Lola Colt (also known as Black Tigress and Lola Baby) is a 1967 Spaghetti Western film directed by Siro Marcellini. It was referred as "a very average Western filled with all the predictable clichés of the genre".
Lola may refer to:
Lola (Greek: Λόλα) was the Greek remake of the successful Argentine comedy franchise Lalola. The series premiered on September 22, 2008 in Greece on ANT1 and ran Monday through Friday. The last episode was released on July 7, 2009.
The TV series centers on the transformation of a man into a woman, sharing with the audience the comical daily events of her new life.
The story begins with Leonidas Lalos who is editor and director of "Mister", a typical men's lifestyle magazine. Young, successful and accomplished, he is an eligible bachelor who has the same attitude towards women as he portrays them in his magazine: expendable pleasure items. His philosophy on life can be summed up as follows: fast cars, fast internet, fast women! In his path he leaves many brokenhearted victims the last of which, the beautiful and mysterious Romina decides to teach him a lesson. With the help of a gypsy she casts a spell on him. On a night with a moon eclipse, the transformation takes places and Lalos wakes up the next day as a beautiful woman.
Lola is a 1981 West German film directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and is the third in his BRD Trilogy. The first film in the trilogy is The Marriage of Maria Braun (BRD 1) and the second is Veronika Voss (BRD 2).
In 1957–1958 in Coburg, in post-World War II West Germany, Schuckert (Mario Adorf) is a local construction entrepreneur whose methods of gaining wealth include shady business practices such as bribing the local officials. His latest scheme, to erect a building with a large basement for a brothel is endangered with the arrival of von Bohm (Armin Mueller-Stahl), a high-minded building commissioner.
Von Bohm tries to institute gradual change of the system from within, rather than exposing the participants, and suggests that Schuckert builds three additional storeys (allowing Schuckert to make significantly more money) on the aforementioned building instead of just a cellar. Meanwhile he falls in love with a beautiful woman named Lola (Barbara Sukowa), who has a child named Mariechen with Schuckert and whose mother works as Von Bohm's housekeeper ("Haushaelterin"). Lola had initially heard of Von Bohn from Schuckert, and then from her mother. When visiting her mother at Von Bohm's house one day, Lola is struck by a Ming vase and her mother tells her that Von Bohn goes to the local library weekly to read about East Asian antiques. Lola made a concerted effort to seduce Von Bohn by reading in the East Asian section of the local library. They are attracted to each other, and von Bohm starts thinking of marriage, going so far as to buy an engagement ring for Lola and eloping with her. However, Lola then sends him a letter saying that she wants to break up. Von Bohm finds out that she is a cabaret singer and prostitute in the town brothel, where most of von Bohm's adversaries are her clients, and that she is the "personal toy" of Schuckert, and he collects evidence against Schuckert to expose the corruption.
A colt is a male horse, usually below the age of four years.
The term "colt" only describes young male horses and is not to be confused with foal, which is a horse of either sex less than one year of age. Similarly, a yearling is a horse of either sex between the ages of one and two. A young female horse is called a filly, and a mare once she is an adult animal. In horse racing, particularly for Thoroughbreds in the United Kingdom, a colt is defined as an uncastrated male from the age of two up to and including the age of four.
An adult male horse if left intact is called either a "stallion" or a "horse" (sometimes full horse); if castrated, it is called a gelding. In some cases, particularly informal nomenclature, a gelding under four years is still called a colt. A rig or ridgling is a male equine with a retained testicle or one which has been incompletely castrated.
In the wild, colts are driven from their herds by the herd stallion somewhere between the age of one and two. This may be in part an instinct to prevent inbreeding. When driven out, they usually join with other young stallions in a bachelor herd. They stay with this band until they are mature enough to form their own herd of mares. The terms "rag" or "rake" have been historically used to refer to a group of colts, but they have fallen out of modern usage.
Colt is a masculine given name which may refer to:
People:
Fictional characters:
Colt is the surname of:
People:
A pig cries in the dark
I know men's lies
And I can have him
And so I love him for that
Oh, what a terrible year it's been
Think I've seen enough
'Cause when you kiss her you reached at my heart
I am taking my painkillers
My blood is already wine
I adored him and he holds my ghost
Oh, what heave, I've been gone
I think I'm going home
'Cause when you kiss her it brings down my heart
You tore it all
Thoughts still seeping in my head
Dripping in my bed
In the end
You never gave me a reason
It was a hundred years ago
I was the eye inside your storm
I was the kid inside your bone
And I'm so young
I was the eye in your storm
And I'm so young
Shadow stop, don't steal my home
The cycle is mine
I'm in blue for a year, I can't bother to wake
And in my arms you are already dead
And no one's coming back
The storm is rising
And it ain't gonna stop
You tore it all
Thoughts still seeping in my head
Dripping in my bed
Oh, the end
You thought that I am a pothead
Three hundred years ago
I was the one who walked with you
Passed the law and passed your home
And I'm so young
Passed the law and passed your home
And I was so young
I'm for it, storm all over it
Cars and dome
Runaway for vacant heart
Oh, baby, you loved me once
I'm throwing stones at cars
I'm throwing stones at cars
'Cause when you kiss her
It brings out my heart
Oh, what a terrible year it's been
I think I've seen it all
Oh, it brings out my heart