Rudolf Cortés - Táborák už zhas (1964)
Cortes feat. Aurelian Temisan - La Cafea (Lyric Video)
The Conquerors - Cortez
Cortes Feminino - Editora Cedic
Cortes de pelo 2014 para mujer
Connect-R & Cortes - Sweet 16 (Official Video)
Corte de cabelo curto perfeito para se aprender
Cortes 2014
apenas meus cortes
Cortes cortos | Peluqueros.tv
Pastor Caio Fabio: Entrevista sem cortes
Curso Corte de Cabelo Feminino - Técnicas de Corte Degradê - Cursos CPT
Cortes de pelo cara redonda
Rodrigo Cintra mostra os cortes das famosas
Plot
A young recruit to the Carabinieri (the national police force of Italy) is assigned to a remote village in the mountains of Sardinia and participates in the investigation of a murder. His life becomes intertwined with that of the villagers, and his identity is transformed and enriched when he confronts the challenge of pursuing justice in a community that is completely different from his own.
"Il posto più vicino fuori del mondo" ("A place nearby that belongs to another world")
Plot
The story is about two swindlers who get their hands on a map to the fabled city of gold, El Dorado while pulling off some sort of scam. Their plan goes bad and the rogues end up lost at sea after a number of misfortunes. Oddly enough, they end up on the shores of El Dorado and are worshiped by the natives for their foreign appearance.
Keywords: 1510s, 16th-century, 21-gun-salute, adventurer, american-indian, armor, brunette, buddy, chase, con-artist
They came for the gold... they stayed for the adventure
Tulio: Any last words?::Miguel: I will cut you to ribbons!::Tulio: Fool! Such mediocrity! Let your *sword* do the talking!::Miguel: I will, it will be loquacious to a fault!
Tulio: I will give you the honor of a quick and painless death. [Grabs tiny dagger, looks at it] But not with that.
Miguel: You fight like my sister!::Tulio: I've fought your sister. That's a compliment.
Miguel: Tulio! Tulio, we've done it!::Tulio: Is that the map?::Miguel: It's all right here!::Tulio: You *still* have the *map*?::Miguel: The whistling rock! The stream!::Tulio: You kept the map but you couldn't manage to grab a little more FOOD?::Miguel: Even those mountains! You said it yourself, it could be possible, and it is! It really *is* the map to El Dorado!::[pause]::Tulio: You drank sea water, didn't you?
[Miguel and Tulio are stranded in the boat, together with Altivo]::Miguel: Tulio, did you ever imagine it would end like this?::Tulio: The horse is a surprise...::Miguel: Any... regrets?::Tulio: You mean besides dying? Yeah. I never... had enough... gold.::Miguel: My regret, besides dying is... our greatest adventure is over before it began, and no one will even remember us.::Tulio: Well, if it's any consolation, Miguel, you... made my life... an adventure.::Miguel: And if it's any consolation, Tulio, you made my life... rich.
Miguel: Oh, come on!::Tulio: I'm not coming on!
Miguel: Altivo! Hey, Altivo! You want the nice apple? Come and get it! But, you have to do a trick for me first! All you have to do, is find a pry bar. It's a long piece of metal with a hooky thing at the end.::Tulio: Miguel, you're talking to a horse!::Miguel: Yes, that's it Altivo. Find the pry bar!::Tulio: Yes, "find the pry bar". He doesn't understand "pry bar"! He's a dumb horse, there's no way he could understand... [Altivo drops keys into the brig]::Tulio: Well... it's *not* a pry bar.
[Tzekel-Kan is about to perform a human sacrifice]::Tulio: [in an undertone to Miguel] I don't like this.::Miguel: Tulio, we've got to do something! [Tzekel-Kan raises his axe]::Tulio: Stop! This is not a proper tribute! [Miguel catches the intended victim and drags him away from the cliff edge]::Tzekel-Kan: [confused] You do not want the tribute?::Miguel: No no, we want tribute, it's just that, um... Tulio, tell him.::Tulio: The stars are not in position for this tribute!::Miguel: Like he said! Stars!... Can't do it... Not today.
Tulio: Miguel, he's a ruthless war-horse, not a poodle!
Tulio: Come on, baby! Papa needs that crappy map!
Plot
No land nor period was more given to romance than the Spanish American in the early part of the 19th century. The influence of the warm constant sun, without excessive amenity was conducive to lethargy and lethargy is the seed of romance. The dreamer is a romancer. This Biograph story starts some time before Mexican independence was proclaimed in California, which occurred in 1822. Perdita Arguello, the pretty Spanish senorita is beloved by Jose Manuella, a wealthy young Spaniard, who migrated to the new world in search of adventure. A man of qualities, he surrenders claim upon the girl when he finds her heart is given to Pedro Cortes, a handsome troubadour of the village. Cortes is just the sort of fellow to impress a thoughtless and unsophisticated girl with his gentle persuasive manner together with his talent as a musician. Of poetic temperament, she yields to his plan and marries him. But what a calamity! Twenty years later we see the result of her folly. Cortes proved to be a worthless dipsomaniac and reprobate. Spending his time and money she earns at the tavern. The most unfortunate feature is that they have a son, now nearly 19 years old. Perdita realizes that the environs and example of the father are not favorable to the boy's well-being, hence she resolves to save him. It is at a time when Baja and Alta California are in conflict, and Manuella, Perdita's former lover, is now Governor. So she appeals to him to provide a future for their son. The Governor takes the boy into his own company. But is there any wonder that the son of such a dog as Cortes should prove himself to be a despicable whelp? He is not long in the service when the blood of his father asserts itself. Drunkenness is one of the first offenses. Next theft of the meanest order, that of robbing his sleeping comrades-in-arms. Perdita has dispatched a letter of thanks to the Governor, which he is reading as the drunken boy is brought before him. The tone of the letter induces Manuella to be easy on the boy that she might live in ignorance of his real nature. However, later she writes that she is dying and believing her son has made a name for himself, she asks to be allowed to see him before she dies. As the Governor reads this letter the boy is brought before him, having been caught for thieving. Manuella is thoroughly disgusted with the boy, but in order to have his mother die happy, he decorates him, making him appear before her as a hero. When she breathes her last the medals are torn his breast and he is sent to prison where the punishment he justly deserves is inflicted. In this subject are shown a series of most beautiful scenes of Southern California, which are photographically perfect.
Keywords: hispanic, hollywood, independent-film, latino, lost-film, melodrama, partially-lost-film
Rudolf Cortés - Táborák už zhas (1964)
Cortes feat. Aurelian Temisan - La Cafea (Lyric Video)
The Conquerors - Cortez
Cortes Feminino - Editora Cedic
Cortes de pelo 2014 para mujer
Connect-R & Cortes - Sweet 16 (Official Video)
Corte de cabelo curto perfeito para se aprender
Cortes 2014
apenas meus cortes
Cortes cortos | Peluqueros.tv
Pastor Caio Fabio: Entrevista sem cortes
Curso Corte de Cabelo Feminino - Técnicas de Corte Degradê - Cursos CPT
Cortes de pelo cara redonda
Rodrigo Cintra mostra os cortes das famosas
HENOCK CORTES / CALIBRE 12 / 2013
Rudolf Cortés - Večery pod Moskvou 1967
Corte de cabello Bob - Bob Haircut - Cortes de cabelo em estilo Bob
Cortes de cabelo práticos e modernos - 16/02/2012
Hernán Cortés
LADIES, CHEK THIS MAN OUT!!!!! - JOAQUIN CORTES
Cortes para cabelos cacheados e volumosos
09 Hijo de cortés - BUNBURY (Palosanto)
Corte Chanel.avi
Cortes (singular form: Corte) is a name of Spanish and Portuguese origin, meaning "Courts". It may refer to:
Hernán Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro, 1st Marquis of the Valley of Oaxaca (Spanish pronunciation: [erˈnaŋ korˈtes de monˈroj i piˈθaro]; 1485 – December 2, 1547) was a Spanish Conquistador who led an expedition that caused the fall of the Aztec Empire and brought large portions of mainland Mexico under the rule of the King of Castile in the early 16th century. Cortés was part of the generation of Spanish colonizers that began the first phase of the Spanish colonization of the Americas.
Born in Medellín, Spain, to a family of lesser nobility, Cortés chose to pursue a livelihood in the New World. He went to Hispaniola and later to Cuba, where he received an encomienda and, for a short time, became alcalde (magistrate) of the second Spanish town founded on the island. In 1519, he was elected captain of the third expedition to the mainland, an expedition which he partly funded. His enmity with the Governor of Cuba, Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, resulted in the recall of the expedition at the last moment, an order which Cortés ignored. Arriving on the continent, Cortés executed a successful strategy of allying with some indigenous peoples against others. He also used a native woman, Doña Marina, as an interpreter; she would later bear Cortés a son. When the Governor of Cuba sent emissaries to arrest Cortés, he fought them and won, using the extra troops as reinforcements. Cortés wrote letters directly to the king asking to be acknowledged for his successes instead of punished for mutiny. After he overthrew the Aztec Empire, Cortés was awarded the title of Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca, while the more prestigious title of Viceroy was given to a high-ranking nobleman, Antonio de Mendoza. In 1541 Cortés returned to Spain, where he died peacefully but embittered, six years later.