Based on a true story, a teenage girl is kidnapped in broad daylight and held captive by a dangerous criminal. As the days pass, she forms an unexpected bond with her captor, leading to a tense standoff between law enforcement and the kidnapper.
Ida McBride decides to drill for oil on her ranch, against her son Tom's wishes. A contentious crew of wildcatters arrives, including a stalwart drilling magnate, his tool-pusher and a young roughneck associate, who endeavor to save the ranching empire by trying to bring in a methane gas well.
Two friends join together to strike oil, court women, and battle an unscrupulous oilman politician during the Oklahoma oil boom of the 1920s.
The wife has bought a new TV and asks Evgeni to connect it to the cable net- work and fix it on the wall, so she can watch “Let’s Talk”. Evgeni finds online the phone number of a specialist for TV installation who comes with a delay of two hours. Evgeni first notices blood on his clothes and on his tools, and then recog- nizes in him the hero of a documentary film about serial murderers.
Two con artists arrive in a western boom town that they think is ripe for the pickings, only to get swindled themselves.
The plot revolves around a rivalry between sand-hog "Hard Rock" Harrigan (O'Brien) and his foreman Black Jack Riley. At the center of their conflict is their mutual affection for heroine "Andy" Anderson (Irene Hervey). But when the chips are down and Riley is trapped in a tunnel cave-in, it is Harrigan who comes to the rescue.
Patricia was constantly raped by her own father during her teenage years. One night she decided to put a razor blade inside her vagina. Years after, she remains a very disturbed person.
The foreman Chernykh and drilling foreman Marich carry out the most rational transportation of equipment in the extreme conditions of the North, introducing new progressive drilling technology.
“We are all from the same trust,” the old peasant replies to the driller’s foreman when he, justifying himself for the wounds inflicted on the ground, refers to the neighboring trust. “And we have no other.”
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