Supernatural events that occur during the séance and a dream that she experienced at the same time as Denton inspire Bermuda to try and gain access to the sealed basement of the boarding house (where her aunt was mysteriously found dead years ago) using an Ace of spades card.
Bermuda is attacked by an unseen presence while in the basement, where she finds a videotape made by Margaret. The tape depicts Margaret rambling about how the house protects them and about how they are "the beautiful ones" described by John B. Calhoun. A gun-totting Denton barges into the room, interrupts the tape, and leaves with Brigitta. Bermuda is terrorized by illusions of an automated hand and giant insect legs, and accidentally bludgeons Sentinel. The demon scares Aphrodite and causes her to fall down a flight of stairs, killing her and allowing her ghost to save Brigitta from Denton. Denton is garroted by Brigitta while being restrained by Aphrodite's ghost, and dies in the same place as Margaret. The film ends with Bermuda and Brigitta reuniting on a train crossing the Manhattan Bridge.
The film was made when Sophia Loren was being credited professionally as ''Sofia Lazzaro'' and she plays the part of Leonora. Fernando is the son of Baldassarre and has become fond of Leonora.
Baldassarre's daughter has married the king of Castile, Alfonso XI, who took Leonora as his favourite. When Alfonso wins a battle against the Arabs, he offers Fernando a reward, and Fernando asks to marry Leonora. The king orders their marriage, after which Fernand learns of Leonara's past and, feeling dishonoured, retreats to the monastery. Leonora visits Fernando who is moved by her entreatments and is willing to accept her, but Leonora dies from exhaustion.
A traditional family in Crete during German occupation tries to hide an undesirable pregnancy. In the same time, the father dies from a disease and the oldest daughter takes over the family.
Successful thirty-something architect Nikola can feel the walls closing in. Already stressed at the office due to a coworker's breach of professional ethics, he goes home to a life with a wife, Maja, and young daughter that offers no respite. Maja can barely contain her pain and anger over her awareness that Nikola is having an affair. Ana, his colleague and mistress of six years, is near a meltdown of her own, as his endless promises to leave Maja continue to ring hollow. Something's got to give — and so it does when Maja drops a bomb on a family gathering and Nikola loses his precarious balance as his life spins out of control. Unable to take actions or even make decisions to reverse the havoc he has wreaked, Nikola finally learns all too well the meaning of the old axiom “he who hesitates is lost” in the midst of unexpectedly tragic consequences.
Harry Melchior (Ruis) works for an investment firm and lives a privileged life with his family until he discovers that for one of his deals his mother's house will have to be torn down. Unable to stop the project he occupies the house illegally and is sentenced to prison, losing his job. His mother (the performance by Cara van Wersch was praised by one critic) is forced to move into a nursing home and dies shortly thereafter, sending Melchior into a rage. Hiding out in the forest "like a Dutch Rambo," he ambushes his former colleagues while they are fox hunting, and shoots them with a machine gun. After a meeting with his former boss's mistress he surrenders to police.
The first act begins with two owners of an inn, Janet and Davy on their wedding night. There is a big storm when the landlord's daughter Lucy Peveryl asks Davy to accompany her to the treacherous Raby Castle to see her love, Roland. The Ruins of the Raby, as the castle is commonly referred as, are abandoned and there is a legend that some sort of demon is in there and anyone who goes is horrified to death and never comes out alive.
Davy agrees cautiously to lead Lucy to the ruins of the Raby. On the journey there is Lord Albert Clavering, Neville, Guy, Ellen, and Maude, who had all been staying at the inn. They soon become trapped on the path to the castle because the bridge that leads them to the castle is knocked down by the storm, leaving them with no choice but to take shelter in the castle. When they get to the castle, they meet a man who identifies as a puritan living in the castle. This is really Alan Raby, who is the phantom demon living in the castle, often talked about in the legends. Davy is suspicious, but the others are unbothered by his presence. After discovering Roland is dead, everyone is terrified as a scream is heard from Lucy's room. Lucy runs out of her room into Lord Clavering's arms and dies, appearing to have been murdered. Alan then comes out and is shot by Lord Clavering in the heart. Lord Clavering realizes it's a mistake because Alan is a good puritan and obeys Alan's request to place his body in the moonlight. After they leave, Alan is seen resurrecting by the power of the moon and defies death. Everyone in the castle now leaves to go back to the inn.
The second act introduces Colonel Raby, Edgar, Dr. Reese and Ada Raby further in time than the first act. Outside the castle, Colonel Raby introduces that the village citizens will assemble in the castle to be chosen to wed Ada Raby. Stump and Jenny are introduced as lovers who reveal that Ada had died, but was brought back to life by a mysterious creature. When she was brought back to life, she never had the same personality as before. A will from Alan Raby is discovered and there is a case of Alan Raby being caught living longer than normal under different pen names. Alan forces Ada into a marriage ceremony, but Edgar challenges him to a duel. They duel and Alan is killed as his body is cast into a dark abyss so the moon will never bring him back to life.
''Nuts!'', narrated by Gene Tognacci, documents the life and career of John R. Brinkley (1885-1942), a Milford, Kansas druggist-turned physician who purportedly discovered a cure for male impotence by implanting goat testicles into the scrotums of his human patients. Largely through the testimonials of his "satisfied" customers, Brinkley enjoyed a period of fame and fortune before drawing the attention of Morris Fishbein, editor of the ''Journal of American Medicine'', and the American Medical Association, which revoked his license.
Brinkley is credited for building the world's most powerful radio station for the time, KFKB (Kansas Folk Know Better), popularizing country or "hillbilly" music, and inventing the infomercial with his own diatribes about public health. Brinkley ran into trouble with the Federal Radio Commission (now the Federal Communications Commission), which shut down his radio station. In response, Brinkley built the "million-watt-regulation-skirting border-blaster", XERA, in Mexico and continued broadcasting.
Brinkley ran for governor of Kansas in 1930 as a write-in candidate. It was reported he might have won had thousands of votes not been disqualified, possibly illegally, by his opponents.
Brinkley's fame and fortune deteriorated when he sued Fishbein for libel. It is revealed late in the movie that Brinkley also faced numerous wrongful death suits, had dubious academic credentials, and had an arrest record.
In a rural mountain community in Spain, a woman allows a drifter to briefly stay in her home in her husband's absence. When she orders the man—who has playfully dressed himself with a Charlie Chaplin mask from the home, obscuring his face—to leave, he brutally stabs her to death.
Meanwhile, teenage Christine "Chris" Miller is recovering from a nervous breakdown she suffered following a violent rape, the trauma of which was only compounded after her father abandoned her and her American stepmother, Ruth. Recently discharged from a psychiatric institution, Chris has gone to live with Ruth in their large country home. Shortly after, Barney Webster, a young and charismatic drifter, is discovered sleeping in the barn by Ruth. She initially orders him to leave, but soon finds herself charmed by him. Ruth ultimately allows Barney to stay on the property and work for her as a handyman.
Barney begins to seduce Chris, while also making romantic advances toward Ruth. Meanwhile, Chris is tormented by fragmented memories of her rape, which occurred in her school's communal showers. Whenever she hears a storm or running water, Chris suffers traumatic flashbacks. Barney witnesses one of Chris's flashbacks in the basement of the home during a rainstorm, and observes her as she goes into an incoherent state, lashing out violently with a knife. Ruth blames Barney for Chris's fit, and forces him out of the house at gunpoint into the night.
Shortly after, a mysterious man arrives at the farm of a nearby family, dressed in a black rain shawl, and steals a sickle from the barn. The young son of the family mistakes the man for a monk, and unlocks the front door for him. The man proceeds to hack the family to death one by one, first the parents, then the youngest boy's teenage brother and sister, before ultimately killing the young child as well. The following morning, Ruth and Chris see news footage of the murders, and immediately suspect Barney.
That night, Barney breaks into the Millers' home. Ruth awakens and alerts Chris, who goes to investigate. The two end up having sex in Chris's bedroom, but the encounter drives Chris into another off her flashbacks, and, in a rage, she stabs Barney in the back with a knife from her nightstand. Ruth, assuming Barney to be the murderer, joins in, also stabbing him multiple times in the back and chest. A nude Barney stumbles through the house, falling down the staircase, and ultimately dies of his wounds. Ruth and Chris clarify their story, framing the murder as a self-defense killing. En route to the police station, the women learn that the murderer has been apprehended, and realize to their horror that Barney was not the killer.
Ruth and Chris return home, and begin rummaging through Barney's belongings. They discover that he was recently released from prison, and that he was an acquaintance of Chris's father. Ruth surmises that Chris's father sent him to surveil the women and abscond from the house with a cache of pearls and other family heirlooms. Later that night, Ruth and Chris bury Barney's corpse at a construction site where a road is being built. The women watch from a distance the following morning as the crew pave over the location where Barney's body has been hidden. A short time later, while Ruth and Chris lounge by the swimming pool, the construction crew notice a sinkhole in the road, and begin digging it up.
A commander of the municipal police of Sorrento (Italy) and director of the music band, makes a trip to Seville to appear at a festival, there he falls in love with a young singer and dancer.
'''Opening quote:''' "'Perhaps some accident has befallen him,' said the king, and the next day he sent out two more huntsmen who were to search for him."
Ian Harmon (Neil Hopkins) is pursued by Edgar Waltz (Sebastian Roché), a member of the Verrat, a Wesen organization. Harmon is shot but escapes, leaving behind a bag, which Waltz takes. Waltz later visits Renard (Sasha Roiz) to ask for help, but he refuses. While Nick (David Giuntoli) and Hank (Russell Hornsby) investigate the shooting, Rosalee (Bree Turner) is visited by the wounded Ian, requesting help.
Waltz murders a bartender. He frames Ian and stays near the scene to make sure the police suspect him. While questioning Waltz, Nick sees him morph into a Hundjäger. Rosalee and Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) ask Nick for help to save Ian. At first, Nick tries to arrest Ian, but the others convince him he is innocent. Later, watching film in his trailer, Nick learns that the Verrat kill Wesen without trial. Waltz contacts Nick, suggesting a "Freidenreden" [''sic'', meaning "Friedenreden" ("peace talks")] - a temporary truce in order to negotiate - to discuss delivering Ian to him.
Nick gets Waltz to admit to the bartender's murder and gives the evidence to Hank and Renard. Rosalee acts as bait to lure Waltz, but the plan backfires and Waltz holds her hostage at gunpoint until they bring Ian. Nick and Monroe successfully distract Waltz, and Nick and Ian hold him at gunpoint. However, Ian then kills Waltz, claiming that more will come after him. Nick arrests Ian and leads him to his car. Before driving away, he tells Monroe to dispose of Waltz's body. Shortly later, he stops the car and releases Ian, giving him his documents and money and telling him to leave Portland and never return. The episode ends as the police discover Waltz's body in the woods.
Mary (Andrea Parker) drives an abused Hanna (Ashley Benson) home, while commenting on secrets and disturbing families. Mary tells Hanna that some families hide secrets, and also that sometimes these secrets are actually people. Hanna asks Mary if she's one of the secret people, and she answers "not anymore."
Later, when Hanna is already safe, Caleb (Tyler Blackburn) and Aria (Lucy Hale) ask her if she really doesn't want to go to a doctor, as she says that the doctors would make questions, claiming that she wouldn't want to answers them. Spencer (Troian Bellisario) and Emily (Shay Mitchell) reveal to Hanna everything about Mary, confirming that she was a patient at Radley Sanitarium, and is Jessica DiLaurentis' twin sister. Hanna then concludes that Mary is “Uber A.” Following, Hanna questions herself why Mary didn't chased her — instead she left her safe and sound, and Ezra (Ian Harding) says that they gave her Charlotte's murderer. Caleb and Aria reveal that they suspected of Alison, and Hanna asks Spencer for something more powerful than coffee. While Spencer is looking for something, Caleb approaches Hanna and hands her the ring that symbolizes her engagement with Jordan. Someones knocks at the door and Ezra goes to see who is it. He finds a jar of flowers with a message from “A.D.”
In Lucas's apartment, Hanna, Emily, Spencer and Caleb go in, and Caleb hands Hanna a package which Lucas delivered. Emily tries to help Hanna, but she answers in a rough way, and Emily calls Spencer for a talk. Caleb again tries a conversation with Hanna, but she avoids him, although they do talk about their kiss in the previous days. Emily realizes that Spencer is missing and goes out for looking for her. She finds her outside the apartment and they argue if Alison is safe inside the psychiatric hospital. The two then agree that Hanna has the same look she previously had, while she and the others were trapped inside A's Dollhouse.
Caleb and Spencer, in sequence, discuss about Hanna, while Spencer is still working on the paperwork of her mother's campaign. Meanwhile, Emily receives a disturbing call from Alison, who is begging for help as a nurse tries to remove the cellphone from her hands. At the Welby State, Emily tries to visit Alison, but a nurse confirms that only family members can see her, and, following, Elliott (Huw Collins) repeated that Alison's conditions aren't the bests and rapidly avoid his conversation with Emily, leaving her unresigned.
At the Radley Hotel, Hanna and Lucas (Brendan Robinson) talk about the opportunity that Lucas gave her of opening her very own fashion business. She then snapped that she's not the wonderful person that everyone think that she is, and Lucas encourages her. Following, Emily tells Spencer that Alison sounded frightened, and Emily urges the possibility of using Mary to visit Alison, since Mary's family. However, Spencer declines the idea. At the Montgomery family house, Aria and Liam (Roberto Aguire) discuss about the turbulent end of their relationship. Neither is happy with what happened, and, plus, Liam reveals that he's the editor of the book that was co-written between Aria and Ezra, putting more wood on the fire.
Back at the apartment, Hanna begins to wonder if she will sign Lucas' contract. She then flash backs the night when she and Jordan first met. A busy Hanna talks on the phone with somebody else, and, after ending the calling, she realizes that somebody put a drink on her napkin, which had an important number written on it. She then draws the man's attention, and he (David Coussins) helps her on unveiling the number. The two then join each other for a dinner, and they pass all night long on the restaurant. Back in present, Hanna decides not the sign the contract. Aria, Emily and Spencer go talk with Elliott in order to gain the opportunity to visit Alison, and he continues to deny it. While Elliott is talking with someone on the phone, the girls receive a new message from “A.D.” and they realize that the stalker maybe is not so far as they think. Hanna is then shown inside Jordan's office, and she invites him to have a drink on the same bar they were on the night they first met. Once again, Emily and Spencer argue about using Mary as a way to visit Alison.
Aria is Ezra are talking about Elliott and their book. After, they hold the each other hands, and then is shown Liam, that is inside his car, watching. Following, Liam and Ezra and arguing about the book, and Liam constantly tries to decrease Ezra's writing. However, Ezra stay calm and forget about anything. In Veronica's campaign office, Spencer is talking with someone on the phone, and Mary shows up. Initially, Mary says that she was waiting to know how Hanna is. The two then discuss Mary's attitude of not leading Hanna to the hospital or to the police. Mary then says that her experiences with hospitals and with the police weren't great, and, in sequence, Mary tells Spencer the reason why she was committed to Radley, many years ago. Mary reports that her twin-sister, Jessica, and her were 14-years-old, and Jessica was babysitting a boy. Jessica telephoned Mary, claiming that the baby didn't stop crying; but, when Mary arrived at the house, the baby was quiet anyway. Jessica then asked Mary to stay home while she was talking to a boyfriend. When the baby's parents arrived at the house, they found the baby drowned in the bathtub, and Jessica threw the blame on Mary, even with her being innocent. In the next scene, Ezra reveals Liam's bad behavior to Aria, and she gets scared.
In New York City, Hanna and Jordan arrives at a closed Columbus bar — the local were they first met. Hanna gets angry, and ends up that she ends their engagement. At the Radley Hotel, Mary shows up and starts remembering the old Radley Sanitarium. Emily helps her and they deal to visit Alison together. Lucas and Hanna then speak about the contract for a fashion business, and, with the end of her engagement, Hanna ends up signing the contract. Aria and Liam discuss about Ezra and the book, and Liam says that Aria was abused by his teacher while in the high school, and Aria denies it. At the psychiatric hospital, Alison wakes up and sees Emily. Alison claims for Emily's help, stating that Elliott is a bad person, and Alison sees Mary and starts thinking that she is her mother, Jessica. However, Elliott enters the room and he kicks out everybody, including the nurse (Gwen Holloway). In the hallway, Elliott asks to talk with Mary; and, inside an office, Mary complains that she was calling Elliott for two days, without an answer and tells Elliott that he has gone too far. Elliott says that Mary should not appear in the hospital and tells her to leave him to his work. Emily, meanwhile, is watching their shadows through an unfocused window.
At the Hastings family loft-barn, Spencer reveals to Caleb that she was fired. Spencer asks Caleb if they made a mistake when they started a romantic relationship, and Caleb denies it. However, Spencer complains that he is using the verb in the past. Back at the hospital, Emily sends a text to the girls, asking what is happening between Mary and Elliott, since she saw their shadows during a "fight."
The episode ends with Ali being drugged by someone — perhaps Elliott — and taken to somewhere else.
Shipwrecked off the coast of Siberia, the Japanese captain sixteen sailors go on a wonderful adventure full of emotions, love, despair and wonder-long nine years.
Carlos escapes from prison and meets Robert, who is carrying money that he has stolen from the bank where he was working. Carlos uses his girlfriend Evelyn, a singer, to steal the money so they can sail to Australia. However Evelyn falls for Robert.
Under the terms of a will, a young man stands to inherit a fortune if he can he turn the prospects of the family farm around. He comes up with a scheme to raise money by putting on a Show.
In an isolated Yorkshire farm house, a deranged young man (Lee Patterson) imagines a car crash victim (Sheila Raynor) is his long deceased mother. Meanwhile, his sister Molly (Lana Morris), attempts to summon help for the unconscious woman, but against her brother's wishes.
Victor Partridge lives in a small bedsit with his young girlfriend, Nina, who is also his secretary. He discusses his desire for promotion.
In the pub Harry Jackson discusses his wife's relationship to his boss, and also seeks promotion.
At interview, Partridge, Jackson and Selkirk all vie for the sole position. The boss Mr Baker has to choose.
Partridge, despite looking very mild-mannered, has a wife as well as a girlfriend! He is the company accountant, but the affair is leaked to the boss to ruin his chances of promotion. Jackson (who is Transport Manager) has been filing fake driver records and this is exposed to also ruin his hopes.
Selkirk, the Sales Manager, seems the likely choice for the directorship in these circumstances. However, Baker calls him in to explain why he is not gettin the post... he is too ruthless.
Surprisingly Partridge is given the job... Baker explains he is reliably dull, but insists that his secretary must go.
Partridge in the new job finds it is a poisoned chalice, as he must work much harder for little more than his name on the company notepaper.
10-year-old Mickey (Dennis Waterman) is late home from school. He tells his parents he was thrown off the school bus by the conductor for not having a ticket, obliging him to walk four miles. The local press makes an issue of the incident and the story snowballs out of control. The conductor, a former POW with memory problems, is harassed until he collapses on railway tracks and is killed by a train. Mickey finally owns up to lying.
The boring and mundane Professor Ovidio has a twin brother called Raf who, on the contrary is an exuberant, womanizing night club pianist. His arrival will bring trouble to Ovidio but in the end his drab life will take a turn for the best.
It has been two years since Case Walker has re-entered the world of professional mixed martial arts fighting, but had grown tired of it. He now competes in amateur bouts in an effort to teach his opponents how to utilize their skills. After such a match in Beaumont, Texas, Case runs into Brody James, an old friend who is also an MMA fighter. Brody has signed with PFC Combat, a promotion run by Hugo Vega, in which Brody has signed to fight the 7-foot beast Caesar Braga for the PFC Championship in Bangkok. Brody asks Case to help him train for the fight, knowing Case needs to find his way back as well as attempt to help Brody go on the straight and narrow. Case reluctantly accepts Brody's offer and travels to Thailand.
Case goes to the Top Fight Gym, where he already finds resistance from Brody's other trainer Matty Ramos. To make matters worse, Case is ridiculed for his training by "Cobra" O'Connor, a younger fighter whose arrogance gets the best of him. During a challenge, Case deflects Cobra's moves and uses elements from Kyokushin to knock Cobra out. Case soon finds himself becoming a mentor to two up-and-coming fighters, Taj and "Creech". Case's pummeling of Cobra attracts the attention of Vega, who is revealed to have some sort of history with Case. PFC marketing director Myca Cruz begins to have a liking to Case and asks him on a date to get to know him, to which he agrees.
When Case has his date with Myca, Matty watches the two together and decides to use it against Case when it comes to Brody. Brody has been slowing down his training and Vega, in an effort to make the fight a success, recommends that Brody use steroids from his supplier to help him better himself. Matty tells Brody of Myca and Case, in which their date ends abruptly when Myca brings up Case's time in prison, making him feel very uncomfortable. When Brody offers to spar with Case, the session gets out of hand as Brody goes too far, hitting Case in the head, to which he retaliates in a way he never expected. Despite apologizing to Brody, their friendship seems to have ended. That is until Case notices Brody using steroids. After training one night, Case and Brody go out to eat. It is then when Brody realizes his mistakes and apologizes. He vows to Case he will do things the right way and even tells Case that Myca would be a good woman for him. Brody and Case work together to begin training for the fight along with Matty, who thanks to an intervention from Brody, agrees to work with Case in training Brody for the title fight. However, viral footage of Case beating up the racist policemen from two years prior has grabbed the attention of many, thus causing Vega to realize that Brody may not be the one worthy of the fight against Braga.
During training, a Sambo wrestler named Boris injures Brody's knee. Case reveals that he had secretly replaced Brody's steroids with baby aspirin and other placebo drugs. Vega offers Case a million dollars to fight Braga. Beginning to train for the fight under the mentorship of Brody and physical training from Matty, Taj confronts Case, accusing him of "selling out". The next day, Case's suspicions are confirmed as he breaks into Boris's locker and discovering a text message telling Vega "It's done". Case knows that he is forced to fight, but must find a way to stop both Braga and Vega, who is set to make a lot of money off the fight and prove that he is responsible for Brody's injury.
At the night of the fight, Myca, who has become Case's girlfriend, tells Vega she quits. Case realizes how he can stop Vega and starts a fight with Braga outside the ring. When Braga gets the best of Case, Case resorts to using Kyokushin again, this time using a ''Nakadaka Ken'' (Extended Middle Knuckle Punch) that damages Braga's ribs. Case continues using traditional karate techniques and knocks Braga out with a ''Kaiten Geri'' (Rolling Wheel Kick) to his head. Vega threatens to sue, but Case tells Vega that they have the proof of him causing Brody's injury and that suing could cost Vega millions of dollars. To make matters worse, Vega must pay back everyone who came to see the fight, to which he storms off in anger, knowing he has been defeated. Case, Myca, Brody, and their crew leave the ring arena knowing they have achieved victory.
On an idyllic Caribbean island, Panama Sugar and his friends, engage a battle with Fox Perry, the wealthy American boss who would like to purchase the island to make a Las Vegas exotic.
A boss leads a director and a photographer to Tibet to look for an actor to star in a film based on the Tibetan opera ''Drimé Kunden'', a legendary account of a prince who selflessly gives away his children and his own eyes to those in need. In order to find a suitable actor, they visits many Tibetan villages, towns and Townships, and monasteries. In a Tibetan village, director chose a girl who played Drimé Kunden's concubine, but the girl has covered her face, and she doesn't want anyone to see her face. The girl asks to follow them to find her former boyfriend, the director answers her request. Along the way, the boss tells the story of his first love. At last, the girl leaves her former boyfriend. The film crew continues to search for a suitable actor.
Nohi Carmi, an attorney on the prosecution committee of the Eichmann Trial in 1961, questions the witnesses invited to the trial. Carmi picks the witnesses whilst taking into account ethically legal motives-to what degree the witnesses accurately remember their holocaust experience, in a way that would allow them to provide the best and most reliable testimony. Feker, the government's contact for the prosecution in court, tries to promote the interests of the Mapai Political Party and the current Prime Minister of Israel David Ben Gurion. Feker, together with Nohi and Shenior (Nohi's boss), check the list of witnesses. Feker tries to remove Revisionist witnesses, in fear of them mentioning the Kastner trial, or witnesses that were against the Reparations Agreement between Israel and West Germany. He also receives a directive from the current foreign minister, Golda Meir, to connect between Amin al-Husseini and Adolf Eichmann.
Nohi's father, Shalom Weinshtok, introduces Nohi to Budapest-born Anda Freund, a survivor of Block 10 of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp, in which women were the subjects of several medical experiments. Anda wrote a diary during her time in Auschwitz, in which she describes her story and the medical experiments done to her and to other Jewish women in the block in great detail. Nohi finds Anda's testimony perfect for the trial.
On the other hand, Feker discovers that Anda's father was against Zionism, and that Anda herself partook in demonstrations against the Reparations Agreement and even joined the Herut movement. Nohi wants to invite Anda to testify, while on the other hand Feker, worried that her testimony would damage Mapai's reputation, wants to rule it out. Between the two we have the boss of Nohi's division, Shenior, who like Nohi, wants to ensure the prosecution ethically and duly carried out. However, Feker constantly pressures him by reminding him that he got his job not because of his legal skills, but because of his allegiance to Mapai, who on top of getting him his job, also got his children jobs in Paris. Feker commands Shenior to do as he says, otherwise he'd find a different Mapai member sitting in his office and his children unemployed.
The play's subplot circles Nohi's relationship with his fiancée Alona. Alona loves Nohi, though harbors a growing suspicion that due to him spending considerably large numbers of hours at work, that he is having an affair with Anda. Alona tries setting up a less time consuming and tiring job for Nohi, at the civil market, where her father Mike works. Mike is a successful importer of agricultural equipment. Prior to Israel's independence in 1948, Mike, with the help of Feker, imported weapons into Israel, and currently deals with politics. Mike doesn't particularly like Nohi, but would gladly cooperate, as it would be for the sake of his daughter.
In the background, Nohi's past as an immigrant, arriving at the Country of the Sabras is described. After immigrating to Israel at the age of 8 from Poland in a Youth Aliyah, he grew up in a Kibbutz, and later served in the army. He graduated from a faculty of law with honors, is currently working at the State Attorney's Office, and is engaged to Alona, the assistant of the PMO director Teddy Kollek. The cold relationship between Nohi and his father, who immigrated to Israel several years after him and is currently a tailor, are described. Nohi built a whole new life in Israel, which included Hebraizing his surname from Weinshtok to Carmi, in order to distance himself from his diasporic past, and started a career in law.
Shenior consistently tries to convince Nohi to give up having Anda testify, and says the following lines in the play:
"It's rubbish though… half of the things that we wholeheartedly discuss and negotiate upon. The Mufti of Jerusalem, Ben Gurion's bolshevism, Begin's empty demagogy. Is that important? To whom? What's important? Me? You? That insect Feker? Even Eichmann himself isn't so important for this prosecution!"
Nohi asks him: "If so, then what is important?"
Shenior replies: "The people, the witnesses, the stories, only that is important."
Nohi asks him: "But you don't want her to testify, do you?"
Shenior answers: "Then why should she testify. She shouldn't testify! You shouldn't have her testify! This prosecution will start, and tens of witnesses will stand up, and tell their stories, of how they were tortured like this, and lost this and that, and were hungry and survived and shut up because they were ashamed of their own lives, and how you've left them out of your world to this day. Their story will be told in news reports nationwide and worldwide, on the radio, filling up newspapers for days and weeks…
A wall of silence may crack apart suddenly. People, people who live all around us like shadows could maybe go back to living like human beings. Think about it, perhaps you'll be starting… a whole new spirit, a spirit of listening, of compassion, you know what? Perhaps even generosity. Is that little to you? It's not important."
The story is set at Camp Jupiter in the San Francisco Bay Area. The story starts off with Apollo and Meg taking Jason's body to Camp Jupiter. On their way to Camp Jupiter, they are attacked by eurynomos, but a girl with pink hair arrives with dryads and a faun and kills the Eurynomous. She then introduces herself as Lavinia and says she will take them to Camp Jupiter. After that, all the dryads and fauns start to leave. But as the last faun, Don, tries to leave, Lavinia spots him and said that he will not leave because of what he is supposed to owe Lavinia for helping him. They carry Jason's tomb to the tunnel where she knows a shortcut to Camp Jupiter.
Suddenly, Hazel as well as two more euronymous come. They enter the tunnel, while Hazel tries to kill the euronymous. Apollo tries to sing a song to help Hazel but is scratched in the belly by a Eurynomous before Hazel kills it. Due to him being scratched, Apollo starts to turn into a corpse. Hazel sees Jason's coffin and is terrified because she had a dream about Jason being killed by Emperor Caligula. After that, the five carry Jason's tomb and arrive in Camp Jupiter where they are greeted by Frank Zhang and Reyna Ramirez-Arellano while everyone watches Jason's coffin being carried. The camp holds a funeral for Jason, with Apollo singing a song about his quest and touching everyone. They all decide that they will carry on with Jason's plan to build temples honoring the gods.
Apollo then faints and has a dream about Caligula and Commodus discussing their plan about either taking Camp Jupiter without conflict or destroying it using Greek fire explosions by mortars on Caligula's yachts. Apollo finds himself in a bed where Meg explains that he had been asleep for about a day and a half. There is a funeral for Jason that night, where Lupa comes and tells Lester to get divine help to defeat their enemies. Apollo and Frank go to Ella and Tyson, who were busy recreating the Sibylline Books. They get a prophecy regarding Tarquin's tomb, as they found about it in the previous prophecy. They later go to the senator where they select him, Meg, Lavinia, and Hazel to go to for a mission to find more about the final king of Rome, Tarquin, who has returned. After they find out about the old ghost King and his plans, they get more scared for the camp. They also find that Tarquin has kept the soundless god at Sutro Tower. After they return, they realize that to solve communication issues and get divine help, they need to destroy the soundless god. So a quest is issued for Apollo, Meg, and Reyna to go to Sutro Tower. But that is in the evening of the next day, and most of the morning is spent on training.
At the tower, they realize the god is Harpocrates, who had troubles with Apollo. He also has a jar containing the voice of the Sibyl of Cumae. With some difficulty, they manage to get the last breath of Harpocrates, along with Sibyl's Jar, which is required to get divine help. As they return, they are ambushed by a euronymous again, and after they manage to kill him, they are helped by Lavinia and her friends, who had escaped from the Camp earlier. Reyna and Lavinia issue "plan L" to defeat the yachts that Apollo saw in his dream. After Apollo and Meg return, they see the camp in the midst of a war. Apollo calls for divine help on Temple Hill. He decides to call Diana. Frank (the other praetor of Rome) sacrifices himself holding his firewood, killing Caligula along the way to save the other legionnaires. Apollo later kills Commodus in the grief of losing Frank. Commodus gives the order to fire. Due to “plan L”, it fails and the yachts are destroyed.
Meanwhile, Tarquin had reached the bookshop where the books were being re-written, but Ella and Tyson are not there. Meg and Hazel fight Tarquin. Diana finally arrives and kills Tarquin and heals Apollo just in time. Reyna and Lavinia, along with Peaches, return. Arion rescues Frank who mysteriously survives death and Reyna Ramirez-Arellano pledges herself to the goddess Diana (Artemis) and joins the Hunters. Dakota, son of Bacchus, passes away overnight due to wounds that he got in battle. He was the longtime centurion of the Fifth Cohort. Don the faun also dies. He gets reincarnated into a laurel tree, Apollo's tree of victory. Hazel is voted as the new praetor of Camp Jupiter and Lavinia voted as centurion of the Fifth Cohort.
Apollo receives his old Godly Bow as a gift from Camp Jupiter, Meg receives seeds and they set off to New York after receiving the last and final prophecy from Ella and Tyson, which they realize is a terza rima, and they would have to find more stanzas in the East. They go in hopes to once again be reunited with their old friends from Camp Half-Blood.
While returning to New York, Lester and Meg McCaffrey encounter an amphisbaena, which recites the second stanza of the Terza Rima prophecy. Within minutes, they are attacked by Nero's Gaul, Luguselwa, or Lu, and her Germani. Apollo and Meg escape with the help of Luguselwa, who turns out to be on their side. The trio reaches the Upper Eastside and decide to go to Percy Jackson for help, but they soon learn that Percy and his girlfriend Annabeth are on the West Coast. They plan on defeating Nero, which involves they fight against Lu in open daylight and Apollo pushing Lu off the building so that Nero believes that Luguselwa is on his side when she really isn't, as Nero could see it through one of the security cameras installed in a nearby building. All goes according to plan. Then, Lester and Meg reach Camp Half-Blood. The Grey Sisters recite another couplet of the Terza Rima prophecy. After they reach their destination, they find that Chiron had gone to a meeting with gods from other pantheons including Bastet from ''The Kane Chronicles'', and Mímir from ''Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard'' to discuss a "common problem."
Apollo, after fainting due to exhaustion on arrival, he sees in his dream that their plan is working: Lu told Nero about the escape, and Nero gave an ultimatum to Meg and Apollo to surrender within two days or else New York, especially Manhattan, burns. The next day, with the help of the Grey Sisters' prophecy, Lester, Meg, Will Solace, and Nico di Angelo, go to meet Rachel Elizabeth Dare. There, she warns about some cattle that are standing outside. After a decision to fail Nero's Greek fire vats with the help of troglodytes (short trogs), a species of very good diggers, Rachel suddenly spouts a prophecy, the final couplet, but Python meddled with it. Suddenly, the cattle, being the Tauri Sylvestre, attack, amd the five barely manage to escape. Nico helps them to reach the troglodytes via shadow travel, while Will is revealed to have the power to glow in the dark.
At the trogs' encampment underground, it is revealed that the trogs are very quick runners and diggers. Soon enough, they decide that Will, Nico, and Rachel will go with the trogs to disable the vats, and then alert Camp Half-Blood, while Meg and Apollo surrender themselves, to get closer to Nero's fasces, the source of his power and immortality, to destroy it and kill Nero. But it turned out that Nero already knew of their plan. Luguselwa's hands are cut off, and she and Apollo are thrown in prison, while Meg is forced by Nero to go to her old room in the Imperial Residences inside the Tower of Nero.
Lester, after just managing to revive Luguselwa, decides to find out more about who is guarding the fasces. It turned out to be a leontocephaline, the Persian god Mithras' creation. He guards immortality, so he wants a sacrifice of it in return to granting access to the fasces. Lu and Lester escape prison. Lu decides to give her immortality up to get the fasces, while Lester goes to save Meg.
Upstairs, he realizes that the entire lower floor area has become a battleground. Camp Half-Blood heroes have come in. Kayla and Austin help Lester to reach Meg. On the way, Lester enters the wrong room, the one with the buttons to burn up Manhattan. The button is pressed, but nothing happens, as the vats have been disabled. Nico also shows up.
After some searching, Lester runs past a laptop. Nero video calls that laptop and tells him that he has a “plan B”: to release Sassanid gas, a very poisonous gas, and kill everyone in the building. Lester has to come to the throne room in fifteen minutes, or else everyone will die. Lester tells the trogs about the gas trap, who run to disable it.
Meanwhile, Lester reaches the throne room, where all the adopted children of Nero are present, including Meg. Nero orders the dryads there to kill Lester or be killed by the Imperial children. However, Meg stops them and chooses to stand by Apollo. Suddenly, Nico shows up with the Tauri Silvestri, who has become a pawn of Nico. Nico orders it to kill Nero. The bull fails, but it ends up creating a lot of chaos. Nero desperately tries to search the remote with the button to release Sassanid gas. In the middle of the chaos, one of the Imperial demigods manages to stab Lester, but he survives.
After the chaos ends, Nero finally finds the correct remote and presses the button. He laughs, but suddenly, Will, Rachel, and Lu show up, along with the trog leader and the emperor's fasces. To Nero's disbelief, the trogs had been successful in disabling the gas trap as well. Nero is forced to reveal the truth. He is not that powerful. Instead, he is being controlled as a pawn by Python. If he is killed, then Python would be near impossible to kill, as the entire Triumvirate’s power will go to Python. He is given a choice, fight and die a hopeless battle, or live for some more years in a large prison. He chooses the first one, but soon gets entangled in a tug of war with Lester over the fasces, which Lester was trying to break. He manages to project his godly powers, using which he revokes Nero's divinity and immortality, and breaks the fasces, killing him.
Camp Half-Blood stays at the Tower to help the Imperial children rehabilitate after years of abuse, but Lester has to go, as he has to quickly defeat Python. Using the Labyrinth, he manages to reach Delphi, halfway across the world, in a matter of minutes.
Lester faces off against Python for the final time. Python starts calling him Apollo, a big achievement for Lester. But Lester is quickly overpowered by the giant snake, who utters a prophecy, saying Apollo will fall, and loses his bow. The arrow of Dodona sacrifices itself to defeat Python and finishes Python’s prophecy, saying that Apollo will fall, but Apollo must rise again. Apollo manages to blind Python and make him loosen his hold on him by hitting him in the eyes with the arrow of Dodona and his elbow. Then he drags Python into Tartarus with him, fulfilling Python's recent prophecy, but in a more literal sense.
The two almost fall down into Chaos but are saved by a ledge. Apollo, who is in no mood to fight, is attacked by Python, but manages to throw him off the ledge into Chaos, destroying him forever and freeing the Oracles from his power. Apollo himself is left dangling off the edge, when the goddess of the Styx, who had followed him all along since he broke his vows on the Styx in the first book, congratulates him on learning his lesson which he realizes is to always uphold a promise that you make. Apollo becomes a god again, and, two weeks later, reappears in Olympus, where he is welcomed as an Olympian.
Apollo, now a god again, goes to meet his friends. He splits himself into multiple Apollos and goes to find them in no particular order. He visits Camp Half-Blood, where Nico and Will tell him that Nico suspects that a voice he's been hearing from Tartarus lately is his old friend the Titan Iapetus, also known as Bob, who supposedly died helping Percy and Annabeth to escape. With the help of the trogs, Nico and Will intend to travel to Tartarus to find out for sure and rescue Bob if they can. As if on cue, Rachel delivers a prophecy, which Will notes to sound bad. Apollo also visits Camp Jupiter, where Frank and Hazel are doing a great job at being praetors. Hazel gets rid of the curse on her jewels, and now they can be spent. Frank is having fun turning his cape into a cardigan, while Percy and Annabeth have finally reached university there, and study marine biology and architecture respectively. Apollo gives Percy his mom's cookies. He visits the Union Station at Indianapolis, where Georgina is being taught by Jo. Reyna, who is there with the other Hunters of Artemis, tells Leo to be more mature when approaching Calypso, who is currently studying in high school and had gone to a summer camp as a counselor. The Hunters are there to hunt down the Teumessian Fox. Apollo visits Piper McLean in Oklahoma, where she has started a new life with her Dad and Shel, her new girlfriend. Apollo also visits Meg McCaffrey, who is living in Palm Springs with the dryads there, Lu, and the Imperial children, whom she is teaching gardening. The Melais are acting as security guards. Apollo gifts Meg a unicorn, and promises her that he will come back.
Bhano, a poor woman belonging to a poor farmer family in rural areas of Punjab, is the female protagonist of the novel. In her village women are often treated as commodity and sold for a little money. Bhano's father was ready to sell her daughter and arranges her marriage with Sarban, a resident of Moranwalli village. After her marriage she faces harassment and tortures. Sarban's four unmarried brothers try to abuse her sexually. The friends of Sarban also harass her. After the death of Sarban, Bhano's life becomes more miserable and her father tries to sell her once again to the brothers of Sarban. Bhano tries to escape by committing suicide. A man named Narain saves her and accepts her as his wife without denying to give any social recognition. Because of circumstances and patriarchal setup in her society Bhano fails to fulfil even her simplest goals in life.
As Spencer (Troian Bellisario), Aria (Lucy Hale), Hanna (Ashley Benson), Emily (Shay Mitchell) do Christmas shopping, they receive a snow globe from "A", saying "A takes a holiday, you should too." They then receive a letter and a map showing the inside of Ali's house, given to them by Mona.
Alison (Sasha Pieterse) is at home sleeping when she is visited by the ghosts of her mother (Andrea Parker) and Mona (Janel Parrish) in her dreams. Mona shows Alison a flashback of a young Alison finding two Christmas presents hidden in their piano. The present is two yellow dresses but Jessica makes her swear that she only found one.
The Liars arrive at the Dilaurentis' Ice Ball with a plan to find evidence on Alison. Lucas, Paige, Caleb, and Ezra are all assisting them. As they are dancing, Alison makes a grand entrance, along with four masked girls. Hanna and Spencer leave the Ice Ball and go to Alison's to search for clues, while an unknown figure in a white cloak is seen lurking around the Ice Ball. Back at the Ice Ball, Aria spots Ali kissing a man in a Santa suit and tells Emily. Aria then discovers that the man is Detective Holbrook. Alison heads into the ice mirror maze and is followed by the white cloaked figure. Alison stops at a mirror and notices the figure watching her. The figure is revealed to be CeCe Drake (Vanessa Ray), who greets Alison with a Merry Christmas. CeCe gives Alison a bottle of specially made perfume named "Alison" and comforts her about her first Christmas without Jessica. Two of the masked girls that arrived with Alison lure Emily into a room and reveal themselves as Jenna (Tammin Sursok) and Sydney (Chloe Bridges). Jenna reveals that she accepted Alison's offer to be her friend after having denied it many years ago which resulted in their feud. Jenna and Sydney believe that Alison killed Mona. After this, Caleb notices what looks like Alison and CeCe, whose identity they don't know, leaving the ball. Caleb and Ezra distract Holbrook, while Aria, Emily, Lucas and Paige corner Alison and CeCe, who reveal themselves as Cindy and Mindy in masks and wigs, as well as being the other two girls who showed up with Alison.
As Hanna and Spencer look around Ali's house, Hanna finds another of Ali's fake passports for if she needs to leave town quickly along with a letter that Bethany wrote to Ali, proving Ali lured Bethany to Rosewood the weekend she was killed. Spencer also finds out that Ali was communicating with someone through the newspaper's personal ads. Toby, who has been keeping lookout for Spencer and Hanna from a window, gets a call from Caleb who says Ali left the party early. "A" then shows up at Ali's house with a knife, looking for the girls. Caleb tries to warn an oblivious Hanna, but she ends up getting knocked out by "A". Believing they have the proof they need, Hanna and Spencer head to Spencer's to celebrate Christmas with their friends and partners.
Meanwhile, Ali is visited by the last two ghosts- the ghost of the present, and the ghost of the future. In Christmas Future, Alison is deceased. Alison is woken up from the nightmare by Mona, who tells her that it's Christmas. As the Liars celebrate Christmas, Ali is seen looking at them, alone, through a window.
The Liars and their partners hear a noise outside and go out to find a large tree and a lights arranged to say "Merry Christmas, Bitches."
Chou Soran was a normal college student until he gets caught up in a terrible incident in a small village while visiting his grandfather's grave. While walking through the graveyard to pay visit to his deceased grandfather, Soran is assaulted by zombies until a mysterious girl wielding a knife appears and leads him to a confrontation with the zombies. After successfully fending off the zombies and further encounters with the knife wielding girl known as Fu Hōhō, Soran's life begins to change as he learns that the martial arts technique taught to him by his grandfather, known as Kitaigen, is a technique being sought after by many martial arts groups with ulterior motives. The story follows Soran's attempt to find out his grandfather's real history and his supposed connection with Fu Hōhō.
Kemal Soydere is the son of a middle class family. Nihan is the daughter of wealthy socialites Önder and Vildan Sezin, she also has a twin brother Ozan whom she loves dearly. Önder’s buissness is slowly coming to an end and Vildan unable to give up her luxurious life, wants Nihan to marry Emir Kozgoulu who holds a deep love for Nihan. But Nihan is appalled to the idea as she despises Emir for she finds him ruthless and arrogant. In his last year in mining engineering, Kemal meets Nihan when the latter helps her buy a bus ticket. The pair fall hopelessly in love at first sight and Nihan completely changes Kemal’s monotonous life. Love is impossible because of the class difference between them, but they manage to be together. That is until Emir stages an accident that results in Ozan killing a girl, to prevent Ozan from going to jail Nihan agrees to marry Emir. The next day, she goes to meet Kemal at the port where he proposes to her when between tears, Nihan sadly turns down his marriage proposal and ends their relationship. Heartbroken, Kemal leaves Istanbul and goes to Zongak to work in the mines. He isolates himself in his work and one day, following his actions to help in an accident at the mine, Kemal is promoted and assumes a position of power in the company. Five years later, Kemal makes the decision to return to Istanbul to face his past.
A group of American soldiers and Italian partisans during World War II join forces in northern Italy against the Germans.
Inspired by Vodou and Kanaval cosmologies, and co-written with the entire cast and crew, Hegel's Angel is an experimental ethnofiction that challenges the boundaries between film genres. The film, set in Haiti, follows an inquisitive boy named Widley whose life unfolds away from the turmoil of an upcoming presidential election. The boy plays football, goes swimming, works with his father on odd jobs, and visits a local editor who is putting together a film within the film while lamenting the director’s disappearance. Throughout, Widley witnesses the struggle of his people under what has been dubbed “the charitable-industrial complex”, and the transition from one foreign domination to another.
The game begins with the Locksmith being questioned by Inspector Voltaire about his recent actions with the Pickpocket, the Cleaner, and Lookout. The Locksmith describes the criminals' prison escape in Monaco alongside another inmate, the Mole. They meet the Gentleman while stealing passports and money to be smuggled out of the country. They board the Gentleman's booby-trapped yacht and try to leave harbor; while doing so, the Gentleman receives an anonymous telephone call from a man he later identifies as Davide, after which the boat explodes. After receiving medical care at a hospital, the thieves help the Gentleman dispose of evidence from a previous heist and rescue his girlfriend, the Redhead. The group proceeds to steal valuables and hire the Hacker. While attempting to steal from a casino, they are caught by the police and taken back to prison.
The Pickpocket is next to be interviewed. The Pickpocket remembers events differently from the Locksmith. His recollection is that the Hacker, the Redhead, and the Gentleman escaped with them. The Gentleman had experienced legal turmoil in his financial affairs, which drove the thieves to escape and retrieve the money. This intrigues Inspector Voltaire, who believed the money was used to smuggle them out of the country, whereas The Pickpocket claims that it was used to smuggle weapons. The Pickpocket reveals the crooks purposefully blew up the boat to distract Interpol. Later, Davide is believed to have been murdered at a nightclub until Inspector Voltaire receives a phone call revealing that Davide's DNA did not match any of the bodies. To further confuse the police, the thieves planted evidence with Davide's fingerprints at a different crime scene. After confessing all of this to Inspector Voltaire, the Pickpocket reveals he was a spy sent by Interpol. The Pickpocket claims the Gentleman has assumed Davide's identity and that if Inspector Voltaire attempts to confirm the story, the Gentleman will know one of his accomplices is a spy.
In exchange for asylum, Inspector Voltaire then interrogates the Lookout for information on the thieves' backgrounds. Inspector Voltaire asks about the Mole, whom the Lookout says has already been caught. She then tells him about herself and says she steals because of "a moral debt". When discussing why the Locksmith disregards the law, she recalls the time when he had his hand broken after being caught counting cards in blackjack. The Lookout informs Inspector Voltaire that the Pickpocket used to be rich before he was arrested and that the Hacker had also been in trouble before; he was caught trespassing in Interpol's headquarters. She says the Gentleman garnered the nickname "The Rat" because he was responsible for tipping off the police, leading to their recapture. The Lookout tells Inspector Voltaire that the Redhead used to be called the Blonde and was caught burgling the Gentleman's house, ultimately falling in love. The final thief she tells him about is the Cleaner, who she says is acting on behalf of his disabled brother. After disclosing this information, they begin discussing asylum.
Finally, Inspector Voltaire and Candide, a constable, are told the Locksmith, the Lookout, the Pickpocket, and the Hacker have escaped from prison. The two try and fail to recapture the thieves. They meet the Gentleman, for whom it is revealed Candide works. Candide poisons Inspector Voltaire and the Mole disposes of the body.
Dr. Flores is a conservative citizen, he is member of the League Against Malandragem and forbids his daughter Camélia (Dircinha Batista) dating a bohemian sambista.
The story takes place in the port of Hamburg in 1947. The manager of a transport company is found dead, he has been murdered. The police investigation revealed that sinister business was being transacted through the company: Drugs and medicines in particular were trafficked or smuggled. The traffickers prove to be tough as nails in carrying out their unlawful activities. The young helmsman Klaus Kröger also feels this when he gets involved in the affair. But who is behind these machinations, who is the head of the gang? Bruno Kalpak and the forwarder Löllgen come under suspicion. Finally, the late returnee Kröger becomes active on his own initiative and helps the investigating police inspector Ostendorff to dig out the entire gang when the latter is about to rob an entire freight train on the banks of the Elbe. The murderer also falls into the clutches of the police.
Dasima (Chitra Dewi) is the ''njai'' (concubine) of an Englishman named Edward William (A. Hamid Arief). She lives unhappily with him and their daughter, Nancy (Astri Ivo). Her wealth is recognised by Samiun (W.D. Mochtar), a black market vendor. Owing to the spending of his wife Hayati (Sofia W.D.) and the extortions of the gambling addict Puasa (Wahid Chan), Samiun is indebted to Chinese moneylenders. Hayati tells him that he may marry Dasima as a second wife to take her wealth.
Samiun—having claimed that he wants to bring Dasima back to Islam—gains the help of a ''dukun'' (shaman), who tells him to collect some of her hair to power the spell. He arranges for a woman named Mak Buyung (Fifi Young) to gain employment at William's house. Over time, Dasima and Mak Buyung become closer, and the former expresses concern for her position, feeling guilty for having left her Islamic teachings. Mak Buyung furtively takes some of her hair, and gives them to Samiun.
Using these hairs, the shaman prepares a powder that Mak Buyung mixes into Dasima's tea. Later that day, Mak Buyung arranges a meeting between Samiun and Dasima. Although at first Dasima is not interested, as time passes Mak Buyung praises Samiun and tells Dasima that he would accept her past. After witnessing a drunken William having sex with another woman, Dasima decides to leave him and Nancy.
Dasima moves in with Mak Buyung, and Samiun—urged on by Hayati—decides to make his move. He and Dasima are soon married. However, their marriage is unhappy. Samiun sells Dasima's possessions, and is unable to divide his time between Hayati and Dasima. Meanwhile, his business affairs collapse when the Dutch colonial police arrest his men. Samiun is unable to repay his debts, and ultimately he and Dasima fight.
Dasima longs to return to William and Nancy, and tearfully leaves. Samiun, desiring the last vestiges of her wealth, convinces Puasa to rob her. However, this plan goes awry when Dasima is knocked into a river and drowns. Her body is found on William's estate, and Samiun and Puasa are soon arrested. Afterwards, William decides to return to Europe with Nancy.
The novel presupposes a referendum to have taken place in the United Kingdom in 2015, on whether the country should join a United States of Europe (a development of the European Union) as part of a Treaty of Aachen. The referendum gives a narrow majority to supporters of the Treaty (51.86% to 48.14%).Roberts (1995), p. 110. Thirty years later the book's anti-hero, the historian Horatio Lestocq, a member of All Souls College at Oxford University, researching the referendum for a series of articles in ''The Times'', comes across evidence revealing that the referendum was rigged by a pro-European elite. After a series of violent events, including murder and an attempt on the life of the émigré William Mountbatten-Windsor (son of "the late ex-King Charles III", and now King of New Zealand), Lestocq's eventual exposure of the referendum fraud results in the restoration of an independent United Kingdom, and he is rewarded, after the repeal of the European Union's 'Classlessness Directive', with a baronetcy and the editorship of ''The Times''.
The book makes satirical predictions (from its 1995 perspective) of the future of a number of real-life people. These include a group arrested in 2016 as being members of the underground Anti-Federalist Movement, among whom are mentioned "Matthew d'Ancona, the former editor of ''The Times'', two former cabinet ministers, Hywel Williams and Iain Duncan-Smith, the [...] broadcaster Dr. Niall Ferguson [and] Michael Gove of the European Broadcasting Corporation." John Redwood, having escaped from Pentonville Prison, is in 2045 the head of the 'Free British Office' in Oslo.
Father Rosetti sis ent by the Vatican to a small city in Pennsylvania to investigate a report of an impedinding virgin birth, but he is attacked on the road by mysterious bikers, making him crash and leaving him catatonic. In his place, Vatican sends Father Justin O'Carroll, not without warning him that seventy years before, the Virgin Mary appeared in an Italian village and left a message concerning the birth of a divine child at the end of the century.
After arriving in the city, O'Carroll meets a pregnant 15 years old teen, Margaret Gallagher, who is bullied by her classmates for her claims of being a virgin. Margaret also has painful visions of people dying, and when a bully attempts to harass her, he suffers mysterious wounds. O'Carroll also finds out that an epidemic of Polio is ravaging the country. When he returns to the Vatican, he learns that another girl claiming a virgin pregnancy, Kathleen Beavier, has surfaced in Boston, being possibly the target of a second part of the prophecy, which talks about a child of Satan. O'Carroll finds that Kathleen's recent life mirrors exactly that of Margaret, and he is forced to investigate which girl will be the mother of which child.
Set several months after her actions prevent a sarin attack in Berlin, Carrie Mathison is back in the United States, living in Brooklyn, New York with her young pre-school aged daughter. She works for a nonprofit organization providing aid to local U.S Muslims. Alive, but now a drug addict, Peter Quinn lives with the fallout of a major stroke. Dar Adal and Saul Berenson continue to work for the CIA, dealing with United States counterterrorism initiatives.
The season is set around the imminent election of the United States' first female president, Senator Elizabeth Keane, and takes place between her election day and inauguration day. The season deals with a suspected cover-up of a terror plot, and the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.
In 1935 Manhattan, several society women fret over the beauty ideals imposed on them by an unforgiving culture ("Best Face Forward"). A red door beckons them inside Elizabeth Arden's salon, where they are greeted by the Arden Girls and then by Elizabeth Arden herself ("Behind the Red Door"). Elizabeth's husband Tommy informs her that Helena Rubinstein plans to relaunch her company in America. Meanwhile, Helena arrives in Manhattan with her marketing director Harry Fleming and tells him that, while she's never met Elizabeth in person, she still plans to undo her ("Back on Top").
When Helena extols her latest face cream, an unfazed Elizabeth reassures Tommy that her iconic pink packaging will always trump pseudo-science. Harry urges Helena to market her cream as two separate products: one for the daytime and one for the nighttime. Helena consents, causing her sales to surpass Elizabeth's. Tommy urges Elizabeth to give him a promotion, but she is reluctant to do so because she believes it will make her look weak ("My Secret Weapon").
One night, while having dinner at the St. Regis Hotel, Elizabeth overhears Helena and Harry talking in an adjoining banquette. She learns that Helena longs for inclusion and that Harry feels undervalued ("My American Moment"). When Harry storms off after Helena mentions her knowing about his late-night trysts, Elizabeth gives him her card and invites him to a job interview.
Sometime later, Harry meets with Elizabeth and insists on working as her Vice President of Sales. Despite her initial reluctance, Elizabeth agrees to Harry's demands after Tommy walks in on them. Harry tells Helena about his new job and hits the town with an errant sailor while Tommy enjoys a night out with several of the Arden Girls. When Elizabeth catches him in the steam room with one of the girls, she promptly fires him and demands a divorce ("Step on Out"). Both women wonder what their lives would be had they been born male ("If I'd Been a Man").
While receiving a visit from nail polish salesman Charles Revson and his hand model Dorian Leigh, Elizabeth becomes intrigued with Dorian as she sees vestiges of her former self in the up-and-comer ("Better Yourself"). Meanwhile, after being approached by Tommy about a job, Helena suggests they work together to destroy Elizabeth's reputation by telling the FDA her skin cream doubles as horse salve ("Oh, That's Rich").
In 1939 Washington, D.C., Elizabeth appears at a Senate Committee hearing and offers a spirited defense to committee chairman Senator Royal Copeland. Fully aware that Tommy deliberately sold her out, Elizabeth reports Helena and forces her to testify before the committee. Following Helena's testimony, however, Copeland chides both women and claims their efforts to undermine one another only resulted in them incriminating themselves. Alone and bereft, the two wonder what it would be like if they actually met ("Face to Face").
As dismayed society ladies across Manhattan read the obligatory labels on Arden and Rubinstein products ("Inside of the Jar"), both women discover that war has broken out in Europe. Helena decides to buoy the spirits of women dedicated to the war effort with a brand new line while Elizabeth learns that the War Office is rationing silk and nylon and vows to do her part by inventing products without them ("Necessity Is the Mother of Invention").
In the post-war years, both women thrive financially and open salons in fashionable neighborhoods across America ("Best Face Forward [Reprise]"). One day, Helena is dining at the St. Regis when she learns she lost the bid on a Park Avenue penthouse because its Board of Directors finds her too Jewish. She overhears Elizabeth being rejected by the elite Mayfair Club because they find her too nouveau riche and gloats over her rival getting a much-needed taste of her own prejudice ("Now You Know").
In the 1950s, Tommy and Harry urge their respective employers to update their ad campaigns. When CBS President Bill Paley offers them sponsorship of the new game show "The $64,000 Question," both women refuse ("No Thank You"). During the show's premiere, they are shocked to learn that the sponsor is Charles Revson's newly formed company Revlon, which features Dorian Leigh in an ad campaign that celebrates sex appeal ("Fire and Ice").
Following the premiere, Helena fires Tommy for failing to alert her to the danger Revlon now poses while Elizabeth fires Harry when he dares to say "I told you so." Both men commiserate at a bar, fully aware that their former employers are digging their own graves by failing to keep up with the times ("Dinosaurs").
Several years later, Elizabeth's Board of Directors pressures her to name a successor, prompting her to opine about how her entire résumé has been pared down to her patented color ("Pink"). Helena, meanwhile, is pressured by her attorneys to save on taxes by donating her large portrait collection. She refuses, insisting that, unlike the creams she spent her entire life championing, the paintings are what preserve her immortality ("Forever Beautiful").
At a gala organized by the American Women's Association in 1964, both women find themselves face to face after being accidentally invited to deliver the keynote address. The two argue until Helena notices that Elizabeth is wearing a shade of her lipstick. The two eventually realize that they had a shared goal that surpassed their bitter rivalry ("Beauty in the World"). As they are ushered to the stage, their handler Tulip thanks the former cosmetics moguls for "all you've done to – I mean ''for'' – women." Upon hearing this, both women pause and wonder who will defend beauty in an ever-coarsening world ("Finale").
The movie begins with the Zyuohgers trying to stop Cube Condor via Zyuoh King 1-2-3-4-5. However, the formation broke, causing Cube Condor to hijack Cube Elephant and Cube Tiger to form Condor Wild, while its pilot Domidol knocked down Zyuoh Elephant and Zyuoh Tiger. Zyuoh King was defeated, causing Zyuoh Eagle/Yamato to be separated while the other Zyuohgers were captured by Domidol.
Misao finds an unconscious Yamato while he was fishing, with the latter proceeding to tell what happened earlier: after discovering that several Zyuman worked for a circus, Yamato brings the Zyuohgers to the circus but the show was interrupted by their ringleader Domidol, who kidnapped the children spectators in his circus tent spaceship to destroy Earth in hopes of creating a giant space trapeze. While delaying the Zyuohgers with Moebas stolen from the Deathgaliens, Domidol approached Perle, one of his performers and steals Cube Condor, enslaving it as his own personal mecha.
While the Deathgaliens watch Domidol's atrocities from above, Naria suggested to face him due to his theft of their assets but Ginis let him pass, wanting to observe his actions after taking interest on the space ringleader. Zyuoh Eagle tries to break into the spaceship, but gets pursued by the Moebas and gunned down by the turrets. In need of more energies, Domidol enters the prison room and tortures Perle while he restrains the captured Zyuohgers in front of the children. Yamato finally breaks in and rescues his teammates long enough to reclaim their Zyuoh Changers and transform. After the rest of the team dragged Domidol out, Zyuoh The World fished the entire spaceship to rescue the children and reunite them with their parents. With no options, Domidol combines with his spaceship into a giant monster and faced against Wild Tousai King. Perle send the Cube Condor by transforming the entire area into the Zyuland illusion, empowering Wild Tousai King with enough energy to counterattack and finish the ringleader with the Condor Zyuoh Infinity attack. The Zyuohgers sent their farewell to Domidol's former performers and hope to meet again in Zyuland.
Cop Mat Joubert is devastated following the murder of his wife, who also worked for the police. He now spends his time drinking and contemplating suicide. When he gets back to work, Mat discovers he has been partnered with a new colleague and has to investigate the murders of several men, all shot with the same German weapon. Meanwhile, elsewhere in Cape Town, young female models are being drugged, raped and murdered.
Discovering a new species of tiny cats living inside of bananas, the anime revolves around their lives. Bananya's lifelong dream is to bathe in chocolate with all of his banana cat friends. Until then, they are trying to live their lives as best as they can in a normal household.
'''Opening quote:''' "Wait!" the troll said, jumping in front of him. "This is my toll bridge. You have to pay a penny to go across."
In the woods, Nick (David Giuntoli) trains in the use of traditional Grimm weapons, with assistance from Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell). At a bridge construction site, Sal Butrell (David Zayas), a Hässlich, meets with Robert Grosszahn (Traber Burns), who owes him money. Grosszahn refuses to pay, so Butrell kills him by drowning him in cement. Arnold Rosarot (Kevin Carroll) witnesses the event and calls 911, but Butrell notices him and goes after him. Arnold barely escapes.
Arnold flees to John Oblinger's (Kyle Vahan) house. Nick and Hank (Russell Hornsby) investigate the crime scene and Wu (Reggie Lee) finds the victim's phone: his last appointment was with someone dubbed "S.B." They interrogate Butrell but he denies involvement. Nick discovers he is a Hässlich. After the detectives have left, Butrell tells two employees that Nick is a Grimm and they need Reapers to kill him. Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) invites Monroe to dinner, after his having saved her.
In Germany, Yannick (David Loftus) sends two Reapers - Junkers (Chino Binamo) and another (Henri Lubatti) - to kill Nick, despite Renard's (Sasha Roiz) warning. Nick persuades Arnold's friend, Bud (Danny Bruno) to arrange a lodge meeting of Eisbibers to discuss taking action against the Hässlich. The meeting is held, but, out of fear, they vote against. Butrell is kidnapped by the Reapers, who question him about Nick. Nick calls Butrell, requesting he appear at the police station for more questions; Butrell counters, trying to bluff Nick into coming to him.
Arnold decides to give testimony, and Nick and Hank arrest Butrell. The Reapers follow Nick and the Eisbibers back to the lodge. Nick baits the Reapers and they fight. One Reaper accidentally beheads the other, then Nick kills him. He then calls Monroe to help dispose of the bodies. Later, Nick arrives home to discover the Eisbibers have sent many gifts. The episode ends as Yannick receives a package from Nick: the Reapers' heads, accompanied by a note saying "Next time send your best".
In Victorian London, widowed Dr. John Gladstone runs over a beautiful young man named Niccolo Cavalanti with his carriage. When others at the hospital begin to notice the injured man's unnatural healing ability, Gladstone shelters a recovering Niccolo in his home, and soon learns that the kind man is a vampire. Niccolo befriends both of Gladstone's daughters, the coming of age Ursula and the blind toddler Camille, and then disappears with Camille. Accompanied by Lady Hespeth Dunaway, a woman whose son was also abducted by Niccolo, Gladstone sets off to find his daughter.
Bobby Cavalero is a 16-year-old high school student who is questioning his sexual identity. He is an award-winning math student and a member of his high school swim team, who gets caught up in a drug bust. He is later exonerated but because of the investigation, information comes out that he had a sexual relationship with an older man in his 30s, Mark Reed. When students at the school find out about his sexual encounter, they start shunning him, verbally abuse him, and call for his expulsion from school. After some members of the swim team discover him swimming laps alone, they jump in the pool and try to drown him. His father, Joe Cavalero, is an ultra-conservative working class man who rejects the idea that his son might be gay. His father is also extremely homophobic, and when he finds Bobby wrestling with his younger brother, he beats the hell out of Bobby. His mother doesn't really understand why her son is questioning his sexuality, but she does try to offer support. The only people who do support him are his ex-girlfriend Beth, his bohemian friend Cleary, and Mr. Geffin, a closeted gay teacher at his school. Mr. Geffin opens up to Bobby and tells him he lives a quiet, happy life with his lover, but nonetheless is still closeted. In the end, Bobby's sexuality is still ambiguous.
The alien Orions attack the planet as humans are deemed too violent. After blowing up many of the Earth's capital cities, they then heal many of the sick and offer to transport them; those who are hungry and others who wanted to go to another planet and many of the earthlings volunteer to go. An "Earth First" militia forms to fight the aliens, while the US Vice President (as the aliens have killed the President) negotiates with the aliens. The plot was noted to be convoluted.
A.J., a teenage boy, is given a computer disk by an eccentric neighbor inscribed with "SCIENTIA EST POTENTIA" (Latin for "knowledge is power"). When downloaded, A.J. was transported to a time-traveling ship called the ''Kryos'' and made captain in the crew's effort to stave off a villain called Warp. Warp sought to capture the ''Kryos'' in order to use its knowledge for evil, but could only do so if A.J. failed to answer any of three questions he posed. Episodes included visits to Egyptian court official Imhotep, printing press inventor Johannes Gutenberg, Sir Isaac Newton. One episode also crossed with A.J's life outside the ''Kryos'', where he struggled with a decision to join a high school clique who had snubbed a black friend of his. A.J. is then sent to meet Colonel Benjamin Davis of the Tuskegee Airmen, and better realizes the scenario after seeing the problems of Jim Crow and the Second World War.
An opera manager (Melvyn Douglas) tries to woo a contract-breaking soprano (Grace Moore) into performing in Buenos Aires.
'''Opening quote:''' "And they lived happily ever after."
Bernard Aidikoff (David Williams), a man involved in a Ponzi scheme, commits suicide when police arrive to arrest him. Arthur Jarvis (David Clayton Rogers) tells his friend and advisor Spencer Harrison (Tom Wright) that all his money was invested with Aidikoff. They ask for money from Jarvis' wife's stepmother, Mavis Kerfield, who declines. Later that night, Mavis is killed by a creature that emits a supersonic scream.
Nick (David Giuntoli) and Hank (Russell Hornsby) investigate. After Nick has a bad dream, Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) contacts the detective who investigated his parents' death. The detective informs Nick that the suspects of their deaths were the three thieves who tried to get the coins and a man named Akira Kimura. While questioning Arthur and Spencer, Nick discovers Spencer is a Murciélago. He is told that Arthur's wife, Lucinda (Amanda Schull), had a strained relationship with Mavis and her stepsisters Tiffany and Taylor.
Nick and Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) discover the Murciélagos can make a screech that can kill a person in an excruciatingly painful way. The only way to counter one is an artifact called the "Murciélago Matraca", which also emits a supersonic noise. Nick and Hank arrest Spencer as a suspect. Lucinda kills Tiffany with the same scream that killed Mavis. Spencer confesses to having a supersonic scream and using it to commit both murders, causing Hank to leave the room in disgust; he then tells Nick that Lucinda is the murderer. Spencer has known Lucinda since she was a child. She has no conscience and will kill the last remaining Kerfield, Taylor, to inherit her father's $52 million fortune. Spencer races to the Kerfield house and finds Jarvis, who had tried to stop Lucinda. Claw marks are visible on his face, where she had struck him.
Nick and Hank arrive as Lucinda torments Taylor and is about to attack her in her home. Monroe arrives with the Murciélago Matraca and he an Nick use it to force Lucinda from the house. Spencer is forced to kill her, but she kills him before dying herself. Nick and Hank show the Murciélago Matraca to Renard (Sasha Roiz), saying it was what Lucinda used to commit the murders. Nick begins investigating Akira Kimura.
Maryam is in her thirties. The one who is born as a girl, passed puberty like a boy and in the way of subsistence tried hard every day just like a man...
Mae Zalinski is a 20-something girl who reluctantly takes a job as a substitute teacher at her old rival high school. Mae has her first day as things go from bad to worse as she starts to uncover the strange, possibly evil underbelly of this seemingly perfect high school. From the odd, overly-friendly vice-principal to the Children-of-the-Corn-esque students, Mae is soon in way over her head.
Pedro Gutiérrez is a modest bank employee who is in financial trouble and dreams of marrying María, but she lives in a wealthy family, and he believes that she will not want to go through hardship.
One night he is working alone at the bank, he hears some suspicious noises in the safe deposit box section and arrives in time to discover some robbers who shoot him in the leg and flee, leaving a wad of $30,000 behind. Pedro sees the opportunity to change his life and keeps it in an old filing cabinet in his apartment.
The bank management congratulates him for his intervention, his salary and job category are increased, when he leaves the hospital he verifies that María is not rich nor does she want luxuries, with which they can live happily.
Two former partners ("Andy Martin" and "Pete Menlo") from a previous mining claim are working in the strike town of "Goldfield", one running a saloon/ casino/ brothel (the "Fandango") and the other providing mining advice and management for the claims that the casino takes in as security against player's stakes. A regular gambler is "Jackpot" (whose daughter, Nevada, is the films love interest and the town's ore assayer).
Buying up a mine stake, the partners make a rich strike. But their miners are taken away by a better pay offer from the town's other main mining magnate, "Bannon". A confrontation in the street with one of the hired guns escalates tension and sparks a price war. But neither mine can keep the loyalty of mule drivers to transport the ore to the smelter to turn into cash and continue the price war. The partners plan to ship a load out of town, but are betrayed by their lawyer to Bannon. (Continuity error - far too large a couple of ore wagons for the number of horses towing it.) The wagons are bushwhacked by Bannon's men outside town and crash. Martin is left unconscious to die in the desert, but is found by a passer-by and taken back into town.
As Martin is returning to town, there is a cave-in at the mine with three men trapped. While the men work to free the trapped men, Menlo and Bannon discuss an offer from a state-wide magnate to run a railway to the town and the smelter, in return for a 50% stake in the town's mines. Martin arrives and incorrectly detects a double cross (financial and romantic) where there was none, and dissolves the partnership and the romance.
Martin and Jackpot meet in a casino, and Martin wins Jackpot's mine, but by an obscure mining law it turns out that the rights to the mines are all controlled by the owner of Jackpot's mine (now Martin). The lawyer is run out of town. Menlo attempts to buy the mine from Jackpot, and discovers that it now belongs to Martin, so attempts to buy it back via Jackpot. This alerts Martin that Menlo is up to something. He is then attacked again by Bannon's hoodlums and dragged to a meeting with Bannon, who also tries to buy the mine. Martin, Nevada and Jackpot figure that something is up, work the mine, find high-quality ore that will control the whole area's strikes but are observed by one of the hoodlums.
Bannon wants to kill the prospectors, but Menlo argues against it. After a fight, Menlo is knocked unconscious and Bannon and his hoodlums head to the claims registration office to prevent the prospectors party from registering the claim. A gunfight ensues, in which the hoodlums are killed, and Menlo reappears just in time to prevent Bannon from killing Jackpot. All ends in sweetness and light, with a fight scene between the two original partners which throws back (or forward) to "Gilligan's Island".
July 1881: a mother comes to Sherlock Holmes to find her son. A naval officer posted to HMS Dido to fight the Boers. However, he did not return with his men, and is now being denounced as a deserter and traitor. Can Holmes uncover the truth, a truth that threatens the Empire with assassination, diamond mines and military cover-ups?
In 1937, while making ''Way Out West'', Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy discuss their contracts, agreeing they are not being justly compensated. Stan advocates leaving Hal Roach to set up their own production company while Oliver is reluctant to rock the boat. Later, at Fox Studios, Stan waits for Oliver so they can sign to Fox. Oliver doesn't show and remains tied to Roach, who puts him in the film ''Zenobia'' with an elephant, leading to a rift between the two men.
In 1953, they embark on a music hall tour of the UK and Ireland while trying to get a comedic movie of Robin Hood made. Poor publicity in Britain has the tour begin in near-empty backstreet theatres as producer Bernard Delfont focuses on his up-and-coming star Norman Wisdom. Public appearances improve ticket sales and they sell out much larger prestigious venues.
Meanwhile, driven by Stan, they continue to write and develop for the movie against an ominous silence from its London producer. Stan discovers the movie has been cancelled for insufficient funding. Unable to tell Oliver, he continues work on the script.
Their wives, Ida Laurel and Lucille Hardy, join them at the Savoy Hotel. They sell out the Lyceum Theatre where, at the opening night party, Ida mentions the "elephant movie" resulting in an argument over the contract fiasco 16 years earlier. Stan expresses resentment at Oliver's betrayal of their friendship and accuses him of laziness; Oliver says they were never true friends, that Stan is a hollow man hiding behind his typewriter. When Stan says "I loved us", Oliver counters that Stan loved Laurel and Hardy, "but you never loved me."
Judging a beauty contest in Worthing, Oliver pointedly rebuffs Stan's attempts at conversation and collapses as Stan addresses the crowd. Delfont suggests Stan replace him with English comic Nobby Cook. Stan goes to Oliver who tells him he is retiring. Going on stage could be fatal, so Oliver has promised Lucille he won't and they will leave for America as soon as possible. They agree it is for the best, that Stan will carry on with a new partner, and that they had not meant the things they said in their argument.
At the next show, Stan observes Nobby Cook onstage from the wings as the orchestra tunes up. Delfont and Ida watch from a box as the Laurel and Hardy Overture is played only to be interrupted by an announcement that the performance has been cancelled. Ida finds Stan at the bar, he says he loves Oliver and won't continue the tour without him, and not to upset Oliver by telling him. Oliver, in his room, recalls the doctor's words while reminiscing appreciative fans. Lucille returns from an errand to find him gone, he is at Stan's door telling him not to leave, they have shows to do.
On the boat to Ireland Stan confesses there is no longer a movie and Oliver says he knew, and thought Stan knew he knew. Stan asks why, then, did they continue to rehearse, and Oliver asks "What else are we going to do?" A large crowd welcomes their arrival in Ireland as church bells ring out their tune. Onstage Stan expresses concern for Oliver's condition in moments when they are hidden from the audience and says they need not finish with the song. Oliver says he's fine, and surprises Stan by announcing to the audience that they will finish with a dance - to Lucille's consternation. As they perform "At the Ball, That's All" Ida takes, and squeezes, Lucille's hand. Stan and Ollie take their bow to wild cheering and applause.
A text epilogue says they never performed together again; Oliver's health didn't recover and he died in 1957; and that Stan refused all offers to perform without Oliver but continued, until his death in 1965, to write material for Laurel & Hardy.
The film's plot turns around the story between two friends called Lothario (britanized from Lotario) and Anselmo, and the latter's wife, Camila. Anselmo, preyed by an impertinent curiosity, asks Lotario to flirt with Camila, to prove her loyalty. At first, Camila spurns outraged the pretensions of Lotario, and Anselmo remains content about his wife's loyalty, but then convinces Lotario to keep flirting with her. Lotario and Camila finally become lovers, whereas Anselmo remains content about the loyalty of both his friend and wife, not knowing about the love affair which they maintain in secret. An unforeseeable circumstance reveals the truth, so Camila ends up running away from the house, and Anselmo dies writing the cause of his mourning.
A ruined Pepe Valdés (Pepe Iglesias) tries to marry the millionaire Esperancita (Emma Penella), which triggers a series of misunderstandings.
Inspector Q (Francis Ng) and agent Ding Siu-ka (Charmaine Sheh) are top members of CIB Department, they are after a drug racket that is taking over the city. Unexpectedly, they receive a mystery message from a missing undercover agent "Blackjack". CIB tries to locate and process Blackjack before it's too late. The paranoid drug mafia leader Tung Pak-ho (Li Guangjie) plays his own troop on each other's throats, suspecting a mole. Meanwhile, boss Blue (Nick Cheung) and his right-hand man Shiu Chi-long (Louis Koo) participate in an internal struggle to become the top dogs irrespective of their strong friendship.
After surviving and shooting their way out of a drug deal ambush in Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, it becomes clear that Blue is Blackjack and upon knowing this, Shiu Chi-long tries to protect himself by using Blackjack's identity. They survive doubts and struggles between them but only for Blue to lose his life to an assassin sent by ruthless Tung Pak-ho. Inspector Q's life is lost facing goons and Ding's life is saved by her godfather Foon Hei Gor (Hui Shiu-hung), who is an undercover agent posing as a legendary retired don who is looking to get back into the criminal underworld in the city. Finally, Foon Hei Gor gets Tung Pak-ho arrested after punishing him for what he had done to his wife when Tung Pak-ho started out as a criminal.
Don Cesar de Echague, masquerading as the avenger "El Coyote", continues the American troops' fight against injustice and perversion of justice against the Hispanic population of California in the mid-1840s. At the same time, he courts the charming Leonor de Acevedo as a nobleman who lives inconspicuously. She rejects him at first because she only knows him as a cowardly nobleman, but rewards him with her love when she learns about his true calling.
In 1848, the dandy-like Cesar de Echague returned to California from the east of the continent. He finds conditions that oppress his Mexican compatriots and only pursue American interests. A rebellion carried out by the inhabitants was bloodily put down; the leaders imprisoned. During the day, César remains the gentleman he portrays to polite society; At night, however, he becomes a black-masked bandit who sides with the oppressed, and just like Zorro, he leads the insurgents towards their goal: fighting and defeating the oppressors, embodied by the officer of the Northern States, Captain Pots.
In August each year, many families go camping at Blue Waves, in Arcachon, on the Atlantic coast. Barbecues, thongs, pastis, volleyball encounters with naturists, are of course all part of the baggage of the campers. Escapist desires to Shogun (the local nightclub) are pressing. This year, the reunion could have been nice if this year does not accumulate unforeseen events.
Upset that his fiancee wants to take a break in their relationship, and to reduce his stress levels, Jean-Pierre Savelli, an insurance company employee in Clermont-Ferrand, decides to spend his holiday in an unusual place for him - the Blue Waves campsite, near Arcachon. There he meets eager campers including Patrick Chirac, and begins to act as a single man again. At first put off by Patrick's overtures of friendship, the two become best friends, as Jean-Pierre begins to "loosen up" a bit. Taking a lead from Patrick, Jean-Pierre gradually acquires the same outlook on life and even becomes the new darling of Blue Waves, which makes Patrick jealous. Patrick begins to cause discord in the camp, although the other campers (Jacky, Paulo, Laurette and Sophie) are already ill-humored, all the more so when it is revealed that the "Blue Waves" campsite may be sold to a Spanish group, to be replaced by a luxury hotel.
When Mrs Chatel reveals the proposal to the campers, everyone forgets their quarrels and rallies around, united against the project. To this end, the campers invent a ploy to undo the work: they decide to try to convince the DRAC inspector that Gallo-Roman pottery is buried in the ground, and that the site is of archaeological importance. On the day of the inspection, Jean-Pierre claims to be the inspector during the mayor's visit. The real expert, meanwhile, is "hijacked" by Patrick and led through the neighboring nudist camp. The deception ends up being uncovered, the inspector visits the correct campsite, examines the excavated pottery ... and authenticates it as genuine. The archaeological site is proven, and so the redevelopment work will not take place.
The time comes for Patrick to leave and, having managed to seduce the lovely Pauline, they set out together for his home in Dijon. But she catches him looking at another girl at the tollbooth. She then leaves the car and Patrick returns home alone. As for Jean-Pierre, he reconciles with his fiancée and, with his daughter Lisa, the three leave for home.
Every summer, the Camping Blue Waves meet to their holiday friends, The Pic, Jacky and Laurette, Gatineau, just divorced Sophia, 37, and Patrick Chirac. This year, Patrick decided to try carpooling ... Thinking through France with Vanessa, he is left with three young Robert charmer, Benji hunk, José the loudmouth. Of course, after the carpool, Patrick is forced to test the co-sleeping.
Lena Vorontsova is the daughter of circus performers. Having fallen in love with the circus, for the incredible atmosphere that reigns in the arena and behind the scenes, she dreams of becoming a tamer. But so far she only cares for animals. The director invites motorcycle racer Fyodor Ermolaev to display an incredibly spectacular show number, right under the circus cupola. Lena is to assist him. The sailor Pyotr Mokin is hopelessly in love with Lena. But the girl’s heart belongs to Fyodor. He is also not indifferent to her but prefers to hide his feelings. The tamer Almazov is fired for addiction to alcohol and violation of discipline. Now the place of the tamer is vacant, and Vorontsova can make her cherished dream come true. Overcoming her fear, she starts to work, and tigers submit to her strong character to become obedient. She has to choose between a timer's career and touring with a loved one as his assistant. Lena decides to follow an old dream. Ermolaev rents a room with an accountant, his daughter Olga dances in a circus corps de ballet, and her parents want to marry her to an artist. She takes the position of an assistant on tour, instead of Vorontsova. Fyodor can't overcome his longing from Lena. He regrets not revealing his feelings to Lena. The motorcycle racer finds out that at the next performance Lena will show her number with the tigers. He hurries to confess her love, just in time. The couple gains long-awaited happiness.
The game starts with the main character and their friends, Cheval and Lilia, looking for a monster egg. They find a nest with one, and it hatches into a Rathalos that bonds with the main character almost immediately. They nickname the creature Ratha. However, upon returning to Hakum Village, it is attacked by a rampaging Nargacuga possessed by a sickness called the Black Blight. Ratha tries to defend the village, but is seemingly killed. Cheval's mother, Vlau, also dies in the attack, driving him into despair.
A year later, the village has recovered, but the threat of the Black Blight still remains. The main character takes the Rite of Kinship and is gifted by the village chief with a piece of Kinship Ore, a crystal with the power to tame wild monsters almost instantaneously. They then gain the title of Rider, which is unique to the village. They also meet a strange-looking stray felyne who names himself Navirou and demands to accompany them. Traveling outside the village to tame monsters, they soon come across the Black Blight, which they are able to purify by using their Kinship Ore to resonate with a larger, natural formation of the mineral.
Lilia decides to join the Royal Scriveners, a group studying the Black Blight, while Cheval tames a Rathian and becomes bent on slaying blighted monsters to get his revenge. Meanwhile, the main character continues to purify the Blight. Eventually, they encounter Doctor Manelger, an evil mad scientist who is attempting to create artificial Kinship Ore and bend monsters to his will. The main character reunites with Ratha, who is revealed to have survived the attack, and flies to Manelger's laboratory, rescuing many kidnapped felyne slaves, as well as the Numbers, felyne test subjects of which Navirou was formerly a member.
To stop the Black Blight, the main character decides to look for the egg of a legendary white dragon, Versa Pietru, that was once tamed by the very first Rider, who is called Redan. They find the egg, but it is stolen by Manelger. Manelger gives the egg to Cheval, who is wielding the artificial ore, and the creature hatches and immediately grows to enormous size. However, after Cheval loses control of the creature, it is infected by blight, turning into Makili Pietru. Cheval finally realizes his foolishness, while the player rushes to defeat Makili Pietru before it can infect the entire world.
However, Ratha's Blight, given to him by a scar left by the Nargacuga, suddenly manifests and the player must defeat Ratha first. After Ratha comes to his senses, they face off against Makili Pietru.
After a long battle, the player and Ratha use Sky-High-Dive to try finish off the Makili Pietru. During this time, Ratha is engulfed in a bright white light, and defeats the Makili Pietru, showing Ratha was really the White Dragon all along.
The series features the comical misadventures formed by:
'''Don Rosendo''', the father, bald, with a mustache and bow tie, he is always in some kind of trouble
'''Doña Laura''', the mother and housewife
'''Diógenes''', the son, a naughty little child who was bald in the first strips but became blonde later
'''Pocholita (or Lolita)''', the daughter, a very attractive young girl who appeared very rarely
'''Jeremías''', a somewhat cynical parrot who is always smoking a cigar
The '''grandfather''' Cebolleta, with his huge white beard and his endless verbiage (''"I was once fighting along the Sepoys when blah, blah, blah…"''), he became one of the most remembered of the characters of Bruguera. Obsessed with telling improbable war anecdotes, he has passed on to the colloquial language through the idiom: ''"Telling more stories than Cebolleta Granpa"''.
Vázquez also drew two other strips about families (''"La Familia Gambérrez"'' and ''"La Familia Churumbel"'') but the Cebolleta family became the most famous one.
A Panamanian cargo ship docks at night at a dock on the Guadalquivir River. José, chief officer of Italian origin, is on duty on the ship. Carmen, an attractive gypsy from Granada, who works in Seville with a gang of tobacco smugglers, comes up on deck and begins to dance to distract the attention of the men on board, thus allowing her cronies to unload the merchandise from the ship. However, the police discover the operation and intervene. Carmen manages to flee from the investigations thanks to the protection of José, who falls madly in love with her.
Samantha Logan is a struggling artist whose career in New York City is not going the way she wants. She must move back to her hometown of Westerly, RI and move in with her grandmother. For a while she's been having dreams about a mysterious man. Much to her surprise the man of her dreamworld is her grandmother's next door neighbor, Malcolm Drew.
Malcolm Drew is a member of an ancient race of shapeshifters called the Amoveo. But the biggest secret of all is that he tells Samantha that she is also an Amoveo, a hybrid. Her father was an Amoveo and her mother was a human with psychic powers. The Amoevo race is dying out and now a new chapter is beginning with humans being lifemates. But in the background of Samantha and Malcolm's budding romance a war is brewing among the Amoveo, one that will put the two of them in the middle.
In the aftermath of the 2008 market crash, James “Jimmy” Adams (James Lafferty) gets laid off from his Wall Street hedge fund manager job. Feeling a sense of guilt for his role in the financial crisis, Adams decides to find a more honest and gratifying job than his previous profession. After several unsuccessful efforts applying to a variety of blue-collar jobs, Adams is hired as a graveyard shift server at Papa’s Chicken and Waffles, a local 24-hour diner chain (the restaurant was renamed in new versions of the book and in the film).
Though many of his coworkers are ex-convicts, he begins to find unlikely friendships, especially with short-order cook Edward Collins (Danny Glover). Collins becomes somewhat of a mentor for Adams, teaching him valuable life lessons about hard work and finance from a fresh perspective. Adams soon sets his sights on owning the Papa’s franchise and works relentlessly to meet the 1000-hour minimum required. Tensions build between Adams and his wife, Becky (Julie Gonzalo), as he downgrades their house and cars to finance his goal.
Overall, his time working at Papa’s offers Adams new insights both professionally and personally. After six months at Papa’s Chicken and Waffles, Adams returns to the finance industry, this time focusing on financial planning and wealth management. He is seen assisting his former Papa’s colleagues with financial planning and business start-up advice.
Marianna Coltari wants nothing to do with the Amoveo civil war, she would rather live it up in the city and hang out at her favorite night club (that just happens to be run by a vampire coven). When her brother Dante hires his human employee Pete Castro as her bodyguard, things get interesting.
Pete is a retired cop and doesn't want anything to do with guarding a party girl like Marianna but he is doing it as a favor for his friend. But when Pete finds out about the Amoveo and the pair are in hiding from an enemy.
Pete is Marianna's lifemate and there attraction is undeniable but can he protect her. But a person from Pete's past May hold the biggest secret of all and the means to fight their enemies.
Category:Amoveo Legend Category:2013 American novels Category:American romance novels
This story revolves around three friends, Sirithunga (Sarath Kothalawala) a handyman and father of three young children, Wimal (Kumara Thirimadura) a three-wheeler driver, and Suraj (Namal Jayasinghe) an overly sensitive university student. The three friends decide following the end of the Sri Lankan Civil War to take a road trip, to areas where the final battles were fought. They each dream of a better life, a future with freedom, love and money.
Shortly after being reunited with his family, John Marston (Rob Wiethoff) is trying to lead a peaceful life with his wife Abigail (Sophia Marzocchi), son Jack (Josh Blaylock), and friend Uncle (Spider Madison) on their ranch at Beecher's Hope. One stormy night, however, Uncle is nowhere to be found and the Marstons, assuming he had found shelter elsewhere, go to sleep. In the middle of the night, they are awakened by a zombified Uncle that bites Abigail, who proceeds to bite Jack, also turning them into zombies. After killing Uncle and tying up Abigail and Jack, John sets out to find a cure and goes to the town of Blackwater in search for a doctor, only to find it nearly abandoned. He runs into one of his former allies, Professor Harold MacDougal (Joe Ochman), who theorizes that a virus has caused the dead to come back to life. After MacDougal is killed by an undead Nastas, John encounters other survivors and helps clear Blackwater and the nearby cemetery of the undead, before learning that another two of his former allies, con artist Nigel West Dickens (Don Creech) and treasure hunter Seth Briars (Kevin Glikmann), are supposedly responsible for the outbreak. He meets with both men, who deny any involvement, although Seth voices his suspicions that the Aztecs had something to do with the entire ordeal and tells John to travel to Mexico.
John travels to Nuevo Paraíso, only to discover that it is in a much worse state than America. He encounters a group of nuns led by Mother Superior Calderón (Irene DeBari), who informs him that a woman told her Abraham Reyes, whom John had previously helped take over Nuevo Paraíso, is responsible for the outbreak. When John goes to meet with said woman, he finds her attacked by a zombified Reyes, whom he kills. The woman informs John that Reyes triggered the zombie plague when he stole an Aztec mask from some tombs, and became a zombie himself when he donned the mask. Venturing into the tombs, John and the woman are able to return the mask to its original place, effectively stopping the plague. The woman then reveals herself as the Aztec goddess Ayauhteotl and thanks John for his help, gifting him one of the four horses of Apocalypse to return home.
John returns to Beecher's Hope to find that Jack and Abigail have been cured, and is happy to be reunited with them. Months later, following John's death, Seth finds and steals the mask, causing the dead to rise from their graves once again. John is among those resurrected, but because he was buried with holy water, he is now a revenant, keeping possession of his soul.
Aya Asagiri is a high school girl who has problems both at school with almost lethal bullying and at home from her brother Kaname's physical abuse. One day a suspicious website pops up on her computer screen, showing a creepy-looking person. This person appears to take pity on her and announces that she will grant Aya magical powers. Later at school, Aya finds a gun that mysteriously appears in her locker. She is soon cornered by bullies and with nothing to lose, Aya fires the gun at them. The shot causes the bullies to disappear, but to her horror she finds out that they have somehow been killed by a train nearby. Aya feels as though she had somehow killed them, and is confused to find herself with longer red hair and blood flowing out of her eyes. She later finds out that she is not alone, when a classmate reveals that she is also a magical girl. The classmate, known as Tsuyuno Yatsumura, becomes one of her new friends, while offering to help her get away from “magical hunters” who kill magical girls and only steal their wands. Tsuyuno teaches Aya about the power she has acquired and the physical changes it brings on to her body. However, the two girls do not know the reason for something that resembles a countdown clock on the website, and they fear it may be something really bad. After meeting a group of other fellow magical girls, all with different powers and abilities of their own, Tsuyuno and Aya attempt to discover what the countdown really means, all while trying to make sure no one knows about their powers.
Jacques lives in a small town where all the inhabitants were put on straw stock following a dismissal. The factory closed, his girlfriend is gone and debts accumulate. So when the Mafia bookmaker corner him, asking him to kill his wife, Jacques gladly accepts.
Emily (Shay Mitchell) connects the puzzle pieces as she understands Elliott and Mary might be working together. Toby (Keegan Allen) and Yvonne (Kara Royster) get engaged. Spencer (Troian Bellisario) feels like breaking up with Caleb (Tyler Blackburn) because apparently he still loves Hanna (Ashley Benson). Emily reveals her true feelings to Sabrina (Lulu Brud). Aria (Lucy Hale) and Hanna find out about Elliott and Charlotte's love affair. The ladies attempt to rescue Alison (Sasha Pieterse) from the psychiatric hospital to protect her from Uber A's threats, but in the process, Hanna accidentally hits Elliott (Huw Collins) with her car, killing him instantly.
The film begins with Snapchat personality Andrea Russett announcing to her followers that her cousin Taylor was flying to visit her for the weekend. This coincides with a Twitter request she had received from Sean O'Donnell, who wants Andrea to visit a supposedly haunted cabin called "Sickhouse". Once Taylor arrives the two women bond and Andrea teaches her cousin to use her Snapchat, which Taylor uses to publish a video of Andrea sleeping, the first of many videos posted by Taylor throughout the film.
The next day Andrea discovers death threats on her cousin's Facebook page, revealing that Taylor actually came to Los Angeles to escape a dire situation back at home. The subject then changes to the Sickhouse and the two read a website that explains the legend of the home and the Sickwife who lived there. They also run into two of Andrea's fans, who ask to take a picture with her. Infatuated with her cousin's life and freedom, Taylor decides that she wants to remain with Andrea forever. Later that night the two cousins attend a house party with Sean and two others, Lukas and JC. Lukas, who has visited Sickhouse before, goes over the rules of the Sickhouse: don't make noise, never go inside, and always leave a gift. During the party, Taylor silently observes Sean and Andrea discussing her before sharing a kiss, which upsets Taylor.
The group sets out for the Sickhouse the following day despite warnings from local residents to stay away. As they grow closer to the cabin Taylor continues to broadcast using Andrea's account, growing irritated when others try to use their phones to document the trip. The group also runs into the two fans again, which Andrea dismisses as a coincidence. After they make it to the woods the group decides to camp out and Andrea has sex with Sean while Taylor loses her virginity to Lukas. The following day they continue to follow clues leading to the Sickhouse and discover the cabin and its altar of gifts. Andrea follows the rules and leaves a gift, however both Lukas and Taylor decide to steal gifts. Lukas drinks from his stolen flask and becomes violently ill and during the night the group is terrorized by strange noises and faint images of the “Sickwife.
The following morning Taylor sends out a broadcast on her own, stating that she would “do anything to not go home". The group return to the Sickhouse to replace the stolen gifts, only for Taylor to run inside. Sean decides to follow her, leaving Andrea and Lukas to wait outside. Soon after Taylor runs out of the house and the door slams shut behind her. The trio runs away leaving Sean behind, only to see a woman in a wedding dress walking through the woods. They return to the house and split up in order to find Sean. They instead find the two fans, one of whom is dressed as the Sickwife. They start to explain that they were just pranking them, only for the two to start becoming uncontrollably sick. As Taylor runs from the house the viewer is shown Sean and Lukas lying sick on the ground, with the latter pleading for help; Andrea is then snatched out of view. Taylor is knocked unconscious and the phone drops to the ground, where it records for a little while longer.
When she wakes Taylor decides to continue sending out snaps despite having no cellphone reception, in the hopes that once the reception returns the videos will upload and someone will send the police to save them. While wandering through the house she finds Lukas. Taylor also believes that she can hear Andrea in the basement and goes to look for her, even as Lukas begs her not to go. In the basement Taylor finds dead bodies and a wedding dress on a hanger. Right before a fade to black, the viewer is shown a glimpse of the “Sickhusband.” After the fade the viewer is shown Taylor humming happily as she drifts further into the basement. Suddenly a hand appears on her shoulder, to which she says, “I’m home” into the camera.
Ultimately, the fates of Sean, Lukas, Andrea, and the two fans are left unclear to the audience.
Set in Saint Petersburg in 1860, the story revolves around retired officer Yakovlev. A deadly shot, Yakovlev is effectively a kind of mercenary in that he is available for hire through his associate Baron Staroe to stand in for others in formal duels.
Much later in the film, flashbacks reveal that years ago an Aleut shaman has predicted he would never die, and so far that seems about right as Yakovlev wins duel after duel, wounding and more often killing noble opponents. Although duels of honor are technically illegal in Russia at the time, most people turn a blind eye to the law. The code of practice is not written down anywhere, and yet everyone knows the rules and rituals, while many participants see it as an almost mystical rite. To take part in a duel is to accept that one’s fate is ultimately in the hands of God, hence the practice of Russian roulette.
Eventually, it turns out that all of Yakovlev’s recent duels were secretly arranged by Count Beklemishev. He is a shadowy puppet master with a grudge and designs on Princess Martha Tuchkova whose brother (Prince Tuchkov) Yakovlev is scheduled to duel with next. When attraction stirs between him and the pretty blond princess, problems arise, especially since, as the flashbacks reveal, Yakovlev has an agenda of his own.
Vale (Angélica Vale) is a cheerful, humble, simple woman, and a fanatic of a soap opera actor, the famous Lucas Duarte (Juan Pablo Espinosa). The lives of Vale and Lucas cross one day, by what they call destiny, luck or magic. While she is hidden inside a giant Pizza outfit, handing out flyers of the place where she works, she saves her beloved actor's life, but in reality, everything is part of one of the scenes of the telenovela. That is the first meeting between Lucas and Vale, but not the only one. Lucas's representative, Gabriel (Gabriel Porras), comes up with the idea of creating a contest for all his fans and after cheating a little, names Vale the winner. Vale, delighted, has lunch with him and ends up saving his life, now for real. After this Vale becomes his personal assistant and shadow, in other words, his guardian angel. Vale begins to know who Lucas Duarte really is (is hobbies, his defects) but even so, she loves him more and more. Lucas begins to realize who his real fan is...her strength, her light, her brilliance and, in spite of himself, he begins to fall in love with her. But like in every story, there is a dark past, a past that can transform their love into something impossible. Even though neither of them knows, Lucas is the father of Tomás (Emmanuel Perez), the son of Lucia, Vale's friend, who Vale has raised as if it were hers since her friend died. He is the man Vale hates for abandoning her friend. Vale is at a crossroads, she must decide whether to stand up for her deceased friend or to remain what she has always been: the fan.
Quiet and measured life in an old residence of a provincial town are waiting for fun change in the lives of the main characters of the film Kolya, Olya and Petya and other hostel residents. It all starts with the return of Nikolay (Kolya) from the Army; he prepares for his wedding with Olga. At the same time, the city comes to businessman Konstantin Smirnov, who once lived in this hostel. Naturally, he visit his first love (Kolya's mother). Konstantin's son, Pyotr (Petya), a young genius, winner of the Nobel Prize, falls in love with Olya and meets reciprocal feelings. Olya makes a painfully difficult choice in favor of the groom. Peter comes to the wedding to wish happiness to the young couple, but runs away with the bride. Olga and Pyotr live happily abroad, and Kolya finds a job at the plant.
Millie Dunbar is a single mother with eight adopted children in South Los Angeles. Her neighbour, Obie, is the only white man in the neighborhood. Together they form an unlikely team during the Rodney King riots.
Yanis Zeri is the leader of a successful Parisian heist gang that specializes in robbing armoured trucks. The crew consists of his trusted friend Nasser, Frank (the boyfriend of his sister Nora), and his younger brother Amine. Yanis enjoys planning and carrying out complicated heists, and rather than flaunt his wealth or live luxuriously, he lives simply and launders the money he makes through friends and family members' businesses. When Yanis needs an explosives expert for a big job, Nasser introduces him to Eric, an experienced young man Nasser met in prison. Even though Eric uses OxyContin for the pain of a previous explosion wound, Nasser insists the group can trust him.
Amine has a modestly-paid role in the crew as driver, which Amine finds is not making him enough money. After a heist, when Amine is tasked with disposing all of the guns into a river, Amine keeps a pistol so he can sell it. When Amine sells the gun to a slum drug dealer, the gun is identified as one of the heist weapons by police and the dealer gets a 10 year jail term. The drug gang leader, Salif, threatens Yanis' sister and insists that Yanis repay Salif for the jailing of his dealer by doing a heist of a heroin shipment coming from Belgium.
Yanis and his crew intercept the heroin, but Nasser is killed in a gun battle. Yanis and Eric eventually deliver the drugs to Salif, however the handover degenerates into a shootout. When Yanis realizes that Salif has taken Yanis' mother and Eric's girlfriend as hostages, Yanis rescues his mother and kills Salif, but by the time Eric reaches his home, he finds his girlfriend has already been killed.
As police surround Salif's apartment, Amine is arrested. Yanis prepares his family to escape to Casablanca by sea, instructing his lawyer to transfer his fortune to Morocco and tell him when his brother will be transferred from his holding cell. Yanis and his crew ambush the police van and escape with Amine, but when they get to a parking garage to use their getaway vehicle, the police open fire and a shootout ensues. Yanis provides covering fire to enable Amine and Eric to escape from the police in the parking garage. The two get on a departing city bus, and watch as Yanis walks slowly out of the parking lot, where he is shot by a young police officer. The film ends with Amine and Eric arriving in a Morocco port on an old fishing boat.
Kothe Kharak Singh is a political novel and the main events of the plot take place in a village in Punjab. The novel presents three generations and narrates the struggle for Indian independence before the partition of the Punjab. It also describes the socio-economic and cultural changes the state was witnessing at that time.
Set in an Eastern fantasy setting, Dān Fěi and her brother, guardians of a sword known as the Tiān Xíng Jiàn, are pursued by the evil Xuán Guǐ Zōng clan, who seek to obtain the sword for their master, Miè Tiān Hái. While her brother is defeated, Fěi, who possesses the sword's crossguard, escapes and finds herself in the care of the wandering swordsman, Shāng Bù Huàn, and a mysterious man named Lǐn Xuě Yā, who become her protectors from the pursuing Xuán Guǐ Zōng clan.
Spin the conditions of the series in the social context, where Najib decides to leave his home in Damascus because of deteriorating health conditions and travels to Lebanon for circumstances in the country to discover that his children are far away from life that he thinks they live.
The series is social drama most of events in Lebanon, His stars are six brothers and his father is Najib that came from Damascus.http://www.bostah.com/الأخبار/ملخص-أحداث-مسلسل-سنعود-بعد-قليل-بتوقيع-رافي-وهبي-والليث-حجو.html
''Laki-Laki Tak Bernama'' shows a number of scenes related to sexuality, including a cheating wife and husband.
The film takes place during the reign of Empress Catherine the Great.
1780 year. Captain of the Imperial yacht Fedor Ushakov asks the commander-in-chief Prince Grigori Potemkin directions to the Black Sea fleet under construction. For this he is ready to give up the prospect of a court career.
1783 year. With a small detachment of sailors and craftsmen Ushakov arrives in Kherson to shipyards. At this time, on the southern borders of Russia, the epidemic of plague rages, among the workers riots riot. Tikhon Prokofiev, nicknamed the Ragged Ear, the fugitive serf from the estate Ushakov and the ally of Pugachev, at the instigation of the English spy Orfano encourages the people to go to the Don. Ushakov with sailors stops the rebels, organizes the extinguishing of shipyards, set on fire by the same spy. Personal example convinces the chief local doctor Ermolaev to stay, attracts to his side Tikhon, introduces a strict quarantine regime and conquers the plague. Son of the doctor Ermolaev Victor asks Ushakov to enroll him on the ship, but he refuses but only because the ships are not yet.
1784 year. Simultaneously with the construction of the fleet, crews of ships begin training. During training firing Ushakov distracted arrived courier - Captain Senyavin. Between him and Ushakov immediately there is dislike. Meanwhile, Senyavin wanted to report that Potemkin himself had arrived at the ceremony of launching the ships. The head of the newly created Black Sea Admiralty board, the liberal and supporter of the British naval school, Count Mordovtsev, also informs Potemkin about the violations allowed by Ushakov the training of officers not according to statutes, unorthodox tactical ideas. Despite Ushakov's inappropriate behavior, Potemkin favored him, the potential of a talented naval commander. During the launching ceremony of the St. Pavel battleship Victor Ermolaev, despite protests from his mother, breaks into the ship. To Orfano in the meantime comes the messenger. The Spy finds Tikhon and reminds him that he can still betray him.
1786 year. During the first training voyage, Ushakov theoretically studies his ideas in the field of tactics of sea battles, while surprising officers by putting his forces into losing conditions - guided by the principle you want victory believe that the enemy is three times stronger, four times.
1787 year. Catherine II travels to Crimea. Potemkin is working on a scenario of events on this matter. Ushakov tells him that he can only boast of the increased training of personnel. Potemkin, despite external outrage, decides to surprise the empress and the ambassadors of European powers not with pomposity but with might. During the meeting of the empress, Potemkin first complains about the lack of strength, the actions of Turkish pirates using English and French weapons. The ambassadors of Great Britain and France ignore the statements. But then Potemkin demonstrates to the assembled squadron of the Black Sea fleet in the Sevastopol raid. At the signal Ushakov ships begin to show firing. However Ushakov, forgetting himself, cries out "Well done Vasiliev (Stapa ''St. Paul''), all for a glass of vodka!". Despite this, the empress produces the commander of the squadron of Count Voinovich in the rear admirals, and Ushakov in brigadiers. London. The British government is concerned about the appearance of the Russian fleet on the Black Sea. Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger took an anti-Russian stance, in his own way understanding his father's will that Britain should not have competitors at sea. Exit Pitt finds in the declaration of Russia of war, but not by Britain, but by Turkey. The Turkish sultan orders the Russian ambassador to be imprisoned in the Semibashen Castle and to declare war on Russia. In the Crimea, the liaison officer informs Orfano about the beginning of the war. Simultaneously with the Turkish landing, the uprising of the Crimean Tatars, prepared by the British, should begin. The most urgent task of Orfano is to get rid of Ushakov. He requires Tikhon Prokofiev to kill Ushakov. However, he attacks the spy and beats him, but is forced to retire because of the newly appeared sailors. Orfano informs the Count Mordovtsev that Ushakov hides a runaway convict. Mordovtsev is on the ball, which gives Potemkin in order to report it. Potemkin, meanwhile, is discussing with Ushakov his ideas. Mordovtsev is going to report on Tikhon, but Senyavin appears that Turkey has declared war on Russia.
1788 year. The fleeing half of the Turkish fleet, defeated by the Ochakovs, and the Sevastopol squadron, which first went into battle, meet near the island of Fidonisi. Turks have a clear advantage in the forces 17 battleships against 2 Russian. However, the commander of the avant-garde (the battleship ''St. Paul'', the frigates ''Berislav'' and ''Strela''), the brigadier Ushakov is sure he will be able to achieve victory. He convinces the commander of the squadron Voinovich to allow him to act at his own discretion. The Rear Admiral permits and departs for the flagship. To Senyavin's request to allow him to stay on the ship, Ushakov refuses. Before the battle Tikhon confesses Ushakov that he fought Pugachev and is a runaway convict, but Ushakov closes his eyes and orders him to take his post. The avant-garde breaks away from the kordebatalia and begins a maneuver to reach the head of the Turkish line. Turks open fire, but erratic and with inefficient distance. Ushakov forbids shooting back, until the ships converge for a minimum distance. Turkish kapudan-pasha orders to prepare for boarding, however, converging, Russian ships open a shattering fire on the Turkish flagman. As a result of the maneuver of the frigates, the Turkish flagship is under fire from both sides. Voinovich, meanwhile, is only praying for "to leave the Turks without a shame." Senyavin informs him of Ushakov's daring maneuver. Despite the fact that Voinovich approves the maneuver with the strength of the result achieved, he himself prefers to stick to linear tactics, sends Senyavin and begins to pray for Ushakov's success. Senyavin arrives in the bid with a report for Potemkin, who, however, broke the spurt of the spleen. Using this, Mordovtsev tries to put him a denunciation of Ushakov allegedly he dissolves about Potemkin discrediting rumors. Potemkin is indifferent to the accusations of abuse of position, but the accusation of envy for the glory of Count Suvorov infuriates him. However, Senyavin again involuntarily saves Ushakov, reporting to Potemkin about the success of Fidonisi, which makes him forgive all the charges, stating that he needs a naval commander, not sabers and fiscals. Instead of denouncing him, he makes Mordovtsev write an order to confer Ushakov the title of Rear Admiral and appoint him commander of the Sevastopol squadron. Voinovich, he appoints the new chief of the Black Sea Admiralty Board, and Mordovtsev sends a long vacation, allegedly due to illness. Ushakov, taking command of the squadron, asks Voinovich permission to apply one more innovation reserve. Voinovich refuses, but declares that the correct decision will be to turn to Potemkin. Ushakov, on Voinovich's advice, declares to Potemkin that he came up with this idea, allegedly following his instructions. Potemkin understands that the idea belongs precisely to Ushakov and asks why he did this after all, the creator of this idea is proclaimed by Potemkin, not by him. Ushakov responds that he needs not glory, but the opportunity to beat the baking sheet
1790 year. In the battle of Tender, Ushakov defeated the Turkish fleet and seized the ship Meleki-Bahri. Those British Royal Navy officers who were on Turkish ships as observers report to the Admiralty about the tactics of Ushakov. Young officers Edward Foote and Horatio Nelson analyze the battle at Tender. Foot, like most British officers, sees Ushakov's violation of the rules only barbarity and savagery, but Nelson unravels in the barbarity innovative sea tactics. However, the intervening Admiral reminds Nelson, in case he ever commands the squadron, about the fate of Admiral Bing, who was shot for violating the regulations of the Admiralty. The Turkish sultan and his associates are discussing the situation. The Turkish fleet is defeated, despite the vows of advisers and the promises of the British. The Sultan asks his advisers what to expect next is it not that Ushak Pasha will open fire from the Bosporus in his palace. But the Admiral Seyid-Ali, who came from Algeria, reassures the Sultan. New ships arrived from the Mediterranean Sea faster and more powerful than Russians. In the bay of Kaliakria, you can not see water from many ships. Seid-Ali swears to the Sultan to bring Ushakov in a cage. Despite the confidence of his officers, Ushakov is seriously preparing for the upcoming battle.
The battle lasts until late at night and ends with the defeat of the Turkish fleet. Soon the war is over.
Ushakov, without entering into a dispute, before his eyes embraces his sailor Khovrin and retires to engage in a peaceful matter to complete the port of Sevastopol. The population of Sevastopol welcomes him as a hero.
The bride's ex-boyfriend is a member of the band, a collection of musical misfits, at an Italian-Jewish wedding.
In a technologically advanced near future, Katherine Mills, a cyborg working for Harbinger Corporation, discovers a reprogramming anomaly regarding a warfare A.I. system located at Harbinger I Training Facility, an undisclosed military training island. She meets with Captain Damien Bukes and his team consisting of Drifter, Robinson, Cutbill, Goodwin, Hackett, and Loftus – all of whom have been assigned to a two-day training mission at Harbinger I.
Upon their arrival, the team notices global communications have been disabled, limiting them to local access only. They discover autonomously operating surveillance drones monitoring them. The team begins their mission of eliminating A.I. threats. The first encounter proves easy for the team as they eliminate A.I. drones from a vantage point. During the battle, Mills discovers an advanced S.A.R. (Study Analyze Reprogram) unit, S.A.R.-003, but is unable to access it.
That night, Drifter and Mills discuss their pasts and Bukes' disdain for her. Later that night, Loftus is killed by the S.A.R. unit. The next day, they discover Loftus's body at the location of the first encounter. The drones take the team's original vantage point and kill Hackett. They discover the A.I. is adapting and learning from them. Bukes flanks two drones, which immediately disperse. Later, the S.A.R. unit captures Cutbill and has him shot and killed by another drone. The drones attack the group again and Bukes and Mills are separated from Drifter, Robinson and Goodwin. That night, the S.A.R. unit discovers Bukes and an unconscious Mills; it "connects" with Mills and leaves.
The next day, the team attempts to exit the training area, but they are attacked by smoke and gunfire. Drifter is shot and pinned down by the S.A.R. unit. Bukes kills Drifter as a coup de grace before the S.A.R. unit is able to. The team escapes into the barrier complex and discovers that the A.I. has killed all of the employees. Mills activates another S.A.R. unit to learn that S.A.R-003 reprogrammed the A.I. to use lethal force to improve soldier motivation and has ordered the soldiers to Harbinger I on its own. S.A.R-003 and other units break through the barrier door as the remaining team escapes through the back. Mills discovers an EMP device which can be used to stop the original S.A.R. unit but could also kill her or wipe her mind clean.
Bukes, Mills, Robinson, and Goodwin place explosives to prepare for a siege. The following day, A.I. drones attack the facility. The team wipes out more than half of the drones, but Robinson is killed in the ensuing gunfight. As S.A.R-003 approaches the team, Mills detonates the EMP, incapacitating herself and the drone. The S.A.R. unit reawakens and attacks Bukes and Mills. Mills controls Robinson's sniper rifle gun in the building to destroy the S.A.R. unit; S.A.R. however uploads its program into Mills before it shuts down and Mills loses consciousness. Hours later, a tiltrotor arrives to rescue the survivors. As Bukes and Goodwin approach the aircraft, Mills reawakens with S.A.R-003's mission protocol.
In the 1860s, from the province of St. Petersburg comes the liberal-minded young officer Bobyrev. He hopes under the protection of his schoolmate Klaverova, who became a general, to make a career. Gen. happily defines Bobyrev in his office, and already builds plans, both through the beautiful Sophia, wife Bobyrev will wage a successful struggle with opponents and influence voluptuous Minister Tarakanov.