We'll always remember this trip. I wanna go back again next year with you. Something so amazing, magical. Something so beautiful. Feels as if the world is perfect. Like it's never gonna end. Sign In. Play trailer Crime Drama. Director Harmony Korine. Harmony Korine. Top credits Director Harmony Korine. See more at IMDbPro. Trailer Red Band Version. Version 1. Clip A Guide to the Films of Harmony Korine. Photos Top cast Edit.
Vanessa Hudgens Candy as Candy. Selena Gomez Faith as Faith. Ashley Benson Brit as Brit. Rachel Korine Cotty as Cotty. James Franco Alien as Alien. Gucci Mane Archie as Archie. Heather Morris Bess as Bess. Josh Randall Jock 1 as Jock 1. Travis Duncan Jock 2 as Jock 2. John McClain Judge as Judge. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. Brit, Candy, Cotty, and Faith have been best friends since grade school. They live together in a boring college dorm and are hungry for adventure.
All they have to do is save enough money for spring break to get their shot at having some real fun. A serendipitous encounter with rapper "Alien" promises to provide the girls with all the thrill and excitement they could hope for. With the encouragement of their new friend, it soon becomes unclear how far the girls are willing to go to experience a spring break they will never forget.
Wish You Were Here. Rated R for strong sexual content, language, nudity, drug use and violence throughout. Did you know Edit. It's them pay you extra money? And there were also -- I think there were a few wells that they had that didn't immediately transfer because there was some question about -- I think whether somebody had a right of first refusal.
Is any of that still -- is that -- would any of that be part of this or is that just completely dead? I think we should assume at this point that it's dead. We're certainly open to it. That was actually not a right of first refusal. It was a lawsuit and it was backed off because the operator was also selling Black Bear to Diversified. They chose to just go ahead and close despite of the lawsuit.
So we kind of stayed away from that. If it got remedied, we would be fine from like run of it. But I think also you have the complication of them probably wanting a whole lot more for it. So I'm not sure that we would buy it at this point. But I think it's safe to assume at this point, let's not -- and if it comes back around at some point and we're free and clear then, we would probably take a swing at it.
And obviously you're generating a tremendous amount of cash. And it looks like you're going to generate some more cash here from -- in terms of this final settlement. I was actually little bit surprised that the Board chose not to increase the dividend at this time considering the amount of cash that you currently have. And then looking out just a couple of quarters, you could be all the way back to the amount of cash you had before the last acquisition, probably by the end of June, if prices stay up here.
Any thoughts on sort of what the Board's thinking is there? Well, this is -- it's a pretty thoughtful Board and has the reputation long earned from being very fiscally disciplined and prudent.
So, I think what you're feeling here is a real reticence to go too aggressive to raise the dividend not wanting to lower it again. We feel like the reputation is really built around. We pay our dividend. We've only lowered it twice during -- in when commodity prices collapsed and then in when they did as well, each time kind of measuredly moving forward. But we're certainly feeling more comfortable about the stability of overall economic environment and COVID situation and our cash flows and everything else, but there's been quite a bit of volatility in the last 12 months.
And I think [Speech Overlap]. I don't know, have a little bit more runway, I guess. Yeah, I mean the only -- I would just add real quick, Erik, I mean when we had discussions on dividend policy, I mean, we look five-plus years out. And so if you're looking at years four and five, as you probably know, the strip's highly backwardated. So things look a little different.
And so as Jason alluded to, I mean, we're setting a dividend rate for the long term. And so while we could have raised it, we felt being more prudent given kind of the backwardation in prices.
This is quite frankly keeping some powder available as acquisition opportunities that we see. And I guess, actually, that sort of leads to my last question if I may, just kind of on the acquisition front, with the big run we've had on commodity prices.
Is that making it harder to source deals? Well, what he just -- no, definitely not to source deals. There's a ton of deals out on the market, some of them with unrealistic expectations.
The thing that's interesting is what Ryan just said, though, is that the strip is pretty backwardated. Now we're fairly bullish on long-term prices, but the market, in general, is pricing quite a bit of uncertainty evidenced by the backwardation, meaning that, yes, prices are pretty high right now. I mean it's down [Phonetic] pretty quickly. The interesting thing that, that is almost enabling though, is transactions to actually happen because people can get closer to strip pricing for their assets and people buying them, if you're reasonably confident about the future curve you might be willing to pay closer to strip because the strip is so backwardated.
For us, we're looking for that long tail. We're looking for barrels five years, seven years, 10 years out there and those things are getting priced way down right now if that makes sense. And we're pretty hopeful like I said in there. And I think your -- Ryan's right. We're also pretty hopeful we'll be able to transact in the next six months, eight months [Phonetic] on something else that will support the dividend. I will now turn the floor back over to management for any closing comments.
Well, thanks again. Thanks for your participation today. And feel free to contact us if you have any other questions or comments. We appreciate the continued support from our shareholders and look forward to providing everyone with further updates on our business and potential targeted growth opportunities on our second quarter fiscal '22 earnings call that will be in the early February.
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New Ventures. Search Search:. Nov 10, at PM. Those they leave behind, those who have no other life to get back to, have a heavier price to pay. In short, whether the life is criminal or not, the decision is to encourage the psychopath in oneself, to explore that domain of experience where security is boredom and therefore sickness, and one exists in the present, in that enormous present which is without past or future, memory or planned intention, the life where a man must go through until he is beat, where he must gamble with his energies through all those small or large crises of courage and unforeseen situations which beset his day, where he must be with it or doomed not to swing….
And the soundtrack of music that keeps the whole crowd of spring breakers dancing, leaping, and writhing makes their break-time look like a real-life music video. Korine enfolds his actors in a quasi-documentary context and films them with the uninflected signifiers of authenticity—authentic views of a self-conscious artifice.
Whether Korine films half-naked young women exulting on the beach or gunslingers in the heat of conflict or characters reflecting in moments of pensive stillness, he seems to be miming the gesture—this is how, if he had wanted to convey such pleasures, such drama, or such emotion, he might have done it. The closer one gets to the movie, the further it recedes.
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