Norris or Noris may refer to:
Carlos Ray "Chuck" Norris (born March 10, 1940) is an American martial artist and actor. After serving in the United States Air Force, he began his rise to fame as a martial artist and has since founded his own school, Chun Kuk Do. As a result of his "tough guy" image, an Internet phenomenon began in 2005 known as Chuck Norris facts, ascribing various implausible or even impossible feats to Norris.
Norris appeared in a number of action films, such as Way of the Dragon in which he starred alongside Bruce Lee, and was The Cannon Group's leading star in the 1980s. He next played the starring role in the television series Walker, Texas Ranger from 1993 to 2001.
Norris is a devout Christian and politically conservative. He has written several books on Christianity and donated to a number of Republican candidates and causes. In 2007 and 2008, he campaigned for former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, who was running for the Republican nomination for President in 2008. In the 2012 election he endorsed former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich. Norris also writes a column for the conservative website WorldNetDaily.
Bruce Lee (born Lee Jun-fan; 27 November 1940 – 20 July 1973) was a Chinese AmericanHong Kong actor,martial arts instructor, philosopher, film director, film producer, screenwriter, and founder of the Jeet Kune Do martial arts movement. He is widely considered by many commentators, critics, media and other martial artists to be the most influential martial artist and pop culture icon of the 20th Century. He is often credited with changing the way Asians were presented in American films.
Lee was born in San Francisco to parents of Hong Kong heritage but was raised in Hong Kong until his late teens. Lee returned to the United States at the age of 18 to claim his U.S. citizenship and receive his higher education. It was during this time that he began teaching martial arts, which soon led to film and television roles.
His Hong Kong and Hollywood-produced films elevated the traditional Hong Kong martial arts film to a new level of popularity and acclaim, and sparked a major surge of interest in Chinese martial arts in the West in the 1970s. The direction and tone of his films changed and influenced martial arts and martial arts films in Hong Kong and the rest of the world, as well. He is noted for his roles in five feature-length films: Lo Wei's The Big Boss (1971) and Fist of Fury (1972); Way of the Dragon (1972), directed and written by Lee; Warner Brothers' Enter the Dragon (1973) and The Game of Death (1978), both directed by Robert Clouse.
Plot
Jebadiah lived on his land for many years. He worked the land, and kept it alive. Jebadiah also hated trespassers. When he died defending his right to remain on his land, he was buried there. That was a month ago. Now there are strangers on his land again, and they want to make his land their own. Jebadiah still hates trespassers.
Jebadiah didn't like trespassers when he was alive. He still doesn't!
The battle between good and evil ends tonight.
Sebastien: We're not going to live like this anymore!
Sebastien: To hell with this foreplay!
Plot
A brutal drive-by shooting of a Croatian woman who works at an abortion clinic sends two homicide detectives out onto the streets of one of the world's most culturally diverse cities. Their first suspect has ties to the pro-life movement. But a sudden turn of events, a fresh trail of clues and a suicide attempt by the victim's Serbian husband lead the detectives into the impenetrable world of Balkan politics and prejudices. As they hunt for the killer, they uncover an ethnic war between Croatians and Serbians amid the urban backdrop of downtown Toronto.
Plot
Fourth adaptation and first made for television of the classic Australian bushranger novel "Robbery Under Arms" by 'Rolf Boldrewood' (qv). Made by the South Australian Film Corporation during the mini-series boom of the 1980s and lensed in the Flinders Ranges, it stars 'Sam Neill' (qv) as the infamous Captain Starlight.
Keywords: 19th-century, adventurer, arms, australia, australian-western, based-on-book, based-on-novel, bushranger, costume-drama, countryside
At last a movie as big as the legend
Plot
Set in England, rather than California, the story follows Raymond Chandler's book fairly closely otherwise. Philip Marlowe is asked by the elderly (and near death) General Sternwood to investigate an attempt at blackmail on one of his daughters. He soon finds that the attempt is half hearted at best and seems to be more connected with the disappearance of the other daughter's husband, Rusty Regan. Rusty's wife, seems unconcerned with his disappearance, further complicating the mystery. Only General Sternwood seems concerned as mobsters and hired killers continue to appear in the path of the investigation.
Keywords: affair, based-on-novel, blackmail, bookstore, clerk, craziness, cynicism, degeneration, detective, ex-boyfriend
Some days business is good - and some days it's murder!
Meet Philip Marlowe, the toughest private eye whoever wore a trench coat, slapped a dame, and split his knuckles on a jawbone.
Philip Marlowe: What did it matter where you lay once you were dead? In a stagnant lake or in a marble tower on the top of a high hill? You were dead, you were sleeping the big sleep, you were not bothered by things like that. Oil and water were the same as wind and air to you. You just slept the big sleep, not caring about the nastiness of how you died or where you fell. Me, I was part of the nastiness now. Far more a part of it than Rusty Regan was. But the old man didn't have to be. He could lie quiet in his canopied bed, with his bloodless hands folded on the sheet, waiting. His heart was a brief, uncertain murmur. His thoughts were as gray as ashes. And in a little while he too, like Rusty Regan, would be sleeping the big sleep.
Philip Marlowe: So many guns lately; so few brains.
Philip Marlowe: [of Mrs. Regan] She'd make a jazzy weekend, but she'd be a bit wearing for a steady diet.
Charlotte Sternwood: [when Marlowe declines to blackmail her] Wha-? You don't want money?::Philip Marlowe: Oh sure. All I itch for is money. I'm so greedy that for fifty pounds a day plus expenses on the day I work, I risk my future, the hatred of the cops, of Eddie Mars and his pals, I dodge bullets and put up with slaps and say "Thank you very much. If you have any further trouble please call me: I'll just put my card here on the table." I do all that for a few pounds. And maybe just a little bit to protect what little pride a sick and broken old man has in his family, so that he can believe his blood is not poisoned. That his little girls - though they may be a trifle wild - are not perverts and killers.
Philip Marlowe: Such a lot of guns around town and so few brains!
Plot
A gunslinger attempts to hang up his hardware and help his younger brother raise cattle. The local attorney, whose brother the gunslinger shot in a fair fight, is determined to swindle the men out of their ranch by preventing a supply deal with the railroad, then using his bodyguard to bushwhack the younger brother.
Keywords: attempted-kidnapping, bank, banker, bar-fight, based-on-novel, bodyguard, brother-brother-relationship, bushwhack, cattleman, crooked-lawyer
Sheriff of Buckhorn: All right, Mitchell, your year's up.::Brock Mitchell: Didn't seem like more than ten!::Sheriff of Buckhorn: You're lucky it wasn't the rope.::Brock Mitchell: Looks like the citizens out there still have ideas.
Sheriff of Buckhorn: Remember, if you ever come through this town again, I might not be here, but they will be!
Sheriff Clay: I got word from the Sheriff of Buckhorn that you were headed this way. Also from every sheriff in every town you passed through from there to here.::Brock Mitchell: It was nice of them to look out for me.
Tracy Mitchell: You know how they are - old timers - trustin' the Good Book and not much else. Still play poker with two decks and three guns on the table.
Van Steeden: Half the people I know tell me tobacco's good for the nerves; half the people tell me it's bad. I think they're both right.
Chad Deasey: Let me lay it out for you. You killed my brother... before I'm done with you, you'll wish it were the other way around. I'm going to make you a mark for every trigger-happy punk. I'm going to push you off the land, out of town, into the saddle, onto the trail with nothing but your roll and gun. There won't be a town within a thousand miles where the sheriff won't be waiting for you; won't be a town within a thousand miles where you'll be able to rest your head.
Brock Mitchell: Clay's right - trouble grows around me like weeds. Everyone I touch... I shouldn't of come back. I'm leaving.::Tracy Mitchell: All right, you leave again, but not without me. You think I tried to keep the ranch goin' for myself? I don't want it without you; I don't want any part of that loneliness again. You hit the trail, I hit it with you. You live in the saddle - a saddle bum - I live it with you. You can't run away from it any more, Brock. I'm tired of holding the fort by myself.
Van Steeden: I think Tracy and I see even clearer than you what this thing means. It isn't just saving the land, it isn't just foreclosing on a piece of property - it's foreclosing on a man's life.::Brock Mitchell: It isn't easy to join the human race again once you've been drummed out, but we'll try.
Ginny Clay: Chad Deasey had your brother killed.::Brock Mitchell: I killed Deasey's brother and Trace.::Ginny Clay: No, Brock.::Brock Mitchell: The bullet that went through Deasey's body - my bullet - never stopped until in found Trace... and killed him.
Ginny Clay: My father is the law, but the law isn't always justice.
Plot
A dazed woman walks the streets of Los Angeles looking for a man named David. After collapsing in a diner, she's taken to the psychiatric ward of a nearby hospital. Flashbacks reveal her obsession for David as a result of borderline personality disorder which ultimately leads to murder.
Keywords: amnesia, asylum, auditory-hallucination, based-on-novel, boarding-school, borderline-personality-disorder, cigarette-girl, concert-hall, delusion, disapproving-daughter
Louise: "I love you" is such an inadequate way of saying I love you. It doesn't quite describe how much it hurts sometimes.
David Sutton: The mathematical chances of you killing me are very slim.
Louise: I can be very objectionable.
Carol Graham: I'm not late, am I?::David Sutton: No, I just came in early to make a few practice swings.
Carol Graham: How many have you had?::David Sutton: Oooh... easily!
David Sutton: My liver rushes in where angels fear to tread!
David Sutton: Tommy, you may take a short rest and then start mixing me another!
Carol Graham: Sometimes it's not your liver I'm worried about, it's your mind!
David Sutton: I seldom hit a woman Louise, but if you don't stop this I'll end up kicking babies!
Dr. Harvey Williard: This civilization is a worse disease than heart trouble or tuburculosis, and we can't escape it.
Involución by No RazaEs el tiempo
El remedio
Para los males
Que ya estas viendo,
La humanidad mientras más crece pierde poder,
Es el tiempo, el
Remedio.
Miro al cielo
Descubriendo
Que tu cerebro
Se esta
Pudriendo.
No hay mas
Que represión
Sabes muy bien tu misión.
Fluye
El ego
Que tienes dentro
Y tu avaricia
Ya decayendo
La humanidad
Mientras más crece pierde poder
Los que están al frente ya no van a
Responder
Es el tiempo, el remedio.
Esto es más premonición
Que el
Basta Ya by No RazaYa, Es hora de actuar
Basta, ya de jugar
Un sistema obsoleto no
Da nada que pensar.
Te diré lo de siempre
Que todo cambiará
Pues ya todo
Es falso
Todo será igual.
Ya llego la hora
Falta pelear
Mírame de
Frente
Yo se que aprenderás,
Multinacionales
Devastan por doquier
Acaban con las tierras
En busca de poder
Ya, para ya, de mentir, de
Jugar, piénsalo ya.
Para ya, de mentir de jugar, piénsalo ya!
Basta ya de
Mentir
Para ya de huir
Distracción no es ficción
Causando dolor
Ya no hay
Decisión.
Son los que poseen
Todo el poder
Mienten y blasfeman
Hacen perecer.
No hay que sentir rencor
Para reaccionar
Inconciencia y la razón
Te dirán como actuar.
Se acabará
Y no valdrá el
Perdón
Ya no habrá mas
Gente con compasión.
Sin la verdad
No hay
Compasión.
Ya, para ya, de mentir, de jugar, piénsalo ya.
Para ya, de
Joljol jakku dallimi nal ttarawayo heokheok hanchamdonganina dallyeo bwado
Dwi dora bomyeon geogi isseo nal johahanabwa
Wingwing kkulbeoldeuri nareul maemdorayo huljjeok ureobwado amu soyongeobtjyo
Naega kkot injul aneunga bwa aigu bukkeureowo
Heona naegeneun naegeneun ttaroitjyo
Naega kkeullineun kkeullineun saramitjyo
Yeoja yeojasarami jeongmal johayo yeppeun kkotboda joha
Chimaman dulleodo hogisim na. isesangeun namja ban yeojado ban
O eonjenga nae gaseume sarangi kok bakhyeoseo anppajindamyeon
Ttakkeumttakkeumhaedo geunyang apeunchae dullae
Ojik nan yeojasaram geudaemaneul gidaryeo
Pposong somsatangi aju matna boyeo ssingssing jajeongeodo jeongmal gatgo sipeo
Modu da nareul yuhokhaeyo naega mwo jikkeonga
Sasil naegeneun naegeneun ttaroitjyo
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Jakku kkeullineun kkeullineun saramitjyo
Yeoja yeojasarami jeongmal johayo yeppeun kkotboda joha
Chimaman dulleodo hogisimna. isesangeun namja ban yeojado ban
Ou eonjenga nae gaseume sarangi kok bakhyeoseo anppajindamyeon
Ttakkeumttakkeumhaedo geunyang apeunchae dullae ojik nan yeojasaram geudaemaneul gidaryeo
Yeojaneun mwol meongna gunggeumhae yeojaneun eodisalkka gunggeumhae
Nae ape jom natanajwo~
Meon hutnal eonjenga yeojasarami naege dagawa
Ppopporeul jjok haejumyeon naui du darineun hu deoldeoldeol
Nae maeumeun wolmidoui baiking aag~
Hoksina yeonaehandan somuni dongnebangnee peojimyeon changbakkeul barabwa