Façade (film)

Façade is a 2000 action/thriller movie.

The film contains strong sexuality and language.

Plot

A real estate developer (Eric Roberts) sells out his partner/buddy in order to clear the path for the construction of a hotel in the Malibu hills. However he slowly finds out that all the characters he's plotting with in order to build the hotel have recently escaped from a nearby insane asylum.

Cast

  • Eric Roberts as Colin Wentworth
  • Camilla Overbye Roos as Caroline Kelner
  • Angus Macfadyen as Frederic Colbert
  • Brad Garrett as Henry
  • Joe Viterelli as Max
  • Damian Chapa as Raul Belliard
  • Daniela Amavia as Natassia
  • Roger Guenveur Smith as Henson
  • Rain Phoenix as Terra
  • Dawn Eason as Chloe
  • Tom O'Brien as Bob Kelner
  • Paige Adams as Monique
  • Joseph Arsenault as Tom
  • Rick Cramer as Cop
  • Patricia Velásquez as Juanita
  • Eliane Chappuis as Kiko
  • Lee Arenberg as Gregory
  • Mark Ginther as Bouncer
  • Caitlin Dulany as Connie
  • John Toles-Bey as George
  • Tracey Walter as Jake
  • Elisabeth Harnois as Kate
  • Ellington Erin as Kyle
  • Georgienne Millen as Waitress
  • Façade (entertainment)

    Façade is a series of poems by Edith Sitwell, best known as part of Façade – An Entertainment in which the poems are recited over an instrumental accompaniment by William Walton. The poems and the music exist in several versions.

    Sitwell began to publish some of the Façade poems in 1918, in the literary magazine Wheels. In 1922 many of them were given an orchestral accompaniment by Walton, Sitwell's protégé. The "entertainment" was first performed in public in 1923, and achieved both fame and notoriety for its unconventional form. Walton arranged two suites of his music for full orchestra. When Frederick Ashton made a ballet of Façade in 1931, Sitwell did not wish her poems to be part of it, and the orchestral arrangements were used.

    After Sitwell's death, Walton published supplementary versions of Façade for speaker and small ensemble using numbers dropped between the premiere and the publication of the full score in 1951.

    Versions

    Façade exists in several strongly contrasted versions, principally:

    VIP (disambiguation)

    VIP is a Very Important Person.

    VIP or V.I.P. may also refer to:

    Entertainment

  • V.I.P. (comedian) Indian television comedian
  • VIP (magazine), an Irish celebrity lifestyle fashion magazine
  • VIP Style Awards, an annual awards-ceremony named after the magazine
  • VIP (studio), a video brand formerly used by Japanese adult video company Atlas21
  • V.I.P. (talk show), a 1973–1983 Canadian television talk show
  • V.I.P. (TV series), a 1998–2002 American television series starring Pamela Anderson
  • VIP Magazin, an Moldovan celebrity lifestyle magazine
  • VIP, a fictional alcoholic snack invented by a character in the film Lover Come Back
  • Film

  • Very Important Person (film), a 1961 British film
  • The V.I.P.s, a 1963 film
  • VIP my Brother Superman, a 1968 Italian animation film directed by Bruno Bozzetto
  • V.I.P. (1988 film), a 1988 Indian film
  • V.I.P (1997 film), a 1997 Indian film
  • VIPs, a 2010 Brazilian film
  • Music

  • "VIP", a song by Kesha from Animal
  • Very Important Person

    A very important person (VIP) is a person who is accorded special privileges due to his or her status or importance.

    Examples include celebrities, heads of state or heads of government, other politicians, major employers, high rollers, high-level corporate officers, wealthy individuals, or any other notable person who receives special treatment for any reason. The special treatment usually involves separation from common people, and a higher level of comfort or service. In some cases such as with tickets, VIP may be used as a title in a similar way to premium. These "VIP tickets" can be purchased by anyone, but still meaning separation from other customers, own security checks etc.

    VIP syndrome

    VIP syndrome is when a perceived VIP uses his/her status to influence a given professional to make unorthodox decisions under the pressure or presence of the individual. The phenomenon can occur in any profession that has relationships with wealthy, famous, and powerful clients or patients, particularly medical or airline professions. One example is the 2010 Polish Air Force Tu-154 crash.

    Atlas21

    Atlas21 (アトラスにじゅういち Atorasu Nijūichi), formerly known as VIP, is a Japanese adult video company with headquarters in Tokyo, Japan.

    Company information

    VIP

    The AV company VIP Enterprise (VIPエンタープライズ VIP Entāpuraizu) was founded in June 1981 and issued its first video, titled Women's Toilet Series (女子便所シリーズ Joshi Benjo Shiriizu), in December of that same year making it one of the first adult video companies to be established in Japan. The studio continued production in 1982 with works that included S&M and scatological themes. In 1983, the company changed its name from VIP Enterprise to VIP Incorporated (株式会社ビップ Kabushiki gaisha Bippu). By 1985, the studio was using actresses with some background in entertainment, such as Anri Inoue (井上あんり) who made her AV debut with VIP in August 1985 with the video Venus With Teardrops (ヴィーナスの滴り Viinasu no Shititari).

    The major event in the company's history in the 1980s was the debut of Hitomi Kobayashi in 1986 in her video Forbidden Relationship. With her style and looks, Kobayashi was a major factor in bringing in the concept of the AV Idol to the fledgling Japanese adult video industry, and, as the "AV Queen", she brought outstanding sales to VIP. In February 1987, Nao Saejima debuted with the company. Another early star for VIP was Rui Sakuragi, who made her debut in April 1989 under the name Masako Ichinose but took the name Rui Sakuragi the following year.

    Mix

    Mix, mixes, mixture, or mixing may refer to:

    In mathematics, science, and technology

    In electronics and telecommunications

  • MIX, a mythical computer used in the textbook The Art of Computer Programming by Donald Knuth
  • MIX (Email), a high performance email storage system for use with IMAP
  • MIX (Microsoft), a discontinued annual Microsoft conference
  • Chaum mixes, an anonymous email system proposed in 1981
  • Electronic mixer
  • Frequency mixer
  • Malta Internet Exchange, an Internet backbone for the country of Malta
  • Milan Internet eXchange, in Milan, Italy
  • MIX (Z39.87): NISO Metadata for Images in XML, a standard for encoding metatdata about digital images and image collections
  • Other uses in mathematics, science, and technology

  • Mixture, a kind of chemical substance
  • Crossbreeding, also called mixing, a genetic concept
  • Mixing (mathematics), a concept in ergodic theory
  • Mixing (physics), a descriptive condition of a dynamical system
  • Mixing (process engineering), a unit operation for manipulating physical systems
  • DJ mix

    A DJ mix or DJ mixset is a sequence of musical tracks typically mixed together to appear as one continuous track. DJ mixes are usually performed using a DJ mixer and multiple sounds sources, such as turntables, CD players, digital audio players or computer sound cards, sometimes with the addition of samplers and effects units, although it's possible to create one using sound editing software.

    DJ mixing is significantly different from live sound mixing. Remix services were offered beginning in the late 1970s in order to provide music which was more easily beatmixed by DJs for the dancefloor. One of the earliest DJs to refine their mixing skills was DJ Kool Herc.Francis Grasso was the first DJ to use headphones and a basic form of mixing at the New York nightclub Sanctuary. Upon its release in 2000, Paul Oakenfold's Perfecto Presents: Another World became the biggest selling dj mix album in the US.

    Music

    A DJ mix is often put together with music from genres that fit into the more general term electronic dance music. Other genres mixed by DJ includes hip hop, breakbeat and disco. Four on the floor disco beats can be used to create seamless mixes so as to keep dancers locked to the dancefloor. Two of main characteristics of music used in dj mixes is a dominant bassline and repetitive beats. Music mixed by djs usually has a tempo which ranges from 120 bpm up to 160 bpm.

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