Zara may refer to:
Plot
A genuine adventure about love from a six year old boy perspective, trying to understand how it works and how to win his girl. That she's a grown-up doesn't make it easier. We follow our curious charmer Adam when trying to get Zara to go on a date with him, through his dreams and fantasies, and on the new adventures they lead to. A film about love from the heart, made with lots of love by finicky young filmmakers.
Plot
A Woman's World looks into the lives of three female Islam converts. They talk about how they encountered Islam, why did they convert and how has it changed their lives for the better. They discuss fashion, shopping, hijab, dating in the Muslim way, the Koran, education, and family roles. One of the main themes that emerges is a sense of unity. The documentary coverage is continuously disrupted by a storyteller with provokingly red lips telling the tale of Cinderella while the events and values present in the story are connected to the modern Western world through appropriate visuals. The common misconceptions about Islam slowly fade away while the realization of the psychological restrictions the modern non-Islamic world sets to women creeps to the surface.
Plot
Five people are brought together by faith to become aware of their truths. August Wells, an undercover agent who dedicates his life to his job. He only has one wish in life and that is to find love and when he finds it he will do anything to hold to it. Fritz Hess, a mysterious man who is filled with hatred. He believes he is pure and seeks revenge on all those who are not like him. Bernard, a single father who prides himself on being the "good guy". He dedicates his life to his daughter but has doubts every step of the way. Lisa, a spy, she is lost and misguided. After falling in love, she tries desperately to find a fresh start. Zara, a self-proclaimed rapper who thinks he is destined for greatness. He will do anything for fame and money and no one can stand in his way. Their truths bring them together, denying them the opportunity to ever go back.
Plot
On a crowded subway, Skip McCoy picks the purse of Candy. Among his take, although he does not know it at the time, is a piece of top-secret microfilm that was being passed by Candy's consort, a Communist agent. Candy discovers the whereabouts of the film through Moe Williams, a police informer. She attempts to seduce McCoy to recover the film. She fails to get back the film and falls in love with him. The desperate agent exterminates Moe and savagely beats Candy. McCoy, now goaded into action, confronts the agent in a particularly brutal fight in a subway.
Keywords: 1950s, address-in-title, alley, anti-communism, anti-communist-zealotry, atomic-bomb, auto-mechanic, backache, bathrobe, beating
How the law took a chance on a B-girl... and won!
Skip McCoy: [after first kiss with Candy] Sometimes you look for oil, you hit a gusher.
Skip McCoy: I know you pinched me three times and got me convicted three times and made me a three time loser. And I know you took an oath to put me away for life. Well you're trying awful hard with all this patriotic eye-wash, but get this: I didn't grift that film and you can't prove I did! And if I said I did, you'd slap that fourth rap across my teeth no matter what promises you made!
Skip McCoy: So you're a Red, who cares? Your money's as good as anybody else's.
Skip McCoy: You boys are talking to the wrong corner. I'm just a guy keeping my hands in my own pockets.::FBI Agent Zara: If you refuse to cooperate you'll be as guilty as the traitors who gave Stalin the A-bomb.::Skip McCoy: Are you waving the flag at *me*?
Capt. Dan Tiger: You'll always be a two-bit cannon. And when they pick you up in the gutter dead, you're hand'll be in a drunk's pocket.
Skip McCoy: Pack up the pitch with the charge or drive me back to my shack.::Capt. Dan Tiger: I'll drive you back in a hearse if you don't get the kink out of your mouth!
Candy: You've been recommended as the best pickpocket stoolie in the business.::Moe Williams: What kind of talk is that, calling me a stoolie? I was brought up to report any injustice to the police authority. I call that being a solid citizen.::Candy: But you get paid for it.::Moe Williams: You gonna knock it?
Moe Williams: You got any Happy Money?::Candy: Happy Money?::Moe Williams: Yeah, money that's gonna make me happy.
Moe Williams: What's the matter with you? Playing footsie with the Commies!::Skip McCoy: You waving the flag, too?::Moe Williams: Listen, I knew you since you was a little kid. You was always a regular kind of crook. I never figured you for a louse.::Skip McCoy: Stop, you're breaking my heart.::Moe Williams: Even in our crummy line of business you gotta draw the line somewhere.
Moe Williams: I have to go on making a living so I can die. But even a fancy funeral ain't worth waiting for if I've gotta do business with crumbs like you.
When the wrold, turns around,
You will allways be there for me,
Thats why you love me,
I will do anything for you,
as you would do for me,