Plot
James Bond is back. An oil tycoon is murdered in MI6 and Bond is sent to protect his daughter. Renard, who has a bullet lodged in his brain from a previous agent, is secretly planning the destruction of a pipeline. Bond gains a hand from a research scientist, Dr. Christmas Jones who witnesses the action which happens when Bond meets up with Renard, but Bond becomes suspicious about Elektra King, especially when Bond's boss, M goes missing. Bond must work quickly to prevent Renard from destroying Europe.
Keywords: 1990s, action-hero, alarm-clock, ambush, arm-sling, assassination, assassination-attempt, automobile, avalanche, babe-scientist
Danger. Suspense. Excitement. There must be when he's around.
Some men want to rule the world... Some women ask for the world... Some believe the world is theirs for the taking... But for one man, The World Is Not Enough!!!
As the countdown begins for the new millennium there is still one number you can always count on.
Bond is Back
Renard: One tires of being executed.
James Bond: Expecting Davidov? He caught a bullet instead of the plane. Get off. Keep your mouth shut.::Renard: You can't kill me. I'm already dead.::James Bond: Not dead enough for me.::Renard: You could show a little gratitude. I did spare your life at the banker's office. That's right. I couldn't you. You were working for me. You delivered the money, killed King and now you brought me the plane.::James Bond: What's your plan for the bomb?::Renard: You first. Or could it be you don't have a plan?::James Bond: That bomb will never leave this room.::Renard: Neither will you.::[Renard and Bond pause for a moment. At that time, the bomb is being hoisted out of the silo]::Renard: How sad... to be threatened by a man who can't grasp what he's involved in.::James Bond: Revenge is not hard to fathom for a man who believes in nothing.::Renard: And what do you believe in? Preservation of Capital?::[Renard pulls away from Bond]::Renard: Go ahead. Shoot me. I welcome it. My men will hear the shot and kill you.::James Bond: And the firefight will bring down half the army from above.::Renard: But when a certain phone call isn't made in twenty minutes, Elektra dies.::James Bond: You're bluffing.::Renard: She's beautiful isn't she? You should have had her before, when she was innocent. How does it feel to know that I broke her in for you?::[Bond gets angry and pistol-whips Renard across the forehead. Renard falls to the ground]::James Bond: [as the puts the silencer on his P99] I usually hate killing an unarmed man. Cold-blooded murder is a filthy business.::Renard: A man tires of being executed.::James Bond: But in your case, I feel nothing just like you.::Renard: But then again, there's no point living if you can't feel alive?::James Bond: Huh?
[Colonel Akakievich and Christmas storm in]::Colonel Akakievich: [to Bond] Hey! Drop the gun!::James Bond: Keep away, Colonel!::Dr. Christmas Jones: He's an imposter. Doctor Arkov is sixty-three years old.::James Bond: [about Renard and his men] This is your imposter, along with the men outside in the plane. They're stealing the bomb.::[Colonel Akakievich picks up an rifle and loads it]::Colonel Akakievich: I said drop it!::[Bond drops the PPK. Renard gets up off the floor]::Colonel Akakievich: [to Bond] On your knees!::[One of Renard's men removes a card from the bomb]::Renard: [Speaks Russian] Well done. [about Bond] He would have killed us all. [Takes a photograph from Christams's hand] This is Peter?::Dr. Christmas Jones: Yeah, but he's no atomic scientist.::Renard: [to Akakievich] I suppose you were the one who let him down.::[Renard shoves the photograph at Akakievich and walks towards Bond]::Renard: [to Bond] You had me. But i know you couldn't...::[Renard squeezes Bond's left shoulder. Bond groans with pain]::Renard: ...shoulder the responsibility.::[Renard lets go of Bond's shoulder and starts walking towards the silo entrance]::Renard: [to Akakievich] Now, without any further interruptions, lets proceed.::Colonel Akakievich: Nyet! There are too many new faces around here, including yours. The bomb doesn't move until I am satisfied. [to the terrorists] Hey, all of you, to the surface, now!::[Renard's men open fire at Akakievich's men]
[last lines]::James Bond: [in bed with Jones] I was wrong about you.::Dr. Christmas Jones: Yeah, how so?::James Bond: I thought Christmas only comes once a year.
[last lines]::James Bond: I thought Christmas only came once a year.
James Bond: Molly, I need a clean build of health, you have to clear me for duty.::Dr. Molly Warmflash: James, I wouldn't really...::James Bond: Not at all.::Dr. Molly Warmflash: Practical, smart?::James Bond: Well let's just, skirt the usual, shall we?::Dr. Molly Warmflash: [start kissing] You'd have to promise to call me [squeezes his shoulder that has been injured] this time.::James Bond: What ever the doctor orders.
Zukovsky: I'm looking for a submarine. It's big and black, and the driver is a very good friend of mine.::Zukovsky: [sees captain hat] Bring it to me!::Elektra King: [takes hat] What a shame, he's just gone. [Shoots Zukovsky]
Renard: Welcome to my nuclear family.
[first lines]::Lachaise: So good of you to come see me, Mr Bond, particularly on such short notice.::James Bond: If you can't trust a Swiss banker, then what's the world come to?
Dr. Christmas Jones: The world's greatest terrorist running around with six kilos of weapons-grade plutonium can't be good. I gotta get it back, or someone's gonna have my ass.::James Bond: First things first.
R (named ar /ˈɑr/) is the eighteenth letter of the ISO basic Latin alphabet.
The original Semitic letter may have been inspired by an Egyptian hieroglyph for tp, "head". It was used for /r/ by Semites because in their language, the word for "head" was rêš (also the name of the letter). It developed into Greek Ρ ῥῶ (rhô) and Latin R. It is likely that some Etruscan and Western Greek forms of the letter added the extra stroke to distinguish it from a later form of the letter P.[citation needed]
The minuscule (lower-case) form of r developed through several variations on the capital form. In handwriting it was common not to close the bottom of the loop but continue into the leg, saving an extra pen stroke. The loop-leg stroke shortened into the simple arc used today. Another minuscule, r rotunda (ꝛ), kept the loop-leg stroke but dropped the vertical stroke, although it fell out of use around the 18th century.
In science, the letter R is a symbol for the gas constant. Mathematicians use R or Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \mathbb{R}
John R. Dilworth (born February 14, 1963 in New York City, New York) is an American animator. He is best known as the producer, director, writer, and creator of the animated television series Courage the Cowardly Dog.
Dilworth attended the School of Visual Arts in New York, where he graduated in 1985 with a Bachelor of Arts. After graduation, Dilworth became an art director at Baldi, Bloom and Whelan Advertising, but continued to work on his own films in his spare time, providing much of his own funding. His animated short, The Chicken From Outer Space, was nominated for an Academy Award in 1996. Cartoon Network later commissioned Dilworth to turn the short into a series, which eventually became the wildly popular and critically acclaimed Courage the Cowardly Dog. Dilworth is the president of Stretch Films, a New York-based design and animation studio, which he founded in 1991. He also worked on the original opening for Nicktoons and for the show Doug.
Dilworth's short Angry Cabaret was also featured in MTV's 1994 Animation Weekend. His breakout film was The Dirdy Birdy.
John Ruskin (8 February 1819 – 20 January 1900) was the leading English art critic of the Victorian era, also an art patron, draughtsman, watercolourist, a prominent social thinker and philanthropist. He wrote on subjects ranging from geology to architecture, myth to ornithology, literature to education, and botany to political economy. His writing styles and literary forms were equally varied. Ruskin penned essays and treatises, poetry and lectures, travel guides and manuals, letters and even a fairy tale. The elaborate style that characterised his earliest writing on art was later superseded by a preference for plainer language designed to communicate his ideas more effectively. In all of his writing, he emphasised the connections between nature, art and society. He also made detailed sketches and paintings of rocks, plants, birds, landscapes, and architectural structures and ornamentation.
He was hugely influential in the latter half of the 19th century up to the First World War. After a period of relative decline, his reputation has steadily improved since the 1960s with the publication of numerous academic studies of his work. Today, his ideas and concerns are widely recognised as having anticipated interest in environmentalism, sustainability and craft.
Thambi Ramaiah is an Indian film actor and director, who works in the Tamil film industry. He directed the Vadivelu-starrer Indiralohathil Na Azhagappan; his performance in Mynaa, won a National Film Award for Best Supporting Actor. Ramaiah has also been working occasionally as a lyricist.
He actually came to cinema to write lyrics and compose music. Unexpectedly he became a director. He worked as an associate director to T. Rajender and P. Vasu. He directed Manu Needhi which had Murali in the lead role and also Vadivelu starrer Indralogathil Na Azhagappan which was a flop. Vadivelu is his best friend, Ramiah wrote all the comedy tracks for Vadivelu and also appeared in them. He made his debut doing a small role with Goundamani in the Sathyaraj starrer Malabar Police. Though he did character roles in Kodambakkam, Oram Po and Vetrivel Sakthivel, he did not get the expected. So he thought that acting is not suitable for him and he patiently waited. Myna has now changed his life. This film is a turning point.
Jon Snow (born 28 September 1947) is an English journalist and presenter, currently employed by ITN. He is best known for presenting Channel 4 News.
He was Chancellor of Oxford Brookes University from 2001 to 2008.
Snow was born in Ardingly, Sussex. He is the son of schoolmaster and Bishop of Whitby, George D'Oyly Snow, grandson of First World War general Thomas D'Oyly Snow (about whom he writes in his Foreword to Ronald Skirth's war memoir The Reluctant Tommy), and cousin of retired BBC television news presenter Peter Snow.
Snow was educated at independent school, Ardingly College, where his father was headmaster. He later attended the independent St Edward's School in Oxford. At age 18 he was for a year a VSO volunteer teaching in northern Uganda.
After mixed success in his first attempt to pass his A level qualifications he moved to the Yorkshire Coast College, Scarborough, where he later obtained the necessary qualifications to gain a place studying law at the University of Liverpool. However, he did not complete the degree, being rusticated for his part in a student protest. However he was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Letters at Liverpool University in 2011.
R¨¹diger stands in the rain and the snow
Collector of autographs
Names upon photographs
Faces of people who everyone knows
R¨¹diger lives in a place on his own
Briefcase and spectacles
Strange and respectable
He knows the meaning of being alone
R¨¹diger works as a clerk in the town
Music or politics
R¨¹diger gets his kicks
He gets information then he comes around
R¨¹diger waits at the hall in Berlin
He waits there all night
Security's tight
They know who he is but they don't let him in
R¨¹diger waits in the dark by the stair
His fingers are shaking
His feet they are aching
But your name's in the paper so R¨¹diger's there
Hide all the children
The wise and the vision
Morning division
They won't be forgiven
Run out the sorrow
There's always tomorrow
We'll never leave them
Not 'till the hollow
Stepping over all the people's bodies left behind
We'll escape this together if we
Lay like the victims
To mask all the reasons
Don't make a sound sister
Tis not the season
Shut out all the horror scenes
We'll make our break tonight
We'll escape this together if we're
Here when the fire dies
We'll make the way and show them all
Fear is the mindkiller
We can't afford so we don't fall
Don't think of these awful places good has left mankind
No mistakes and we both will stay alive
Tell the story
Horrid and gory
No-one will listen
Until the bell rings
Ask why all the strange behavior
We can only cry
It's a message we tried to convey
So here when the fire dies
We'll make our break and show them all
We came from these horrid places
Tell you what we found
We'll escape this together if we're here when the fire dies
We'll make our way and we'll show them all
Fear is the one thing left they can't afford
Now they've screwed themselves
These are all the awful places good has left mankind
No mistakes and it's me and you alive
Alone
Again
Alone