Every bar has a story and this one's the bomb!
Plot
After sneaking out of her father's birthday dinner, Esther Wang wanders the streets of Brooklyn in search of one good party. But a solo journey to find the celebration with her true family only leads to a dead cell phone, and a locked warehouse door with the raging party on the other side. Determined, she knocks all night until suddenly it's morning and she's asleep on the sidewalk. In the harsh light of day, she's forced to face her identity when a homeless outreach worker, her only ride home, needs Esther to translate for a struggling Chinese woman who belongs to the streets.
Clark Cant. Mild mannered Christian. During the week he's just like everybody else.
Behind the mask.
Plot
Someone is killing young women in the park. Police suspect it's related to the smut picture racket, and begin leaning on Gloria Henderson, a smut front woman for the "mob." Her right arm man continues to procure young women with stars in their eyes to submit to their heinous celluloid activities, and if the women try blackmail, they call in a specialist to take care of the problem.
Keywords: actress, cult-film, exploitation, female-nudity, fight, independent-film, model, morality, murder, naivety
A compulsive killer strikes terror...in every woman's heart
Mistress to his compulsive madness...His touch meant death
Frank...Daring...Shocking Realism
Sadistic Urge of a Compulsive Madman!
Beauty Contest Winner Trapped by a Vicious Art Photo Racket!
Branded for Torture...A SMUT PICTURE!
The Sinister Urge of a Psycho Killer
Psycho Killer Strikes Terror!
Startling...Terrifying Realism
Sensational! Bold! Startling!
[Mary sees Ed Wood posters on pornographer Johnny Ride's office wall.]::Mary Smith: Are gangster and horror films all you produce?::Johnny Ryde: Those are made by friends of mine. I think you'll find my type of picture entirely different.
Connie Talbot (born 20 November 2000) is an English child singer from Streetly, Aldridge. She rose to fame in 2007 when she reached the final of the first series of Britain's Got Talent, where she was runner-up to Paul Potts. Talbot was supposed to sign with Sony BMG but the label pulled out of the deal due to her age.
Talbot signed with Rainbow Recording Company and released her debut album Over the Rainbow in the UK on 26 November 2007. The album was re-released 18 June 2008 with a new track listing, and the first single from the album, a cover of Bob Marley's "Three Little Birds", was released on 10 June.
Despite its negative critical reception, Over the Rainbow has sold over 250,000 copies worldwide and reached number one in three countries. Since the initial album release, Talbot has performed publicly and on television in Europe, the U.S. and across Asia, where her music had gained recognition through YouTube. Her second album, Connie Talbot's Christmas Album, was released on 24 November 2008; her third, Holiday Magic, was released in late 2009. While pursuing her musical career, Talbot attends school, and lives in Streetly with her family.
Simon Phillip Cowell (born 7 October 1959) is an English A&R executive, television producer, entrepreneur, and television personality. He is known in the United Kingdom and United States for his role as a talent judge on TV shows such as Pop Idol, The X Factor, Britain's Got Talent and American Idol. He is also the owner of the television production and music publishing house Syco.
As a judge, Cowell is known for his blunt and often controversial criticisms, insults and wisecracks about contestants and their abilities. He is also known for combining activities in both the television and music industries, having promoted singles and records for various artists, including television personalities. He was most recently featured on the fifth series of Britain's Got Talent and the first season of The X Factor USA.
In 2010, the British magazine New Statesman listed Cowell at number 41 in a list of "The World's 50 Most Influential Figures 2010".
Cowell was born in Lambeth, London and brought up in Elstree, Hertfordshire. His mother, Julie Brett (née Josie Dalglish), is a former ballet dancer and socialite, and his father, Eric Selig Phillip Cowell (1918–1999), was an estate agent developer and music industry executive. Cowell's father was from a mostly Jewish family, though he did not discuss his background with his children (Cowell's paternal grandmother had immigrated from Poland). Cowell's mother was from a Christian background, and is of part Scottish descent. He has one brother and three half-brothers and a half sister; younger brother Nicholas Cowell, half-brother John Cowell, half-brother Tony Cowell, half-brother Michael Cowell and half sister June Cowell.
John Roger Stephens (born December 28, 1978), better known by his stage name John Legend, is an American singer-songwriter and actor. He has won nine Grammy Awards, and in 2007, he received the special Starlight award from the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Prior to the release of his debut album, Stephens' career gained momentum through a series of successful collaborations with multiple established artists. Stephens added his voice to those of other artists, assisting in them reaching chart-topper hits. He lent his voice to Kanye West's All of the Lights, on Slum Village's "Selfish" and Dilated Peoples' "This Way". Other artists included Jay-Z's "Encore", and he sang backing vocals on Alicia Keys' 2003 song "You Don't Know My Name" and Fort Minor's "High Road." Stephens played piano on Lauryn Hill's "Everything Is Everything."
Stephens was born on December 28, 1978, in Springfield, Ohio. He is the son of Phyllis, a seamstress, and John Mills, a factory worker and former National Guardsman. Throughout his childhood, Stephens was homeschooled on and off by his mother. At the age of four, he began playing the piano and at the age of seven, he performed with his church choir. When he was ten, his parents divorced, causing his mother to suffer a breakdown. At the age of 12, Stephens attended North High School, from which he graduated four years later. He graduated salutatorian.
Idina Kim Menzel ( /ɪˈdiːnə mɛnˈzɛl/; born Mentzel on May 30, 1971) is an American actress, singer and songwriter.
She rose to prominence for her performance as Maureen Johnson in the Broadway musical Rent, a role which she reprised for the 2005 film adaptation. In 2004 she won the Tony Award for originating the role of Elphaba in the hugely successful Broadway blockbuster Wicked.
Menzel was born in Queens, New York. Her mother, Helene, is a therapist, and her father, Stuart Mentzel, worked as a pajama salesman. Her family is Jewish; her grandparents immigrated from Russia and elsewhere in Eastern Europe. Her family lived in East Brunswick, Somerset and Marlboro, New Jersey from when she was in kindergarten to third grade, but she considers herself raised in Syosset, New York, with her younger sister Cara. Idina changed her last name to Menzel to better reflect the pronunciation the Mentzel family had adopted in America. When Menzel was 15 years old, her parents divorced and she began working as a wedding and bar mitzvah singer, a job which she continued throughout her time at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. She earned a Bachelors of Fine Arts degree in Drama at NYU prior to being cast in Jonathan Larson's rock musical Rent. She was friends with actor Adam Pascal before they worked together in Rent.
Connie:
Pretty little baby,
Backup:
Yah, yah,
Connie:
Pretty little baby,
Backup:
Yah, yah,
Connie:
Pretty little baby,
You say that maybe,
You'll be thinkin' of me,
And try to love me,
Pretty little baby,
I'm hoping that you do-oo-oo-oo-oo-oo-oo!
You can ask the flowers,
I sit for hours,
Tellin' all the bluebirds,
The "bill and coo" birds,
Pretty little baby,
I'm so in love with you-oo-oo-oo-oo!
(chorus)
Now is just the time,
While both of us are young,
"Puppy love" must have it's day-ay-ay,
Don'tcha know it's much more fun to love,
While the heart is young and gay-ay-ay-ay-ay-ay!
Meet me at the car hop,
Or at the pop shop,
Meet me in the moonlight,
Or in the daylight,
Pretty little baby,
I'm so in love with you-oo-oo-oo-oo!
( instrumental bridge; repeat chorus)
(close and fade)
Pretty little baby,
I said, "Pretty little baby",