Cover Me may refer to:
Cover Me is the fourteenth studio album of German pop singer Nena, released in 2007. In it she covers her favourite songs, with the first CD devoted to German-language originals and the second to English-language originals. "Mach die Augen auf", "Ich werde dich lieben", and "Mein Weg ist mein Weg" were released as singles.
Original artist in brackets.
CD 1
Cover Me is a 1995 direct-to-video erotic thriller film starring Rick Rossovich, Courtney Taylor, Paul Sorvino, Stephen Nichols, Elliott Gould and Corbin Bernsen. It was produced in conjunction with the Orion Interactive CD-ROM game Blue Heat: The Case of the Cover Girl Murders. The plot involves a serial killer preying on the models of a Los Angeles adult magazine and Holly Jacobson (Taylor) a former policewoman, must stop him by disguising herself as a nude model in order to lure him out.
A witness is someone who has firsthand knowledge about a crime or dramatic event.
Witness may also refer to:
The Witness (Hungarian: A tanú, also known as Without A Trace), is a 1969 Hungarian satire film, directed by Péter Bacsó. The film was created in a tense political climate at a time when talking about the early 1950s and the 1956 Revolution was still taboo. Although it was financed and allowed to be made by the communist authorities, it was subsequently banned from release. As a result of its screening in foreign countries, the communist authorities eventually relented and allowed it to be released in Hungary. It was screened at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival in the Un Certain Regard section. A sequel was made in 1994 named "Megint tanú" (English: Witness Again).
The film features József Pelikán as a single father who previously participated in the WW2 communist movement of Hungary, but is now working at a dike. He meets an old friend from the underground communist movement, Zoltán Dániel, now a government official who fishes at the Danube, near the dike. Dániel falls in the river, and Pelikán rescues him and invites him to his home. The ÁVH receive a "serious anonymous report" stating Pelikán committed an illegal act of slaughtering a pig for food. Dániel tries to save him, but accidentally opens a hidden door to the basement, where all the pork had been hidden. Pelikán is taken to prison and later released, due to the "will of the higher command". Comrade Virág gives various assignments to Pelikán such as being the CEO of a swimming pool, an amusement park, and an orange-research facility; all to cause Pelikán to be the witness in a show trial against Zoltán Dániel. Before the trial they present Pelikán with testimony he must memorize, but Pelikán decides to tell the truth. He is thrown back in prison as a reprisal. While awaiting hanging, the political climate changes by reason of Stalin's death and he is released and meets Comrade Virág who has lost all his former power and influence.
The Witness is a short film (19 minutes) directed by Chris Gerolmo, starring Gary Sinise and Elijah Wood.
Set in a Nazi concentration camp, The Witness shows a series of repeating set of psychological actions.
Gary Sinise plays a guard, whose daily routine is to corral Jewish prisoners through a tunnel and into the gas chamber. Each day, as he performs this task, the guard is watched by a Jewish little boy (Elijah Wood), whose piercing stare unsettles him. He tries to shake this child's steady glare, day after day, until one night he steals into the barracks, finds the child and smothers him. Instead of being free of the accusing stare, another child has replaced the one he killed.
The Witness was produced in 1992 in the United States and is in the German language.
The Witness at the Internet Movie Database
Through the witness
Relive repressed
Tremor
Disturbance
The vitality of fear
Open and afraid
Confront sickness and misery
Look deeply into disaster
Fight the sense of self
Everything lets go
Into everything else
Reaction slows reflex
Impulse absorbed
Open
Unaffected existence
Descend deeply
Dissolve the unreal
Look deeply into disaster