Plot
Two friends Jen and Lena meet as children and make a pact to be life-long kindred spirits but eventually drift apart due to lifestyle choices. Jen becomes the tough, smooth, "got it all together" business woman intent on making the bucks and living the good life, single and in charge. Lena, on the other hand, is the "good girl" choosing religion, marriage and the suburbs only to find herself shackled to a possessive, self-absorbed husband who tries to control her every move and thought while doing as he pleases. The two friends re-unite when Lena is diagnosed with cancer and is told she has less than two months to live. Feeling alone and frightened she remembers the long ago pact made with Jen that she would never be alone. Lena calls Jen and the two women pick up their friendship where they left off with a renewed love and devotion fired by Lena's illness. Lena's dying wish is to take one last trip with Jen to their childhood neighborhood by the ocean but getting Lena out of the overbearing and selfish control of her husband Dave proves to be far more difficult than even smooth, aggressive Jen could have imagined. Dave and Jen become arch enemies fighting over Lena's right to die with the dignity of her own decisions. Jen's emotions are even more complicated by Lena's faith in God which Jen finds frustrating and childish in the face of her empty life and present illness; after all, if God's so good why have her choices lead the naive Lena to a miserable marriage and premature death? Eventually Jen does succeed in escaping with Lena and the women make their way to the beach where childhood memories and life long decisions must be re-examined in the light of personal choices and life's ultimate end. Never Alone is the story of the tender love of two woman grappling with their own morality and the reasons for existence in a world that's never fair.
Plot
Perfect Pitch is about the art of pitching. It tells the humorous story of a writer, Chuck Wang, who joins a room full of oddball writers to pitch his concept to an imposing Mr. Leech. While he nervously sits with his script in a waiting room, Mr. Leech and two other studio executives become increasingly impatient with the numerous awful ideas they must endure. They are in an unreceptive mood when Chuck Wang is called in. Surprisingly, they respond to his introduction about rooting for an underdog. It quickly goes sour, however, when Chuck introduces the details of classical music and genius. The spark of an idea gets tossed around though, and soon becomes unrecognizable as an idea about a baseball pitcher throwing a perfect game in the seventh game of the World Series. Chuck is congratulated for his brilliant concept, and is whisked out.
Plot
This stream-of-consciousness live-action comedy is a journey through our hero's to-do list, as he tries to escape his everyday life by moving to Japan. Each episode of Frank Leaves For The Orient deals with another aspect of Frank's attempts to wrap up his life, break up with his girlfriend, quit his job, etc. The action becomes a surreal, rapid-fire, sometimes non-linear story that splits apart and then comes back together.
Keywords: satire, sitcom
Plot
Chaank Armaments is experimenting with the ultimate fighting machine which is part human - part machine. So far, the Hardman project has been unreliable and has killed a number of innocent people. The genius behind this project is Jack who lives in a world of models, toys and magazines. When he is fired by Cale for killing a few corporate officers, he unleashes the ultimate killing machine called the 'Warbeast' against Cale and those who would help her.
Keywords: ambiguous-ending, blood-spatter, bomb, claustrophobia, computer, computer-hacker, corporate-corruption, corporation, crushed-to-death, cult-film
Order in to chaos
It feeds on your fear
Man's Deadliest Weapon Shows It's Metal
Fear Is Death
Suit Up And Fight Back
The Future Has Teeth
Man's deadliest invention is about to show its metal
Jack Dante: Whoo! God, that turns me on!
Jack Dante: He's dead. I showed him my thing... and it killed him!
[Imitating Hellraiser 3]::Sam Raimi: Jesus!::Jack Dante: Well, no, not quite. But close.
Jack Dante: With weapons like mine, and authorization like yours, we can do some serious damage.
[first lines]::John Carpenter: There he is, the ultimate soldier. No mercy, no pity, no fear.
Jack Dante: That's a sharp comeback.
Plot
Brantley Foster, a well-educated kid from Kansas, has always dreamed of making it big in New York. On his first work day in New York, he is fired in a hostile take-over and learns that jobs - and girls - are hard to get. When Brantley visits his distant uncle, Howard Prescott, who runs a multi-million-dollar company, he is given a job in the company's mail room. Then Brantley meets Christy Wills, who happens to be one of the top executives. Brantley sees how poorly the company is being run and decides to create a position under the name Carlton Whitfield, to influence and improve the company's operations. Soon things get unexpectedly out of hand, not in the least because of his aunt, his girl and leading a double life.
Keywords: apartment, armed-robbery, assumed-identity, blockbuster, board-meeting, business, businessman, camera-shot-of-feet, capitalism, cheating-husband
There's no such thing as an overnight success. Brantley Foster took two weeks.
[after sex]::Brantley Foster: Can I make a personal observation?::Vera Prescott: Um, anything but the thighs.::Brantley Foster: You know, somebody sold you a bill of goods and convinced you you had to be 21 forever. I think you're terrific; I think the only thing wrong with you is your husband is a jerk. You're beautiful, you're intelligent, you're sensuous...::Vera Prescott: Say that again!::Brantley Foster: Which part?::Vera Prescott: All of it! [sounds of car] Oh, no.::Brantley Foster: What, what is it?::Vera Prescott: It's the jerk. [Brantley rushes to the window] My husband.::Brantley Foster: My uncle!::Vera Prescott: Your what?::Brantley Foster: Oh God, that makes you...::Vera Prescott: Auntie Vera?::Brantley Foster: Oh! God! [Vera laughs] Oh God, oh God, oh God! What's my mother going to say? I've disgraced my whole family!::Vera Prescott: Oh, the hell you did!
Grace Foster: Take this. It's Uncle Howard's phone number in New York.::Brantley Foster: I've got an uncle in New York?::Grace Foster: My cousin Ellen married his half-sister's nephew, before she got bit by that dog and died.
[on entering his newly rented apartment]::Brantley Foster: All right, listen up. If there are any bugs in here, or rats, or anything that has more legs than I do, you just stay on your side of the room, okay? I'll stay on mine. I should warn you, I'm packing an iron.
[after reviewing Brantley's (faked) résumé]::Mrs. Meacham: Outstanding! Outstanding!::Brantley Foster: You're not going to tell me I have too much experience, are you?::Mrs. Meacham: Certainly not - you're perfect for the job.::Brantley Foster: Great!::Mrs. Meacham: Except...::Brantley Foster: No! No exceptions! I want this job, I need it, I can do it. Everywhere I've been today there's always been something wrong, too young, too old, too short, too tall. Whatever the exception is, I can fix it. I can be older, I can be taller, I can be anything.::Mrs. Meacham: Can you be a minority woman?
[Brantley said "good morning" to an executive]::Fred Melrose: Not the suits, man! You never consort with the suits unless they consort with you first.::Brantley Foster: Wait a minute, that's ridiculous! He's a person, I'm a person. I can't say hello to him?::Fred Melrose: He's not a person, he's a suit! You're mailroom. No consorting.
Vera Prescott: [into phone] This is the third weekend in a row he's found an excuse not to come to the country... No, I don't know, but knowing him it's probably some teenage airhead from the steno pool. Hmph. The last one I caught him with was so dumb, she thought "dictation" was some kind of S&M; trip.
Howard Prescott: What you are doing in here?::Vera Prescott: [half naked] Feeling romantic...::Howard Prescott: Oh. What's for dinner?::Vera Prescott: Ohh, Howard! You really know how to sweep a girl back onto her feet.
[at Brantley's apartment]::Brantley Foster: Oh, God. What are you doing here?::Vera Prescott: Brantley, darling, I heard you calling me telepathically - I'm VERY psychic - so of COURSE I rushed right over.::Brantley Foster: I would've used the phone...::Vera Prescott: Mental telepathy's much more reliable.
Brantley Foster: We have a problem.::Vera Prescott: What?::Brantley Foster: It's your husband: he's my boss.::Vera Prescott: O-oh, him. We won't tell him. Besides, Howard's working late tonight - on whom, I have no idea.
Christy Wills: You want me to spy on him?::Howard Prescott: No, I don't want you to spy on him. I want you to get to be friends with him, and then rifle through his papers and tell me what you find.
The most sensational kidnapping case of our time!
Plot
Jennifer Nelson and Bruce Templeton meet when Bruce reels in her mermaid suit leaving Jennifer bottomless in the waters of Catalina Island. She later discovers that Bruce is the big boss at her work (a research lab). Bruce hires Jennifer to be his biographer - only to try and win her affections. However, there's a problem. Bruce's friend General Wallace Bleeker believes that Jennifer is a Russian spy, and he has her placed under surveillance. Then, when Jennifer catches on...Watch Out!
Keywords: boat, catalina-island, female-protagonist, glass-bottom-boat, ham-radio, mermaid, reference-to-mata-hari, reference-to-napoleon-solo, reference-to-open-sesame-incantation, robot
The spy who came out of the water.
Is this the girl next door?
Donna: Widow! That's like catnip.::Jennifer Nelson: Well, not for that cat!
Edgar Hill: I want to talk to you a minute. Those phone calls, there is no question about it. She's an agent, operating for the...::Bruce Templeton: She's no more an agent than you are! And if you're the best the CIA can come up with, this country is in big trouble!::Edgar Hill: Now look here! We'll have to detain her.::Bruce Templeton: Mrs Nelson can leave here whenever she wishes!::Edgar Hill: What's that noise?::Bruce Templeton: What? Oh, well I locked her in the closet.
Jennifer Nelson: Hey! What in heavens name do you think you're doing?::Bruce Templeton: You talkin' to me?::Jennifer Nelson: Yes I'm talking to you! That's my suit on your line!::Bruce Templeton: Oh I'm sorry... that's a funny looking suit.::Jennifer Nelson: It's my mermaid tail. and would you please throw it back?::Bruce Templeton: Well it's kind of difficult. it's all tangled. Why don't you come aboard, and I'll untangle it for you::Jennifer Nelson: Well THAT's a little difficult too, since I'm BOTTOMLESS!
Zack Malloy: You wouldn't hit a coward, would you?
Jennifer Nelson: Donna, may I borrow a dime please? I have to call my dog.
Bruce Templeton: Hey! You're the mermaid::Jennifer Nelson: Yes, I'm the mermaid::Bruce Templeton: Didn't recognize you with your clothes on.
Homer Cripps: She's a pretty strange acting female.
Jennifer Nelson: What are you drinking?::Anna Miller: Hootch. That's half Scotch, half Bourbon.::Jennifer Nelson: It sounds delicious.
Jennifer Nelson: Isn't it marvelous what a new dress will do, huh?
Jennifer Nelson: Aaah! Aaah! Who are you? Who is he?::Bruce Templeton: Zack Malloy, my partner. He drops in every now and then to molest women.
Plot
On a peaceful, pre-war winter in Czechoslovakia, the genial godfather, Jaroslav Haschek, of Vera Hascheck, presents the young girl with her first pair of ice skates. Soon, she astonished the warm-hearted people of her village with her skill, and she is acclaimed a marvel-on-ice. She wins the ice-skating championship of her country and is invited to skate at the fabulous Lake Placid Carnival in the United States. Vera receives an offer of a contract from eager showman, Carlton Webb, and his press agent Jiggers - but she turns them down. The financial backer for the two men is a wealthy, gabby, man-chasing woman called "Countess". Vera is a sensation at Lake Placid when she learns of Nazi Germany's move on Czechoslovakia, and she immediately attempts to abandon her career and rejoin her people. The trip can not be arranged and, alone in a strange country, she seeks an uncle, Carl Cermack, who has become a prosperous American citizen. The uncle welcomes her to his sumptuous Lond Island home, where he lives with his spoiled débutante daughters Irene and Susan. Vera learns that the two sisters are fighting it out over the same man, Paul Jordan, Cermack's junior partner, who isn't overwhelmed by either sister. Vera invites her uncle and cousins to join her at Lake Placid, where she is to appear in the dazzling New Year's Eve ballet. She is named "Queen" of the ballet, and Roy Rogers, a visiting movie-cowboy star is named "King." Paul begins to pick up interest in Vera, and she agrees to sign a contract with Webb, provided she can use an assumed name in his shows. Jiggers suggests they call her "Cinderella," because she has lost one of her famous skates. When Vera opens at Madison Square Garden, Jiggers plants the story that she refuses to appear until her skate is returned. Aware that Paul has kept her skate as a souvenir, Cermack telephones his partner in Texas. On the night of the opening, Webb and Jiggers are driven to desperation, since Vera has taken their publicity gag in earnest and refuses to go on unless her skate is returned. None of the phony "Prince Charmings" Jiggers has hired has the right skate, of course. The weary Vera doesn't even look at the last applicant - but the skate is hers. She stares down and recognizes her godfather, Jaroslav, who has been brought to American by her uncle. He explains that her skate was given to him by a young man. He beckons into the crowd and Paul emerges. Vera finds herself in the arms of her own Prince Charming.
Keywords: 1940s, actor-shares-first-name-with-character, b-movie, ballet, career, career-woman, carnival, champion, cinderella, competition
Glittering with gay musical scenes! Glistening with brilliant spectacles! Gleaming with romantic gaiety! (original poster)
Executive may refer to:
Michael Joseph Dudikoff II (born October 8, 1954) is an American actor who has been in numerous films, including the American Ninja series (1985–1990), Tron (1982), Bachelor Party (1984), Platoon Leader (1988), River of Death (1989), Soldier Boyz (1996), Ringmaster (1998), and The Silencer (1999), to name a few. He is in pre-production for Havana Heat, an action thriller.
Michael Joseph Dudikoff comes from a large family. His father was a Christian Orthodox from Russia, and served in the Army before marrying Dudikoff’s mother, a French-Canadian native from Quebec who was extremely talented on the piano. The couple moved to California in the mid-1970s and had five children. Dudikoff is the fourth of the group.
Dudikoff graduated from West Torrance High School and was studying child psychology at Harbor College, when he was discovered as a model. During this time, he also worked at a rehabilitation center for abused youth called Cedar House. He waited tables at Beachbum Burt’s in Redondo Beach, California to pay for his education.
Sylvia Ann Hewlett (born 1946) is an economist, consultant, lecturer, and expert on gender and workplace issues.
A Kennedy Scholar and graduate of Girton College, Cambridge, Hewlett earned her PhD degree in economics at the University of London.
Hewlett is the founding President of the Center for Work-Life Policy, a non-profit organization which seeks to develop policies that enhance work-life balance. She is also Director of the Gender and Public Policy Program at the School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University. In the 1980s, she was the first woman to head up the Economic Policy Council of the United Nations Association -- a think tank composed of 125 business and labor leaders. She is the author of several books (see Bibliography section). Her articles have appeared in the Harvard Business Review, the New York Times, the Financial Times, and the Harvard Business Review. She has taught at Cambridge, Columbia and Princeton Universities and held fellowships at the Institute for Public Policy Research in London and the Center for the Study of Values in Public Life at Harvard. She has appeared on 60 Minutes, The Today Show, Good Morning America, Newshour with Jim Lehrer, Charlie Rose, Newsnight with Aaron Brown, NBC Nightly News, Oprah, The View, All Things Considered, Talk of the Nation, On Point, and has been lampooned on Saturday Night Live.
Jim Master (born March 16, 1962) was a basketball player who played collegiately for the Kentucky Wildcats.
Master’s family moved to the Fort Wayne, Indiana community during his high school years, and he attended Paul Harding High School as a junior and senior and played for the Hawks.
During his junior year, Master led the Hawks to the school’s first ever Indiana state tournament wins at the sectional and regional levels.
As a senior, Master set SAC records for most points scored in a season. His outstanding year was acknowledged when he was awarded the 1980 Indiana Mr. Basketball award.
His high school coach, Harlan Frick, is on record saying he believes Master is the finest shooting guard ever to play in Fort Wayne.
Master attended the University of Kentucky on a basketball scholarship. He was part of the 1980 recruiting class that included Melvin Turpin, Bret Bearup, and Dickie Beal. This group was considered by PrepSports.com as the best recruiting class in the nation. It was also rated by one as the eighth-best Wildcat recruiting class of all time. Master was seen as the best outside shooter in the country. Besides Kentucky, Master was reported as being recruited by Notre Dame
He spoke up now for a little while.
Couldn't let his life slip away.
He spoke up now just for a little while
but couldn't find words to say.
He spoke up now with an open file
to put his plan in place.
He spoke up now and all the while,
the colour drained from his face.
Too tired to sleep at night,
working the day,
can't find an appetite, no time to play.
He spoke up now, threw his pencil down,
wiped a tear from his cheek.
He spoke up now,
all his colleagues frowned.
He wasn't made for the working week.
Too tired to sleep at night,
working the day,
can't find an appetite, no time to play.
He spoke up now
as the walls came in
and stared defeat in the eye.
He spoke up now
with an evil grin
and bid his job goodbye.
Too tired to sleep at night,
working the day,
can't find an appetite, no time to play.
(He spoke up now)
Too tired to sleep at night,
working the day.
(He spoke up now)
Can't find the appetite, no time to play.
He spoke up now
as the walls came in
and stared defeat in the eye.
He spoke up now
with an evil grin