Free For All (2008 Film)
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Free For All (2008 Film)
Free for All may refer to: * ''Free for All'' (film), a 1949 American comedy film * "Free for All" (The Prisoner), a 1967 episode of the British television series ''The Prisoner'' * ''Free-for-All'' (Ted Nugent album), a 1976 album by Ted Nugent ** "Free-for-All", the album's title track * ''Free-for-All'' (Michael Penn album) a 1989 album * ''Free for All'' (TV series), a US American animated series created by Brett Merhar * Free For All link page, a search engine optimization technique * Deathmatch (gaming) Deathmatch, also known as free-for-all, is a gameplay mode integrated into many shooter games, including FPS game, first-person shooter (FPS), and real-time strategy (RTS) video games, where the goal is to kill (or Glossary of video game terms#fr ..., a video game mode, sometimes referred to as "free for all" * ''Free for All'' (album), a 1964 Blue Note album by Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers * " Freeforall", a 1986 short story by Margaret Atwood {{disambiguat ...
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Free For All (film)
''Free for All'' is a 1949 American comedy film directed by Charles Barton (director), Charles Barton and starring Robert Cummings, Ann Blyth and Percy Kilbride. Cast A young man invents a pill that can turn water into gasoline. While staying in Washington DC, Washington to register his patent, he falls in love with his host's daughter. However, she works for a major oil company and after she lets slip to her employers about the magical new formula, they desperately try to get their hands on it. Main cast * Robert Cummings as Christopher Parker * Ann Blyth as Alva Abbott * Percy Kilbride as Henry J. Abbott * Ray Collins (actor), Ray Collins as A.B. Blair * Donald Woods (actor), Donald Woods as Roger Abernathy * Mikhail Rasumny as Dr. Axel Torgelson * Percy Helton as Joe Hershey * Harry Antrim as Mr. Whiting * Wallis Clark as Mr. Van Alstyne * Frank Ferguson as Hap Ross * Dooley Wilson as Aristotle * Russell Simpson (actor), Russell Simpson as Farmer * Lester ...
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Free For All (The Prisoner)
"Free for All" is an episode of the allegory, allegorical British science fiction TV series, ''The Prisoner''. It was written and directed by Patrick McGoohan (though he used the pseudonym "Paddy Fitz" for the writer credit) and the second episode to be produced. It was the fourth episode to be broadcast in the UK on ITV (TV network), ITV (ATV Midlands and Grampian Television, Grampian) on Friday 20 October 1967 and first aired in the United States on CBS on Saturday 29 June 1968. The episode stars Patrick McGoohan as Number Six (The Prisoner), Number Six and features Eric Portman as Number Two (The Prisoner), Number Two . The central theme of the episode is corruption and fraud in elections. Plot summary Number Six is persuaded to run for election to the post of Number Two when it is suggested to him by the new incumbent that, should he win, he will finally meet Number One. Number Fifty-Eight, a newly arrived young woman who speaks only an unidentified Slavic-sounding foreign l ...
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Free-for-All (Ted Nugent Album)
''Free-for-All'' is the second studio album by American hard rock musician Ted Nugent. It was released in October 1976 by Epic Records, and was his first album to go platinum. Background As the recording of ''Free-for-All'' commenced, rhythm guitarist and lead vocalist Derek St. Holmes left the band, citing growing personal and creative conflicts with Nugent. Two solid years of living together on the road had taken its toll on the relationship. Additionally, St. Holmes was unhappy with Tom Werman's production, saying that the producer was watering down the band's sound. A full year before ''Bat Out of Hell'' brought him international success, vocalist Meat Loaf was brought in by producer Werman to sing on the album. Meat Loaf was paid the sum of $1,000 for his contributions to the album, which included crafting his vocal arrangements and two days of recording sessions. He says that after he agreed to do the album he was sent a lyric sheet containing just the words with no arr ...
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Free-for-All (Michael Penn Album)
''Free-for-All'' is the second album by the American singer-songwriter Michael Penn, released in 1992 on RCA Records. It contains two songs that reached the Top 20 on the Modern Rock charts: "Long Way Down (Look What the Cat Drug In)" peaked at number 14, while the second single, "Seen the Doctor", reached nine spots higher. The album led to a bitter battle between Penn and his record company, pushing a follow-up album to 1997. Critical reception The ''Chicago Tribune'' stated: "Penn is again working with producer Tony Berg, but this time they provide a rich, subtle blending of instruments, harmonies and textures to create an album that doesn't so much pop out as seep in." In his review for AllMusic, Stewart Mason wrote that it was the record which proved to critics that Penn was no one-hit wonder, calling "Long Way Down" a "dark and pained opening to an album that was hardly pop-star material." Track listing All tracks composed by Michael Penn. #"Long Way Down (Look What the C ...
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Free For All (TV Series)
''Free for All'' is an American animated series created by Brett Merhar for Showtime. The series, set in Colorado, follows the day-to-day life of Johnny Jenkins, an innocent 19-year-old college student who has to deal with a bitter, cigarette smoking grandmother and a coarse, sometimes-violent, alcoholic father, in a rather dysfunctional family while his friend, Clay, is living large with the settlement money he got from suing a taco restaurant for personal injuries. The show was developed for television by Merriwether Williams, the head writer for the first three seasons of ''SpongeBob SquarePants''. The show lasted for only seven episodes that aired over the summer of 2003, the last ending on a cliff-hanger. Despite favorable to mixed reviews from critics, the show had very low ratings, due to poor promotion and basing the series on an already-unsuccessful property. Showtime cancelled the animated series shortly after the last episode aired. Though the series is now considered "ob ...
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Deathmatch (gaming)
Deathmatch, also known as free-for-all, is a gameplay mode integrated into many shooter games, including FPS game, first-person shooter (FPS), and real-time strategy (RTS) video games, where the goal is to kill (or Glossary of video game terms#frag, "frag") the other players' characters as many times as possible. The deathmatch may end on a ''frag limit'' or a ''time limit'', and the winner is the player that accumulated the greatest number of frags. The deathmatch is an evolution of competitive Multiplayer video game, multiplayer modes found in game genres such as fighting games and racing video game, racing games moving into other genres. Description In a typical first-person shooter (FPS) deathmatch session, players connect individual computers together via a computer network in a peer-to-peer model or a client–server model, either locally or over the Internet. Each individual computer generates the first person view that the computer character sees in the virtual world, ...
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Free For All (album)
''Free for All'' is a jazz album by Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers released on Blue Note. Recorded in February 1964, it was released the following year. It was originally titled ''Free Fall''.Liner notes to the 2014 SHM-CD by Michael Cuscuna The Allmusic review by Al Campbell awards the album 4 stars and states, "This edition of the Jazz Messengers had been together since 1961 with a lineup that would be hard to beat: Freddie Hubbard on trumpet... Wayne Shorter on tenor sax, Curtis Fuller on trombone, Cedar Walton on piano, and Reggie Workman on bass. Shorter's title track is one of the finest moments in the Jazz Messengers' history." Composition Freddie Hubbard's composition "The Core" is dedicated to the CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) and expresses "Hubbard's admiration of that organization's persistence and resourcefulness in its work for total, meaningful equality." "They're getting", he explains, "at the core, at the center of the kinds of change that have to take pl ...
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