Nino Brown: I'm not guilty. *You're* the one that's guilty. The lawmakers, the politicians, the Columbian drug lords, all you who lobby against making drugs legal. Just like you did with alcohol during the prohibition. You're the one who's guilty. I mean, c'mon, let's kick the ballistics here: Ain't no Uzi's made in Harlem. Not one of us in here owns a poppy field. This thing is bigger than Nino Brown. This is big business. This is the American way.
Larry Hooper: [from trailer] Lieutenant Colonel Django used funds from the project's black budget to procure prostitutes... Bill Django: That's a lie! Larry Hooper: ...and to get drugs for himself and his men. Bill Django: That... well, the hooker thing is definitely a lie.
Creasy: Do you know what this is? It’s a charger used by convicts to hide money and drugs they tuck it up their rectum. This is pencil detonator, timer, used as a receiver from the pager. This is C4 highly explosive; you put it all together you've got a bomb, not very sophisticated, but very powerful. [whispers in his ear] Creasy: That's what you have in your ass right now. Don't move! Don't move!
God: Parting your soup is not a miracle Bruce, it's a magic trick. A single mom who's working two jobs, and still finds time to take her son to soccer practice, that's a miracle. A teenager who says "no" to drugs and "yes" to an education, that's a miracle. People want me to do everything for them. What they don't realize is *they* have the power. You want to see a miracle, son? Be the miracle.
Mike Lowery: We got a tip that the Zopehounders were gonna do a hit on cash or drugs from this big time X-man. Marcus Burnett: That's what they call an ecstasy dealer on the streets. Capt. Howard: Marcus, I know what they call them. That's why I'm Captain.
Chris Vaughn: I grew up in this town, people used to walk tall in this town, they wouldn't have traded the mill for a crooked casino and they wouldn't have stood around while drugs were being sold to kids.
Kathryn: Introduce her to your world of sex, drugs and... what else do you do?
Fulvio Nesstra: I'm very good at reading what's in a person's eyes. Charlie: That's nice. Fulvio Nesstra: I'm reading yours right now. Charlie: Yeah? What do they say? Fulvio Nesstra: They say you're sleepy. But I can't figure out is it's too much drugs sleepy, too much work sleepy or I'm so fucking bored sleepy. Maybe you've got that weird fucking sleepy disease. Narco-sleepy. Something sleepy.
Dr. Sterling: Have you had any drugs in the last 24 hours? Elizabeth: No. Well... I guess I snorted some coke and smoked some pot but uh, you know, that was just to make the ecstasy last longer. Dr. Sterling: Sure you're not forgetting anything? Elizabeth: Maybe a few beers? Dr. Sterling: Did you ever think you might have a substance abuse problem? Elizabeth: The only substance problem I have right now is that I need you to get me some trank so I can come down off this fucking coke. Dr. Sterling: And then what happens?
Gavin Gore: What did you tell your parents to get off restriction Maynard? Maynard Keyes: That I was going to do drugs and kill myself if they didn't let me go. Gavin Gore: I should try that sometime. Maynard Keyes: Yeah. Now next year I get to miss school twice a week to see a therapist. Gavin Gore: Awesome.
E.L.: Think about it Josh, you're in college. The window of opportunity to drink and do drugs and take advantage of young girls is getting smaller by the day.
William Somerset: I just don't think I can continue to live in a place that embraces and nurtures apathy as if it was virtue. David Mills: You're no different. You're no better. William Somerset: I didn't say I was different or better. I'm not. Hell, I sympathize; I sympathize completely. Apathy is the solution. I mean, it's easier to lose yourself in drugs than it is to cope with life. It's easier to steal what you want than it is to earn it. It's easier to beat a child than it is to raise it. Hell, love costs: it takes effort and work.
Carson Wells: Call me when you've had enough. I can even let you keep a little of the money. Llewelyn Moss: If I was cuttin' deals, why wouldn't I go deal with this guy Chigurh? Carson Wells: No no. No. You don't understand. You can't make a deal with him. Even if you gave him the money he'd still kill you. He's a peculiar man. You could even say that he has principles. Principles that transcend money or drugs or anything like that. He's not like you. He's not even like me. Llewelyn Moss: He don't talk as much as you, I give him points for that.
Anita Miller: It's unfair that we can't listen to our music! Elaine Miller: That's because it's music about drugs and promiscuous sex. Anita Miller: Simon and Garfunkel is poetry! Elaine Miller: Yes it's poetry. It's poetry of drugs and promiscuous sex. Honey, they're on pot.
Raychel: [hiding drugs in take-out boxes for mob customers] Some people like cheap wine and valium. Other people like swans with zesty take-out!
Alonzo Harris: Yeah, you dead now. Turn down drugs to a dealer and the police chief is handing your wife a crisp flag. What the fuck is wrong with you?
Security Guard: [seeing the mess in the room] What the hell gets into you people? Robert Boyd: [cheerfully] Drugs and alcohol. Security Guard: [grins] Well, I got no problem with that.
Chlo: There's never been a classic movie made in Bruges until now. Ray: Of course there hasn't. It's a shithole. Chlo: Bruges is my home town, Ray. Ray: Well, it's still a shithole. Chlo: It's not a shithole! Ray: What? Even midgets have to take drugs to stick it. Chlo: Okay. So, you've insulted my home town. You were doing really well, Raymond. Why don't you tell me some Belgium jokes while you're at it? Ray: Don't know any Belgium jokes, and if I did I think I'd have the good sense not to... hang on. Is Belgium with all those child abuse murders lately? I do know a Belgium joke. What's Belgium famous for? Chocolates and child abuse, and they only invented the chocolates to get to the kids. [Ray sees Chloe's shocked expression] Ray: What? Chlo: One of the girls they murdered was a friend of mine. Ray: [after a long pause, feeling bad] I'm sorry, Chloe. Chlo: One of the girls they murdered wasn't a friend of mine. I just wanted to make you feel bad. And it worked! Quite well.
Joey: Welcome to Free Love Festival, where America's best and brightest come to celebrate... Jade: Freedom? Joey: Yes! Freedom to do drugs - lots of fucking drugs!
Doris Duke: I assume you have credentials. Elizabeth Taylor, Peggy Lee. What? Do you have a thing for entertainers, Mr. Rafferty? Bernard Lafferty: Lafferty. I beg your pardon, Miss Duke. It's Lafferty with an L. Doris Duke: It says you haven't worked for six months. Bernard Lafferty: I had a, a wee health problem. Doris Duke: Drugs or alcohol? Bernard Lafferty: Erm... Doris Duke: I assume it's under control. Bernard Lafferty: I assure you it's all in the past now. Doris Duke: Right.
William Shatner: [advising Trey on how TV cops taste drugs] You spear the knife into the bag... then pick some of the drugs up with the knife... then lightly press it on your tongue. And that is how TV cops taste drugs! Detective Mitch Preston: What if it's cyanide? There's a reason real cops don't taste drugs.
Pastor Clever: [at Smokey] Excuse me brother, what we call drugs at the 74th Street Baptist Church we call the sin of sin sins. Smokey: Well round here, between Normandie and Western, we call this here a little twenty twen twen... Craig Jones: Right... Smokey: Nigga... Pastor Clever: Give me a little for my cataracts. Smokey: You didn't put in on this man.
Marcus: I rebuke the spirit of drugs in the name of Jesus. What's his name? Drummer: I.B. Bangin'. Marcus: What you mean I.B. Bangin'? Drummer: I.B. Bangin'! Marcus: What the hell kind of name is I.B. Bangin'? Drummer: I don't know his real name. I.B.'s Girlfriend: It's Frederick Smith. Marcus: Okay, Freddy... I.B.'s Girlfriend: It's Frederick. Marcus: Okay, I.B. Bangin', we're gonna bring you back from the dead.
Peter Banning: You're a... you're a complex Freudian hallucination having something to do with my mother and I don't know why you have wings, but you have very lovely legs and you're a very nice tiny person and what am I saying, I don't know who my mother was; I'm an orphan and I've never taken drugs because I missed the sixties, I was an accountant. Tinkerbell: Guess again. [Tinkerbell takes the sheet which makes Peter trip on the floor] Peter Banning: [disoriented] Oh, look, stars. Tinkerbell: That's right, Peter, second star to the right and straight on till morning. [Tinkerbell takes Peter by the strings of the sheet] Tinkerbell: Neverland!
Nick Peretti: Drugs ain't a black thing, or a white thing. It's a death thing. Death don't give a shit about color.
Tom Ludlow: [upon finding drugs hidden in a mustard container] You got two strikes, Grill. This is three strikes. Twenty-five to life. Grill: That ain't my fucking shit. Fuck you. You put that shit there. Dirty ass, punk ass cop.
John: I don't take drugs that still have government code names.
Peter Bradley: [Eli is on drugs while being interviewed on television] Now, your previous novel... Eli: Yes, "wildcat". Peter Bradley: Not a success. Why? Eli: Well... wildcat was written in a kind of obselete vernacular... [long pause] Eli: ... wildcat... wild... cat... [he stares into space] Eli: ... pow... wildcat... I'm going to go.
Dietrich: No more drugs for that man.
Actor: Hey, aren't you that cheerleader Diane Delisio? Say, do you know where you can get any performance enhancing drugs that will enhance my performance?
Max: Drugs are bad.
Raoul Duke: My attorney had never been able to accept the notion, often espoused by former drug abusers, that you can get a lot higher without drugs than with them, and neither have I for that matter.
Dr. Bill Stiffle: Mrs. Johnson suspects that Troy might have been selling drugs to some other kids at school. Dean Stiffle: Yeah? Dr. Bill Stiffle: How do you feel about that? Dean Stiffle: I feel that it must have been unfulfilling for him. Dr. Bill Stiffle: That's very interesting. Why do you say that? Dean Stiffle: Because he killed himself.
Andy: Sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, hey ladies? Vera: Aye, but we can do without the drugs and rock 'n' roll!
Black Dynamite: I'm declaring war on anyone who sells drugs to the community. Chocolate Giddy-Up: But Black Dynamite! *I* sell drugs to the community!
Black Dynamite: Now if I catch any of you dealing drugs to the community, I will not consider you a brother or a friend, can you dig it? Black Hand Jack: Hell no, nigga!
Annie Garrett: So, tell me about Mary Lou's daughter. Guido Levits: Mora? Annie Garrett: Yeah, where is she? Guido Levits: Crown-Hills Cemetery. Annie Garrett: What happened? Guido Levits: Uh, got into drugs all kinds of things. Run away for days at a time. Guido Levits: Came home pregnant once, had colleen. Guido Levits: Ran again and died of an overdose. Annie Garrett: How old was she? Guido Levits: Seventeen. Annie Garrett: Aw... [shakes head] Annie Garrett: So sad. Guido Levits: Killed Mary Lou's marriage. Just about destroyed her. Guido Levits: Still carries a lot of guilt. She thinks if she had been a stronger mother, Mora would have been okay.
Honey: How can you be a drug addict in the new millennium, Lyle? Drugs are so retro. Lyle: Before I became a drug addict, I had so many problems. Now I just have one - Drugs! It's given my life real focus.
[after the team has killed a bunch of drug dealers] Papo: What da fuck do ya want? McBain: Money. Papo: Money? Shit man, take da money! You guys sure killed a lot of people for a little money. Gill: People? Who gives a fuck about people like that? Or people like you for that matter. Papo: Oh, I get it. Dealers of death. Who cares about people that sells drugs to eight-year-olds? Hey man, you expect them to work at Burger King making 3.75 an hour? I pay them 200 dollars *a day*! Y'know, they just tryin' to make a livin'! Do I look like the kinda guy who could get a job at one of those glass towers? And as far as dealing drugs to any eight-year-olds, do you see any eight-year-olds down dere? All I see is a bunch of assholes from New Jersey!
Saul: How about in the park, when I said you were my friend... you didn't say anything back. Dale Denton: Well, that's easy. It's because we're not friends. You are my drug dealer. The only reason I know you is because I like the drugs you sell. If you didn't sell drugs, I would have no idea who you are, and I wouldn't be here right now. I would be fantastic! Saul: Oh. Dale Denton: I'm sorry, that sounded really mean... just to hear that, that sounded really mean. Saul: No, I see. The monkey's out of the bottle now! Dale Denton: What? That's not even... a figure of speech. Saul: Pandora can't go back into the box - he only comes out.
Commander Helena Braddock: So, where is everybody? Melanie Ballard: Yeah, Friday night, the whole place should be packed. A whole twelve hours before sun up and there's money to burn, whores to fuck and drugs to take.
Bethany: I'm only going to ask you once and you'd better be honest. Are you on drugs again?
[John Hull presents Gerald Carver with drugs he has obtained] Carver: I can't buy that much shit, John. I don't have that in the budget. John Hull: Well, what am I supposed to do with it? Carver: You're a drug dealer. Deal drugs.
Mike: I didn't think drugs and alchohol were such a big deal they had to resort to Neo-McCarthyism to get rid of it. Pink: I think they're just worried that some of us are having too good a time.
Oliver: I want to retire in South America. I hear that's where the drugs come from.
Jo: You think you'r the only person with reproductive organs. I'm gonna have this fucking baby. I'm gonna have this baby and my baby is gonna sell drugs to your baby on the playground. Do you know that. You fucking bitch.
[Bill is passing up all drugs but marijuana for the night] Bill: Baked, not fried... the healthy choice.
Vin: Do you have any idea how much those drugs cost? Amy: There'll be other drugs, Vincent. Vin: I know... but, I really liked those ones.
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