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T-800: Hasta la vista, baby. Later in the film, T-800 says the phrase again before shooting the frozen T-1000 with his gun. In the 2003 film Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, John Connor utters the phrase again. Although "hasta la vista" is a Spanish expression, the Castilian Spanish dubbing of the movie replaced the catchphrase with ...
Come as You Are (Spanish: Hasta la Vista) is a 2011 Belgian road comedy-drama film directed by Geoffrey Enthoven [1] from a screenplay by Pierre De Clercq, based on the real-life experiences of disability rights activist Asta Philpot. [2] It stars Tom Audenaert, Gilles De Schryver, Robrecht Vanden Thoren and Isabelle de Hertogh
Composed by Alain J, Eric K-Roz, Claude M'Barali and Kurser, "Hasta la Vista" was also recorded in Spanish language, which is included on the CD and the vinyl.It contains many puns as well as numerous Latino components, such as the Spanish guitar played by the Italian-French performer Miro, the name of the song and the first verse in Spanish-language, the "atmosphere and the passionate ...
Will Tommy fulfil his dream of drifting off into the Marbella sunset with Ryan? Or will his confused son finally see the light? And will our precious Catherine be OK? We’ve been speculating on ...
Come as You Are is a 2019 American comedy drama film directed by Richard Wong and starring Grant Rosenmeyer, Hayden Szeto, Ravi Patel and Gabourey Sidibe.Produced and financed by Chicago Media Angels and The Blacklist, [1] [2] it is a remake of the 2011 Belgian film Hasta la Vista. [3]
The Prime Minister claimed it was ‘mission largely accomplished’ during his three years in office.
"Hasta la Vista" (MC Solaar song), 2001 "Hasta la vista" (Oleksandr Ponomariov song), 2003 "Hasta la vista" (Ruslan Alekhno song), 2008 "Hasta la vista" (Hurricane song), Serbian entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 2020 "Hasta la Vista", a song from the Camp Rock soundtrack; Hasta La Vista (Lil Wayne song), 2018
The term "mock Spanish" has been used by anthropologist-linguist Jane H. Hill of the University of Arizona, most recognizably in relation to the catchphrase, "Hasta la vista, baby", from the film, Terminator 2: Judgment Day. [1] Hill argued that using pseudo-Spanish terms is covert racism. [2]