Subscribe to the Palace Cinemas weekly session times email and have every film in your inbox. Every Wednesday afternoon you will receive our confirmed session times. Jonathan Francis "Jon" Gries (born June 17, 1957) is an American actor, writer and director. He is also credited under the names Jon Francis and Jonathan Gries. What Was the Name of That Movie? It won't find that film if your post gets hidden. Basically, Whirlpool is a family- friendly site so don't offend, even in the context of describing a scene from a movie: it's not on and it won't be tolerated. ![]() ![]() Joel David Rifkin (born January 20, 1959) is an American serial killer convicted of the murder of 9 women (although it is believed he killed as many as. Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew, later called simply Rehab with Dr. Drew, is a reality television show that aired on the cable network VH1 in which many of the episodes. TLC Book Tours is a virtual book tour site. Virtual book tours are a promotional tool for authors to connect with readers via well-read book blogs and specialty. ![]() ![]() We can't edit your posts (we don't do that on Whirlpool), but we will hide them (they can be unhidden once the content that broke a rule is removed). Whilst some scenes which are shocking might be the easiest to remember and describe, that doesn't mean they'll be OK to describe. Use some common sense before posting. Some helpful internal links: How to post – see here (crash course)How to quote – see here. Formatting on Whirlpool – Whirlcode. Now the good stuff. There are some ridiculously clever and knowledgeable folks lurking in this thread – and I mean ridiculous in the same way baby turtles are ridiculously cute. ![]() However, to paraphrase Jerry, you have to help them help you. Try not to post a . Obviously, if you can remember actors, events, genre etc include that. DON'T tell us how old you were when you saw it. DON'T tell us where you were when you saw it. DON'T tell us you were with your grandmother when you saw it.
DON'T tell us when you think you saw it. DO tell us (roughly) what year you think the film was released. DO tell us what era you think the story was set. DO tell us where you think the story was set. The long standing contributors to this thread like a challenge (within reason) and consider your questions to be a challenge, so the more information the merrier. If they help you, please thank them. No big stars I don't think . She's pretty bored because she lives with her mother. She hangs out by this lake. They live in this hotel with one or two staff, it's quite isolated. It's summer, it's hot, lot's of orange and yellow I think. I think the girl was blonde, wore quite loose fitting short dresses I seem to remember. The mother arranges for some extra help so she hires this guy who is older. Things get a bit steamy between the daughter,mother and guy I think. A few tensions arise and I think the girl is tired of living with her mother. Then I seem to remember the girl moving out and going to the city or something in this apartment block. That's where my memory of the plot fades out. Please help, I'd like to hunt it down, but completely forgot the name of it. I'm looking for 2 movies: first– The scene I remember shows a Civil War officer, possibly in the fog, shooting or stabbing wounded soldiers after a battle, while humming, whistling, or singing – I think the song was rock of ages. It may have been an opening scene, setting background for the movie. Second – Looking for an American War movie – I saw it on TV in the early 7. Could be black& white – we may not of had a color TV at the time. Could either be WWII with Japanese as the bad guys or Korean War. I only remember a few scenes. One – the squad was dug in on top of a hill or ridge and being overrun. They dug holes and covered them – hiding inside. Two – they were going around a hill on a road and there was a camoflaged tank that they had to take out. Three – at the end the survivors were walking down the road towards their own lines or back to base. Re- posting.. Anyone? Hi again. There's this one movie I watched in the 8. American is in a NY taxi, and the taxi driver mentions that he's an . I watched this movie in Japan (in English with Japanese subtitles) with a Japanese friend. I was the only one in the movie theater that laughed at this scene (I was asked later on why I laughed at that particular scene after the movie was over). I was so sure it was Crocodile Dundee, but watching the movie years later, that particular scene is not in it. I KNOW I didn't make it up.. Thanks. USER DL not sure it has been a long time since I have seen them but it sounds like it could have been . I hope some one can give me a clue what the name is of this movie. I've copied it from the other thread: Another movie that i've been looking voor a very long time is a fairytale which i think is from the 7. The story is about a princess who only marries if her suitor knows the answer to her riddle. If he doesn't know he'll be turned to stone. There was a scene which they showed the previous suitors of the princess as statues in the garden. I remember vaguely that there was one suitor, (a prince maybe) who knew the answer and the face of the princess turns pale or something before returning to nomal when he indeed gives the right answer. Like a fairytale it all ends well. It might not even be an original English movie maybe dubbed even because the sound wasn't much in sync with the picture. I've posted this on another site some time ago and someone pointed out that it has similarities with the opera Princess Turandot and/or 1. Arabian nights. Though searching on IMDB has not brought me closer to an answer. Maybe the movie is loosely based on the abovementioned sources because as i can remember it, it was not a scene for scene adaptation from the book/opera to the screen. And i like to stress that it has no singing. So it's no musical, no opera on stage that has been filmed for TV. And as far as i'm concerned is not part of a tvseries (for example Shelly Duvall's Fairytale theatre). I hope someone can help me with this. Hi everybody, I had a look at Google and cant find the movie that I trying to remember its name. I watch this movie when child, I am 3. I barely remenber the full history but what I can remember is a chase of 2 or 3 children (siblings? They travel arround the country and every time the murder is closed and trying to get the children. I do not remember the exact motivation of the chase but I think it is because the children have testemoned a crime. Thanks for any help. Hi guys another one.. It is a old comedy where a strange (looking like Indian) was wrongly inveted to a posh party in a huge mansion (in USA? After that a big pool party take place instead the posh one. Thanks for any help. It is a old comedy where a strange (looking like Indian) was wrongly inveted to a posh party in a huge mansion (in USA? After that a big pool party take place instead the posh one. Pretty sure it's . From what I remember, an American girl moves to this house that I believe is her step father's or something. She starts seeing things and I think her little brother is effected. Comes to find out that the grandfather was some kind of Dr that did experiments on kids. It's not a recent movies, as in the last 5 yrs or so. It's driving me nuts not remembering the name. Talaia writes.. Pretty sure it's ? Well, it is a bit of a tragic movie. It takes place in the early to mid 9. USA, probably the east end cities like New York or Chicago. The movie took place in what looked like late summer, and fall, seeming to get colder to the end. The protagonist is a young blonde woman, late 2. This blonde lady goes to a movie theatre alone and there a strange man (about her age) begins to touch her sexually, which she allows, to the point where he gives her oral sex. After the movie this man tries to speak to her, to which she dismisses these further advances. She seems to just go with the moment, and is a bit impassive though friendly and naive. There is a scene where she is in a cafe and tries to get a meal on tab, but the clerk (a man), a bit meanly, tells her she has no credit. The blonde lady encounters an old black fellow on a park bench, and he tells her how pretty she is, and says he wishes he was young again, which inwardly flatters her a bit it seems. She begins to lose weight and get thin, apparently, and she starts to wear this white headscarf over her head. The movie ends with this lady trying to see if she can spot the old black fellow on the park bench, but he is no longer there. The movie closes with her on this bench, gaunt and cold, and one may presume the lass dies. Unanswered from part 3, so I'll post it here: So I watched part of this movie on a Qantas flight between London, England and Sydney, Australia in either December 2. January 2. 00. 3 or December 2. January 2. 00. 5. Early on in the film, it may have even been the first scene of the film, a girl and her boyfriend are getting it on in the family pool, when they are caught by her mother. I can't remember any of the actors or actresses in it, but I'm pretty sure it's set in the USA, possibly in California. Thanks for the help. FLIGHT OF THE DOVES. I remember wanting to see it when I was a kid because it had Jack Wild in it (who was in HR Pufnstuf)Exactely!!! Thank you Lesco! This forum rocks! Thanks. I believe it may have been, . It starred, Susan Sarandon and Goldie Hawn. Hello everyone,I really need help remembering what this film is called. I watched it I think somewhere in the 2. I hope these are helpful. The information: well basically it's a horror film I think, and in obe of the scenes a women who rips out a guys heart, the scene looks like they were in a cave of some sort I think which was filled with a lot of treasures. Before he went in the cave, he came into a room filled with women, but having what I ! I watched it on tv, I think it was only a tv film, since it looked quite old. Thank you guys for your help,Will. Hello, i'm new here because i couldn't find movies title anywhere. I watched it couple of years ago and don't remember it so well. Can't remember actors, director, but it could be released in 9. It's not very new movie i guess. From movie i remember scenes where friends went to the party together. And in middle of the party one of the friends overdosed i guess, and died. Also afterwards they were going away from town, like runaway, because this kid took off from his home. They stopped at hotel and there they slept together. But after that the girl got back home. At the end of movie as i can remember the guy locked in the bathroom at this girls house, and i'm not sure, but i remember that he stabbed himself with scisscors. That is all that i remember from this movie, and i want to watch it again. Could you help me? Dying To Be Free - The Huffington Post. The last image we have of Patrick Cagey is of his first moments as a free man. He has just walked out of a 3. Georgetown, Kentucky, dressed in gym clothes and carrying a Nike duffel bag. The moment reminds his father of Patrick’s graduation from college, and he takes a picture of his son with his cell phone. His face bright, he sticks his tongue out in embarrassment. Four days later, he will be dead from a heroin overdose. Patrick was recuperating from surgery for a knee injury suffered during his sophomore wrestling season.******1. Patrick flying off the high dive in Lexington, Kentucky.******1. Patrick with his father, Jim, on their front porch.******1. Patrick’s mother, Anne, holding him. Photographs courtesy of Anne Roberts and Jim Cagey. That day, in August 2. Patrick got in the car and put the duffel bag on a seat. Inside was a talisman he’d been given by the treatment facility: a hardcover fourth edition of the Alcoholics Anonymous bible known as “The Big Book.” Patrick had tagged some variation of his name or initials on the book’s surfaces with a ballpoint pen, and its pages were full of highlighting and bristling with Post- its. Patrick’s father, Jim, took his usual seat in the big red chair, and Patrick’s mother, Anne Roberts, sat on the couch. Patrick took the footrest between them, sitting with his hands on his knees. Was he ready to be home? Did he have a plan to get a sponsor? Maybe he should start looking for a job or apply to graduate school? But they decided that he should be home now. He would attend Narcotics Anonymous meetings, he would obtain a sponsor — a fellow recovering addict to turn to during low moments — and life would go on. As they talked, though, a new reality quickly set in. Their son’s addiction was worse than they had thought. It wasn’t just pain pills, Patrick told them. He’d lost a year to the drug, along with a girlfriend he adored and a job caring for victims of traumatic brain injury — a job that made him feel that he was doing something worthwhile with his life. He didn’t want to be a heroin addict. Anne was in nursing and health care administration. Before Patrick was born, she had even helped run a methadone clinic treating heroin addicts and later had worked in substance abuse and psychiatric wards for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Jim and Anne knew how to be steady in a crisis. So many of her clients had done well: the smartly attired stockbroker who came in every day, the man who drove a Pepsi truck making deliveries all over the state, the schoolteacher who taught full time. She was also familiar with a newer maintenance medication on the market sold under the brand name Suboxone. Like methadone, Suboxone blocks both the effects of heroin withdrawal and an addict’s craving and, if used properly, does it without causing intoxication. Unlike methadone, it can be prescribed by a certified family physician and taken at home, meaning a recovering addict can lead a normal life, without a daily early- morning commute to a clinic. The medical establishment had come to view Suboxone as the best hope for addicts like Patrick. Even at clinics that offer the medication, the upfront costs and budget limitations render it out of reach for the vast majority who come through their doors. But Patrick had insurance, and Anne, with her treatment background, thought she could find a prescribing doctor. We can put you on methadone or we can get you Suboxone. There are other things that you can do besides the 1. Patrick knew firsthand about Suboxone’s potential. He had tried it on the black market to stave off sickness when he couldn’t get heroin — what law enforcement calls diversion. But Patrick had just left a facility that pushed other solutions. He had gotten a crash course on the tenets of 1. Staff at the center expected addicts to reach a sort of divine moment but gave them few days and few tools to get there. And the role of the therapist he was assigned seemed limited to reminding him of the rules he was expected to follow. Still, by the second week, he appeared to take responsibility for his addiction. When they could reach the facility’s staff, his parents were assured of their son’s steady progress. Patrick was willing to try sobriety one meeting at a time. I want to try this first.”. Patrick made for a natural 1. The rituals of self- discipline were nothing new. He’d kept a journal since the 8th grade documenting his daily meals and workout routines. As a teenager, he’d woken up to the words of legendary coaches he’d copied from books and taped to his bedroom walls — John Wooden on preparation, Vince Lombardi on sacrifice and Dan Gable on goals. He had been a dominant wrestler in high school and a competitive bodybuilder in his early 2. At his training peak, he measured and recorded his water intake down to the ounce. He made stickers with the words “STATE CHAMP” written on them in black marker and put them all over the house. But multiple knee injuries — and knee surgeries — ended those dreams. Around the time he graduated from the University of Kentucky, the knee pain returned, and he developed an addiction to pain medications. He needed a Percocet just to get out the door. After a statewide and federal crackdown on pain pills made them too expensive, he switched to heroin. He shot up alone in the privacy of his condo — neither his best friend nor his girlfriend at the time ever saw him with a needle. His habit developed to the point at which he was shooting up a half- gram of heroin a day. He woke up the next morning and told his mother of the relief he felt at not having to worry about scoring drugs. He sounded astonished and grateful. The next morning, he told her the same thing. Please include your phone number. Anne had stocked the fridge with Patrick’s favorite mini cinnamon rolls and made up his bedroom before he came home. Although she had long ago taken down most of his “STATE CHAMP” stickers, she had left one up on the frame of his bedroom door. He was an only child and they were close. Now they had to be closer. He looked for construction jobs, and he thought about enrolling in graduate school for physical therapy. He visited a troubled childhood friend who had become a shut- in, just to keep him company. He made plans to get back in the gym with his best friend, and he apologized to his former girlfriend, hoping for a second chance. You keep talking this way, I’ll marry you tomorrow.’” Patrick, she added, “felt very victorious, almost.” Over meals, he quoted the Big Book from memory to his mother. Those women could be bad news, he confessed to his mother one afternoon in their kitchen. Let’s get out the NA schedule and find a different meeting, Anne offered. Patrick told her he’d already found a later one to attend. Anne was worried that her son hadn’t found a sponsor yet, so she called a friend in AA; he promised to help get Patrick a sponsor after the weekend, when he’d be back in town. Jim called doctors to see if they prescribed Suboxone. He had already put Patrick on a waiting list for a long- term 1. Lexington. He was told that a spot might open up in six months or so but there were no guarantees. He came home late, hours after his meeting ended. The next morning, while Anne was out jogging, Patrick left the house, telling his father that he’d be back later. He hadn’t returned by that evening. His parents’ calls went straight to voicemail; their texts went unanswered. Stay strong & take care.”. We need to hear from you — it’s getting late.”. After attending Sunday church service the following morning, Jim drove to Patrick’s condo. He spotted his son’s car in the lot, knocked on the condo’s door, and then let himself inside. He checked the bathroom. He had fallen back against the door.” On the kitchen counter there was a spoon, a cotton ball, a lighter and the cap to a syringe. They notified friends and relatives, wrote a eulogy for their newspaper, and made funeral arrangements. They held the memorial service on what would have been their son’s 2. At Recovery Works, Patrick’s former treatment facility, his name and photo were added to a memory wall in a common room — another fatal overdose in a system full of them. Staff turnover in the treatment industry meant that soon enough hardly anyone there would remember Patrick at all. In the months before Patrick’s death, Sydney Pangallo, 2. Recovery Works alumna, suffered a fatal overdose. Dan Kerwin, 2. 3, attended a Recovery Works program in the spring, and his sister found him dead of an overdose during the July 4th weekend. Tabatha Roland, 2. April — one week after graduating from Recovery Works. And in November, Ryan Poland, 2. He too was a Recovery Works graduate. The problem is not with heroin treatment at one facility in Kentucky over the span of a few months. The problem is with heroin treatment. Percocet, Oxy. Contin and Opana became commonplace wherever chronic pain met a chronic lack of access to quality health care, especially in Appalachia. Tom Frieden, director of the CDC. Heroin Use By Year. Between 2. 00. 2 and 2. Source: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration“We had a fourfold increase in deaths from opiates in a decade,” Frieden said. And more than 4. 00,0. Clinics that dispensed painkillers proliferated with only the loosest of safeguards, until a recent coordinated federal- state crackdown crushed many of the so- called “pill mills.” As the opioid pain meds became scarce, a cheaper opioid began to take over the market — heroin. Frieden said three quarters of heroin users started with pills. But we weren’t about to let these pill mills flourish in the name of worrying about something that hadn’t happened yet. The statistics are overwhelming. In a study released this past fall examining 2. CDC found that heroin deaths doubled between 2. The CDC reported recently that heroin- related overdose deaths jumped 3. In the past decade, Arizona’s heroin deaths rose by more than 9. New York City had 4.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
November 2017
Categories |