Plot
Andy, a successful marketing guy quits his job, because he feels disconnected with the values about work he learned from his father. He gets a new job at a top notch research facility, where he quickly makes a powerful enemy who makes him volunteer for a nearly impossible project: The $99 Personal Computer. He recruits the only available guys at the lab, three sociopaths. Together they really compile a revolutionary PC for $99, but then they become the victims of a venture capitalist and Andy's old foe from the research lab. Can he and his new friends find a way to overcome the problems?
Keywords: based-on-novel, company, computer, dollar-sign-in-title, friendship, hologram, money-in-title, mooning, nerd, number-in-title
When things get odd... The odd get even
Alisa: Simplify, Clarify, and Economize
Andy: This place is amazing. It's like Christmas morning and Disneyland and sex all wrapped up in one.
Andy: Darrel just smiled!::Darrell: I did not! It was a facial spasm!
[the guys are meeting at a restaurant after their design was "stolen"]::Andy: Guess what guys? I had a VISION!::Tiny: [skeptically] That involved third-world school kids?
Salman: Eat flaming death, Francis.
Tiny: Sit down and shut up, Francis
Andy: Hi! I'm Casper - the friendly hologram. I think it was God who said, "Let there be light."::[computer prototypes all start at once]::Francis: Holy shit!
Darrell: Darrell doesn't cry. Darrell's eyes sweat.
Claudia Goss: Francis you are so totally in the toilet. Bye!
Darrell: Darrell's been inoculated.
Plot
In 1943, a young painter, Françoise Gilot (1921- ) meets Pablo Picasso (1881-1973), already the most celebrated artist in the world. For the next ten years, she is his mistress, bears him two children, is his muse, and paints within his element. She also learns slowly about the other women who have been or still are in his life: Dora Maar, Marie- Thérèse (whose daughter is Picasso's), and Olga Koklowa, each of whom seems deeply scarred by their life with Picasso. Gilot's response is to bring each into her relationship with Picasso. How does one survive Picasso? She keeps painting, and she keeps her good humor and her independence. When the time comes, she has the strength to leave.
Keywords: 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, accident, anti-hero, artist, automobile, baby, based-on-book, beach
Only his passion for women could rival his passion for painting.
Dora Maar: You may be a great painter, but you are morally corrupt. You've contaminated the whole world.
Pablo Picasso: You are in the labyrinth of the Minotaur. You should know that the Minotaur consumes at least two maidens a day.
Pablo Picasso: I really like intelligent women. Sometimes, of course, I like stupid ones too.
Pablo Picasso: I love wild cats. They are always pregnant because they think of nothing but love.
Pablo Picasso: I make a lot of mistakes, but so does God.
Olga: He's useless. Nothing but drink and girls. Just like his father.::Picasso: I don't drink.
Dora Maar: Who are your friends?::Pierre: Francoise and Genevieve. They're painters.::Dora Maar: What do they paint, besides their finger nails?
Dora Maar: Perhaps she thinks you'll immortalize her. Don't raise her hopes, Picassos may prove to be no more immortal than the skeleton of some extinct bird of prey.
Dora Maar: It's true, I do not have a child. But I think he finds me equally, if not more amusing without one.
Pablo Picasso: You've loved women even more than I have, but you haven't hated them at all.::Henri Matisse: I leave that to you.
Plot
Boisterous nightclub entertainer Buzzy Bellew was the witness to a murder committed by gangster Ten Grand Jackson. One night, two of Jackson's thugs kill Buzzy and dump his body in the lake at Prospect Park in Brooklyn. Buzzy comes back as a ghost and summons his bookworm twin, Edwin Dingle, to Prospect Park so that he can help the police nail Jackson.
Keywords: brooklyn-new-york-city, comedian, dance, dual-role, gangster, ghost, librarian, murder, new-york, new-york-city
It;s Gala-Gala with Girls, Gaiety and that Goldwyn Glamour! (original poster)
[repeated line]::Edwin Dingle: Potato salad!
Edwin: I don't want to go to Brooklyn. You can't make me. I don't *want* to go to Brooklyn.::Bus Driver: None of us want to, bud, but we all gotta go sooner or later.
Edwin: Do you remember you once told me you wouldn't be found dead in Brooklyn?::Buzzy's Ghost: Yeah, I remember. That was the only way they could get me here.
Edwin: I'd like a pint of Prospect Park!
[last lines]::Edwin Dingle: In fact, I don't think I'm ever going to see Buster again.::[Edwin hears the spooky Buster music and gasps]::Edwin Dingle: [angrily] Buster!::Buzzy's Ghost: [popping out of a box] I'm a little devil, ain't I?
Edwin Dingle: I enjoy it here very much ... uh, I love the smell of leather bindings.
Schmidt: He's talking to a salami. He thinks it's a fan dancer.
Trunk or torso is an anatomical term for the central part of the many animal bodies (including that of the human) from which extend the neck and limbs. The trunk includes the thorax and abdomen.
Most critical organs are housed within the trunk. In the upper chest, the heart and lungs are protected by the rib cage, and the abdomen contains the majority of organs responsible for digestion: the liver, which respectively produces bile necessary for digestion; the large and small intestines, which extract nutrients from food; the anus, from which fecal wastes are excreted; the rectum, which stores feces; the gallbladder, which stores and concentrates bile and produces chyme; the ureters, which passes urine to the bladder; the bladder, which stores urine; and the urethra, which excretes urine and passes sperm through the seminal vesicles. Finally, the pelvic region houses both the male and female reproductive organs.
The trunk also harbours many of the main groups of muscles in the body, including the:
Richard Francis Cottingham is a serial killer from New Jersey operating in New York between 1967 and 1980. He was nicknamed 'the torso killer', due to his habit of dismembering his victims, usually leaving nothing but a torso behind. In one case, he dismembered two prostitutes in a motel room, taking the hands and heads with him before setting the room on fire. He was eventually convicted of murder in 1981 after being caught fleeing an attempted murder. Several books have been written about him including The Torso Killer and "The Prostitute Murders" (ISBN 1-55817-518-0) both written by Rod Leith, a newspaper writer and local historian who had covered Cottingham's case from the beginning. Officially Cottingham killed six people but he claims between 85 and 100 murders.
[musick & lyrixxx - Matt Harvey, 1995]
Blood is spilled, bones are cracked, Fettered limbs are cruelly hacked,
Relentless brutal maniac, Violent death, gore attack... Torso... Choke on
guts, final breath, Now awaiting your morbid death, No more hope for life is