Amy is a 1997 Australian film written by David Parker and directed by Nadia Tass, starring Alana De Roma in the title role, Rachel Griffiths, Ben Mendelsohn, and Nick Barker.
The story developed from a concept inspired by the Man of La Mancha and the screenplay was developed by Tass' husband David Parker. The project that took eleven years to complete due to financial problems and a difficult search for the perfect "Amy".
Amy's (Alana De Roma) father, Will Enker (Nick Barker), was a popular rock musician accidentally electrocuted while performing on stage. The psychological trauma leaves Amy mute and deaf. So the 8-year-old is brought by her mother, Tanya (Rachel Griffiths), to Melbourne to diagnose the reasons for her continued silence. Amy befriends her neighbor, Robert(Ben Mendelsohn), and while social workers try desperately to get her to speak and go to school, she makes the choice to communicate again and begins to sing along to Robert's rock songs after three years of silence. Her mother works out her own emotional issues with the help of a therapist.
Plot
Hidden Agenda is about a legendary Miami, Florida Detective named Matthews (played by Hans Hernke) who gained his reputation by solving cases from his office, but when an aggressive serial killer threatens his city, he is forced to leave the confines of his precinct to find "The Room" and a helpless kidnapped victim. His world begins to unravel and crumble around him in this crime/thriller story that tests the very limits of the human psyche.
Plot
Tom, a young English man living in New York, is dumped by his girlfriend on the morning of Halloween. Amy, a young New Yorker, is dumped by her friends for another party instead of going to the Annual Halloween Parade. Alone, both Tom and Amy dressed as Skeletons find that in a city of 8 million people, you might just bump into the one you're looking for.
In a city of 8 million people, you might just bump into the one you're looking for.
Amy: I carved my pumpkin last night. It kind of ended up looking like my Uncle in a weird sort of way!::Zoe: Weird like, now you want to eat your Uncle's brains?::Amy: Yeah, yeah, something like that!
Plot
Like Father, Like Sun follows a young man, Ryan, as he is in a pivotal point in his life and must make personal decisions to grow up and move forward. With the recent passing of his father and his girlfriend, Amy, and him arriving at different crossroads of life, Ryan must go through a journey of self discovery and realize what he wants out of life.
Plot
A story of love and lies for four twenty-somethings looking to find themselves in New York City. A pair of best friends and a seemingly perfect couple meet at a local Irish pub tucked in the winding streets of the West Village. Through their chance meeting, the four bond and over time all of their relationships with one another morph into love, betrayal and heartbreak for all.
Keywords: apartment, bar, bisexual, breakup, brushing-teeth, cell-phone-camera, cellular-phone, college-student, coming-out, female-bonding
Bridget: We don't flirt, girls find us.
Molly: Okay, uh, look at modern literature. All of the greatest female characters were written by woman because no man could ever write from a female's perspective. Women have this compassionate chemistry that allows them to listen with an unbiased ear. All woman, even you.
Molly: Never have I been thrown up against a wall and kissed hard.::Bridget: Never have I ever been turned down.
Greg: Why'd you cheat on Chole?::Trip: Honestly? I didn't know she'd be home so early... I thought I had another day.
Bridget: Mhmm. Tuesday.::Molly: So you call them days of the week?::Bridget: No... Well, yes. But Trip started that::Molly: Wait, but there are that many?::Bridget: No... sometimes.::Molly: I've never just dated, per say.::Bridget: I wouldn't necessarily call it dating.::Molly: What would you call it?::Bridget: Fucking?
Bridget: Ugh, that's totally my thing!::Molly: What thing?::Bridget: Everyone has a thing that makes them attracted to someone else. Like, you straight girls are into holding doors and a hand on the small of your back.::Molly: Totally.::Bridget: That lip thing, that's... my thing.
Trip: Why do you think everyone is gay?::Bridget: I don't think everyone is gay.::Trip: Mmhmm.::Bridget: I don't think Chloe's gay.::Chloe: I have totally kissed a girl.::Bridget: Sweetheart, if I thought you were like a second gay, I'd be all up in it.::Chloe: Well now is your chance, Bridge. Wanna do me in the bathroom?::Bridget: Yes::Trip: Stop hitting on my girlfriend.::Bridget: Oh, I'm sorry. Are you allowed to do that? Didn't think so.::Trip: Asshole.::Bridget: Fucker.
Molly: Hey... Cute skirt!::Trip: I'm a four.
Bridget: I don't really know if that proves that I'm more sensitive then all guys.::Molly: Stop saying that. You listen with your whole body and you have this intense eye contact. No guy, not even the best guys, have that.::Bridget: But I don't really feel like that's a gender thing, I feel like that's a personal thing.::Molly: You're SO wrong. Okay, uh, look at modern literature. All of the greatest female characters were written by woman because no man could ever write from a female's perspective. Women have this compassionate chemistry that allows them to listen with an unbiased ear. All woman, even you.