Tumgik
#leon kowalski
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
73 notes · View notes
hard-times-paramore · 7 months
Text
Therefore We Are - a Blade Runner fanfic
It's a prequel about the lives of the Replicants from the movie. Plus a few OCs. I am writing together with @sharonz-arty-corner03
Tumblr media
Summary:
The Tyrell Corporation brought about the Nexus 6 Replicant as the promised solution to humanity’s problems.
Unique to themselves and yet the same to everyone else, these feats of genetic engineering knew no limits save those imposed by their masters.
They lived, they worked, they died holding up the colonies' ecosystem as just another cog or wire in the endless machine of life.
Until a group of Replicants—led by one ROY BATTY—decided that they too had thoughts, and relationships and destinies.
This was not called conscience. It was called malfunction.
25 notes · View notes
diioonysus · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
dancing + art
380 notes · View notes
orathearsonman · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
my phone focused on Sarah’s face while I was taking this photo which I would consider a win
3 notes · View notes
lordgrimoire · 2 months
Text
Unnamed DCxDP Au featuring the National Guard
List of Characters from the NatGuard stationed in Amity Park (Company Commanders and up Only)
Lieutenant Colonel Olivia Walker (Was locked out by GIW, defaulting command to Kowalski but backs up everything he’s doing.)
Major Franklin Kowalski-HQ Company
Sergeant Major Robin “Jabber-jaw” Carter (Command Sergeant Major)
Captain Matyas “Mad Matthew” Kucera-Mechanized Infantry Company
Captain Leon Schneider -Mechanized Infantry Company
Captain Grace Campbell-Military Police Company
Captain Harris Hughes-Tank Company
Captain William Christensen-Forward Support Company
70 notes · View notes
slavicafire · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Sur la terrasse. Vintage postcard with artwork by Leon Kowalski, dated around 1910-1926. 
116 notes · View notes
troybeecham · 11 months
Text
Today the Church remembers the 108 Blessed Polish Martyrs.
Orate pro nobis.
The 108 Blessed Polish Martyrs were Roman Catholic Christians in Poland killed during World War II by the Nazis, either in the concentration camps or by mass slaughter on the streets. The group comprises 3 bishops, 79 priests, 7 male religious, 8 female religious, and 11 lay people. There are two parishes named for the 108 Martyrs of World War II in Powiercie in Koło County, and in Malbork, Poland.
The 108 Blessed Martyrs were beatified on 13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II in Warsaw, Poland.
List of Martyrs
Bishops
1. Antoni Julian Nowowiejski (1858–1941 KL Soldau), bishop
2. Leon Wetmański (1886–1941 KL Soldau), bishop
3. Władysław Goral (1898–1945 KL Sachsenhausen), bishop
Priests
1. Adam Bargielski, priest from Myszyniec (1903–1942 KZ Dachau)
2. Aleksy Sobaszek, priest (1895–1942 KL Dachau)
3. Alfons Maria Mazurek, Carmelite friar, prior, priest (1891–1944, shot by the Gestapo)
4. Alojzy Liguda, Society of the Divine Word, priest (1898–1942 KL Dachau)
5. Anastazy Jakub Pankiewicz, Franciscan friar, priest (1882–1942 KL Dachau)
6. Anicet Kopliński, Capuchin friar, priest in Warsaw (1875–1941)
7. Antoni Beszta-Borowski, priest, dean of Bielsk Podlaski (1880–1943, shot near Bielsk Podlaski)
8. Antoni Leszczewicz, Marian Father, priest (1890–1943, burnt to death in Rosica, Belarus)
9. Antoni Rewera, priest, dean of the Cathedral Chapter in Sandomierz (1869–1942 KL Dachau)
10. Antoni Świadek, priest from Bydgoszcz (1909–1945 KL Dachau)
11. Antoni Zawistowski, priest (1882–1942 KL Dachau)
12. Bolesław Strzelecki, priest (1896–1941 KL Auschwitz)
13. Bronisław Komorowski, priest (1889–22 March 1940 KL Stutthof)
14. Dominik Jędrzejewski, priest (1886–1942 KL Dachau)
15. Edward Detkens, priest (1885–1942 KL Dachau)
16. Edward Grzymała, priest (1906–1942 KL Dachau)
17. Emil Szramek, priest (1887–1942 KL Dachau)
18. Fidelis Chojnacki, Capuchin friar, priest (1906–1942, KL Dachau)
19. Florian Stępniak, Capuchin friar, priest (1912–1942 KL Dachau)
20. Franciszek Dachtera, priest (1910–23 August 1942 KL Dachau)
21. Franciszek Drzewiecki, Orionine Father, priest (1908–1942 KL Dachau); from Zduny, he was condemned to heavy work in the plantation of Dachau. While he was bending over tilling the soil, he adored the consecrated hosts kept in a small box in front of him. While he was going to the gas chamber, he encouraged his companions, saying "We offer our life for God, for the Church and for our Country".
22. Franciszek Rogaczewski, priest from Gdańsk (1892–1940, shot in Stutthof or in Piaśnica, Pomerania)
23. Franciszek Rosłaniec, priest (1889–1942 KL Dachau)
24. Henryk Hlebowicz, priest (1904–1941, shot at Borisov in Belarus)
25. Henryk Kaczorowski, priest from Włocławek (1888–1942)
26. Henryk Krzysztofik, religious priest (1908–1942 KL Dachau)
27. Hilary Paweł Januszewski, religious priest (1907–1945 KL Dachau)
28. Jan Antonin Bajewski, Conventual Franciscan friar, priest (1915–1941 KL Auschwitz); of Niepokalanow. These were the closest collaborators of St Maximilian Kolbe in the fight for God's cause and together suffered and helped each other spiritually in their offering their lives at Auschwitz
29. Jan Franciszek Czartoryski, Dominican friar, priest (1897–1944)
30. Jan Nepomucen Chrzan, priest (1885–1942 KL Dachau)
31. Jerzy Kaszyra, Marian Father, priest (1910–1943, burnt to death in Rosica, Belarus)
32. Józef Achilles Puchała, Franciscan friar, priest (1911–1943, killed near Iwieniec, Belarus)
33. Józef Cebula, Missionary Oblate, priest (23 March 1902 – 9 May 1941 KL Mauthausen)[
34. Józef Czempiel, priest (1883–1942 KL Mauthausen)
35. Józef Innocenty Guz, Franciscan friar, priest (1890–1940 KL Sachsenhausen)
36. Józef Jankowski, Pallotine, priest (1910 born in Czyczkowy near Brusy, Kashubia (died 16 October 1941 in KL Auschwitz beaten by a kapo)
37. Józef Kowalski, Salesian, priest (1911–1942) , priest beaten to death on 3 July 1942 in the KL Auschwitz concentration camp
38. Józef Kurzawa, priest (1910–1940)
39. Józef Kut, priest (1905–1942 KL Dachau)
40. Józef Pawłowski, priest (1890–9 January 1942 KL Dachau)
41. Józef Stanek, Pallottine, priest (1916–23 September 1944, murdered in Warsaw)
42. Józef Straszewski, priest (1885–1942 KL Dachau)
43. Karol Herman Stępień, Franciscan friar, priest (1910–1943, killed near Iwieniec, Belarus)
44. Kazimierz Gostyński, priest (1884–1942 KL Dachau)
45. Kazimierz Grelewski, priest (1907–1942 KL Dachau)
46. Kazimierz Sykulski, priest (1882–1942 KL Auschwitz)
47. Krystyn Gondek, Franciscan friar, priest (1909–1942 KL Dachau)
48. Leon Nowakowski, priest (1913–1939)
49. Ludwik Mzyk, Society of the Divine Word, priest (1905–1940)
50. Ludwik Pius Bartosik, Conventual Franciscan friar, priest (1909–1941 KL Auschwitz); of Niepokalanow. These were the closest collaborators of St Maximilian Kolbe in the fight for God's cause and together suffered and helped each other spiritually in their offering their lives at Auschwitz
51. Ludwik Roch Gietyngier, priest from Częstochowa (1904–1941 KL Dachau)
52. Maksymilian Binkiewicz, priest (1913–24 July 1942, beaten, died in KL Dachau)
53. Marian Gorecki, priest (1903–22 March 1940 KL Stutthof)
54. Marian Konopiński, Capuchin friar, priest (1907–1 January 1943 KL Dachau)
55. Marian Skrzypczak, priest (1909–1939 shot in Plonkowo)
56. Michał Oziębłowski, priest (1900–1942 KL Dachau)
57. Michał Piaszczyński, priest (1885–1940 KL Sachsenhausen)
58. Michał Woźniak, priest (1875–1942 KL Dachau)
59. Mieczysław Bohatkiewicz, priest (1904–4 March 1942, shot in Berezwecz)
60. Narcyz Putz, priest (1877–1942 KL Dachau)
61. Narcyz Turchan, priest (1879–1942 KL Dachau)
62. Piotr Edward Dankowski, priest (1908–3 April 1942 KL Auschwitz)
63. Roman Archutowski, priest (1882–1943 KL Majdanek)
64. Roman Sitko, priest (1880–1942 KL Auschwitz)
65. Stanisław Kubista, Society of the Divine Word, priest (1898–1940 KL Sachsenhausen)
66. Stanisław Kubski, priest (1876–1942, prisoner in KL Dachau, killed in Hartheim near Linz)
67. Stanisław Mysakowski, priest (1896–1942 KL Dachau)
68. Stanisław Pyrtek, priest (1913–4 March 1942, shot in Berezwecz)
69. Stefan Grelewski, priest (1899–1941 KL Dachau)
70. Wincenty Matuszewski, priest (1869–1940)
71. Władysław Błądziński, Michaelite, priest (1908–1944, KL Gross-Rosen)
72. Władysław Demski, priest (1884–28 May 1940, KL Sachsenhausen)
73. Władysław Maćkowiak, priest (1910–4 March 1942 shot in Berezwecz)
74. Władysław Mączkowski, priest (1911–20 August 1942 KL Dachau)
75. Władysław Miegoń, priest, commander lieutenant (1892–1942 KL Dachau)
76. Włodzimierz Laskowski, priest (1886–1940 KL Gusen)
77. Wojciech Nierychlewski, religious, priest (1903–1942, KL Auschwitz)
78. Zygmunt Pisarski, priest (1902–1943)
79. Zygmunt Sajna, priest (1897–1940, shot at Palmiry, near Warsaw)
Religious brothers
1. Brunon Zembol, friar (1905–1942 KL Dachau)
2. Grzegorz Bolesław Frąckowiak, Society of the Divine Word friar (1911–1943, guillotined in Dresden)
3. Józef Zapłata, friar (1904–1945 KL Dachau)
4. Marcin Oprządek, friar (1884–1942 KL Dachau)
5. Piotr Bonifacy Żukowski, friar (1913–1942 KL Auschwitz)
6. Stanisław Tymoteusz Trojanowski, friar (1908–1942 KL Auschwitz)
7. Symforian Ducki, friar (1888–1942 KL Auschwitz)
Nuns and religious sisters
1. Alicja Maria Jadwiga Kotowska, sister, based on eye-witness reports comforted and huddled with Jewish children before she and the children were executed (1899–1939, executed at Piaśnica, Pomerania)
2. Ewa Noiszewska, sister (1885–1942, executed at Góra Pietrelewicka near Slonim, Belarus)
3. Julia Rodzińska, Dominican sister (1899–20 February 1945, KL Stutthof); she died having contracted typhoid serving the Jewish women prisoners in a hut for which she had volunteered.
4. Katarzyna Celestyna Faron (1913–1944, KL Auschwitz); (1913–1944), had offered her life for the conversion of an Old Catholic bishop Władysław Faron (no relation). She was arrested by the Gestapo and condemned to Auschwitz camp. She put up heroically with all the abuses of the camp and died on Easter Sunday 1944. The bishop later returned to the Catholic Church).
5. Maria Antonina Kratochwil, SSND nun (1881–1942) died as a result of the torture she endured while imprisoned in Stanisławów.
6. Maria Klemensa Staszewska (1890–1943 KL Auschwitz)
7. Marta Wołowska (1879–1942, executed at Góra Pietrelewicka near Slonim, Belarus)
8. Mieczysława Kowalska, sister (1902–1941, Soldau concentration camp in Działdowo)
Roman Catholic laity
1. Bronisław Kostkowski, alumnus (1915–1942 KL Dachau)
2. Czesław Jóźwiak (1919–1942, guillotined in a prison in Dresden)
3. Edward Kaźmierski (1919–1942, guillotined in a prison in Dresden)
4. Edward Klinik (1919–1942, guillotined in a prison in Dresden)
5. Franciszek Kęsy (1920–1942, guillotined in a prison in Dresden)
6. Franciszek Stryjas (1882–31 July 1944, Kalisz prison)
7. Jarogniew Wojciechowski (1922–1942, guillotined in a prison in Dresden)
8. Marianna Biernacka (1888–13 July 1943), executed instead of her pregnant daughter-in-law Anna, offered her life for her and her unborn grandchild)
9. Natalia Tułasiewicz (1906–31 March 1945, died in KL Ravensbrück)
10. Stanisław Starowieyski (1895–1941 in KL Dachau)
11. Tadeusz Dulny, alumnus (1914–1942 KL Dachau)
Almighty God, by whose grace and power your Holy Martyrs of Poland triumphed over suffering and were faithful even to death: Grant us, who now remember them in thanksgiving, to be so faithful in our witness to you in this world, that we may receive with them the crown of life; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. Amen.
(Fr. Józef Kowalski, priest beaten to death on 3 July 1942 in the KL Auschwitz concentration camp)
(Sr. Alicja Jadwiga Kotowska, a nun killed protecting a group of Jewish children in 1939 in the mass murders in Piaśnica)
Tumblr media
39 notes · View notes
warrenwoodhouse · 7 months
Text
Cliques - Bully Guide (Game Guides) (Guides)
List of all of the cliques in Bully and in Bully: Scholarship Edition.
Main Game
Nerds
Boys
Algernon “Algie” Papadopoulos
Bucky Pasteur
Earnest Jones
Melvin O’Connor
Donald Anderson
Cornelius Johnson
Fatty Johnson
Thad Carlson
Girls
Beatrice Trudeau
Hangouts
The Library
The Observatory
Preppies
Boys
Chad Morris
Gord Vendome
Parker Ogilvie
Tad Spencer
Derby Harrington
Bif Taylor
Bryce Montrose
Justin Vandervelde
Girls
Pinky Gauthier
Hangouts
Harrington House
Old Bullworth Vale
Glass Jaw Gym
Greasers
Boys
Johnny Vincent
Ricky Pucino
Hal Esposito
Lefty Mancini
Norton Williams
Peanut Romano
Vance Medici
Girls
Lola Lombardi
Hangouts
Auto Shop
Add
Jocks
Boys
Kirby Olsen
Casey Harris
Bo Jackson
Damon West
Dan Wilson
Juri Karamazov
Luis Luna
Ted Thompson
Girls
Mandy Wiles
Hangouts
Football Field
Swimming Pool
Gym
None
Boys
Gary Smith
Peter “Petey” Kowalski
James “Jimmy” Hopkins
Constantinos Brakus
Ivan Alexander
Gordon Wakefield
Lance Jackson
Pedro De La Hoya
Ray Hughes
Sheldon Thompson
Trevor Moore
Girls
Angie Ng
Eunice Pound
Christy Martin
Gloria Jackson
Karen Johnson
Melody Adams
Zoe Taylor
Hangouts
Bullworth Academy
Bullies
Boys
Russell Northrop
Trent Northwick
Davis White
Ethan Robinson
Tom Gurney
Troy Miller
Wade Martin
Girls
None
Hangouts
Bullworth Academy
Carpark - Bullworth Academy
Townies
Boys
Duncan
Edgar Munsen
Clint (aka: Henry)
Gurney
Jerry
Leon
Omar Romero
Otto Tyler
Girls
Zoe Taylor (before re-attending Bullworth Academy)
Hangouts
Add
Townsfolk
Boys/Men
Mr. Doolin
Add
Girls/Women
Miss Abby
Add
Hangouts
Old Bullworth Vale
Add
Police
Boys/Men
Officer Williams
Girls/Women
None
Hangouts
Old Bullworth Vale
Bullworth Town
Add
Prefects
Boys/Men
Prefect 1
Prefect 2
Prefect 3
Girls/Women
None
Hangouts
Bullworth Academy
Orderlies
Boys/Men
Add
Add
Girls/Women
None
Hangouts
Add
Add
Carnival Folk
Boys/Men
Add
Add
Girls/Women
The Siamese Twins
Add
The Last Mermaid
Hangouts
Billie Crane’s Traveling Carnival
Faculty
Men
Dr. Crabblesnitch (Principal)
Mr. Burton (Gym Teacher)
Mr. Lionel Galloway (English Teacher)
Mr. Hattrick (Math Teacher) (Scholarship Edition)
Mr. Luntz (Janitor, Shop Attendant)
Mr. Matthews (Geography Teacher) (Scholarship Edition)
Neil (Shop Teacher)
Dr. Slawter (Biology Teacher) (Scholarship Edition)
Dr. Watts (Chemistry Teacher)
Mr. Wiggins (History Teacher) (Scholarship Edition)
Women
Miss. Danvers (Secretary)
Mrs. Carvin (Librarian)
Edna (Cook)
Mrs. Danica McRae (Nurse)
Mrs. Peabody (Girls’ Dorm Hall Monitor)
Miss. Peters (Music Teacher) (Scholarship Edition)
Ms. Deidre Philips (Art Teacher, Photography Teacher)
Hangouts
Bullworth Academy
8 notes · View notes
jedivoodoochile · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Nexus VI replicant, Leon Kowalski is incepted on this day in 2017.
25 notes · View notes
justforbooks · 11 months
Photo
Tumblr media
“I always felt like the kid that sat at the foot of the gods,” said Treat Williams, who has died aged 71 following a road accident. And it is true that the first decade of his movie career was dominated by one high-calibre director after another.
John Sturges put the doughy-faced, darkly handsome actor toe-to-toe with Michael Caine in The Eagle Has Landed (1976), adapted from Jack Higgins’s novel about a plot to kidnap Winston Churchill. Miloš Forman gave Williams his first lead, as the hippie Berger in the screen version (1979) of the 1967 musical Hair. He was an ill-tempered army corporal in Steven Spielberg’s wartime comedy 1941 (also 1979). Sidney Lumet drew on his cocksure swagger and his air of moral ambiguity in Prince of the City (1981), a thriller about police corruption. And Sergio Leone cast him as a union boss in the gangster epic Once Upon a Time in America (1984).
It was Lumet’s film that announced Williams as a formidable talent, with a special aptitude for ensemble playing. He starred as Danny Ciello, a corrupt drugs squad detective who becomes increasingly isolated as he informs on his colleagues in the elite Special Investigations Unit. The character was based on the detective Robert Leuci. Williams lived with Leuci while preparing for the part. He also attended drug busts and hung out with police officers. “By the time we started rehearsals, I was thinking like a cop,” he said.
Janet Maslin in the New York Times commended the “playful, arrogant, effectively brazen quality” of his portrayal. Equally integral is the seam of self-disgust that runs through Ciello, first when he is exploiting his power over drug addicts and dealers, then when he turns on his own kind.
Williams went on to display a menacing eroticism in Smooth Talk (1985), directed by Joyce Chopra and based on Joyce Carol Oates’s 1966 short story Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? When he turns up in the second half of the film as Arnold Friend, a vision of adult masculine prowess that the teenage protagonist (Laura Dern) seems to have been yearning for, he is simultaneously ridiculous, alluring and intimidating.
Williams was born in Stamford, Connecticut, and raised in nearby Rowayton, the son of Richard, a pharmaceuticals executive, and Marian (nee Andrews), an antiques dealer who also ran a sailing school. He was educated at Kent school, Connecticut, where he first began acting, and at Franklin & Marshall College, Pennsylvania. He studied in New York at the Actors Studio, where his classmates included Mickey Rourke, and was hired as understudy to four parts (including Doody, played on stage by John Travolta) in the Broadway production of Grease. Eventually he took over the lead role of Danny Zuko, which he played for three years.
Having already appeared on stage in the London production of The Ritz, Terrence McNally’s comedy about a hounded businessman hiding out in a gay bath-house, he was then cast in Richard Lester’s 1976 movie version.
Auditioning for the film of Hair was a lengthy and arduous process. During his 12th audition, he recalled: “I started removing all of my clothing. At the end of the monologue, I was standing stark naked in front of them … They applauded, and I told them: ‘This is all that I’ve got, I don’t know what else I can give you.’” It was enough.
Discouraged when Hair, 1941 and the comedy Why Would I Lie? (1980) continued a run of box-office flops, he began an alternative career flying planes in Los Angeles. A call from Lumet, who was looking for an un-starry and largely unknown cast for Prince of the City, put him back on track.
He continued to alternate between film and theatre, following Lumet’s picture by appearing in Ohio in Carlo Goldoni’s farce The Servant of Two Masters and on Broadway taking over from Kevin Kline as the Pirate King in The Pirates of Penzance. On television, he played the boxer Jack Dempsey in the TV movie Dempsey (1983), Stanley Kowalski – opposite Ann-Margret as Stella – in A Streetcar Named Desire (1984), the title role in J. Edgar Hoover (1987) and the super-agent Michael Ovitz, co-founder of CAA, in The Late Shift (1996), for which he was Emmy-nominated.
In Things to Do in Denver When You’re Dead (1995), he played a thug working as an undertaker and using corpses as punch-bags. He was also in the noir-ish Mulholland Falls, the superhero adventure The Phantom (both 1996) and the thriller The Devil’s Own (1997), starring Harrison Ford and Brad Pitt.
Better than these were two projects that displayed his versatility: the monster movie Deep Rising (1998), in which he does battle with sharp-fanged sea-serpents, and The Deep End of the Ocean (1999), starring Williams and Michelle Pfeiffer as a couple reunited with their son many years after he was kidnapped.
He starred in Woody Allen’s Hollywood Ending (2002), played James Franco’s father in Danny Boyle’s 127 Hours, and the writer Mark Schorer in Howl (both 2010), which also starred Franco as Allen Ginsberg. He had a recurring role on the series Everwood (2002-06), as a widowed neurosurgeon settling in Colorado with his children, and on the cop drama Blue Bloods (2016-23). He also appeared in many Hallmark channel productions, including the series Chesapeake Shores (2016-22), as well as the Netflix musical Dolly Parton’s Christmas on the Square (2020).
He is survived by his wife, Pam Van Sant, whom he married in 1988, and their children, Gill and Ellie.
🔔 Richard Treat Williams, actor, born 1 December 1951; died 12 June 2023
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at http://justforbooks.tumblr.com
14 notes · View notes
bladerunnerfanatic · 1 year
Text
19 notes · View notes
thehyperrequiem · 1 year
Text
Madagascar Trilogy (Thehypercutter Style) Cast
Madagascar 1: "A group of cartoon creatures who have spent all their life in a New York Zoo end up in the jungles of Madagascar and must adjust to living in the wild."
Madagascar 2; Escape 2 Africa: "The Madagascar cartoon creatures fly back to New York City, but crash-land on an African nature reserve in Kenya, where they meet others of their own kind, and Om-Nom especially discovers his royal heritage as prince of a grumpus pride."
Madagascar 3; Europe's Most Wanted: "The Madagascar cartoon creatures join a struggling European circus to get back to New York but find themselves being pursued by a psychotic cartoon creature-control officer."
Om Nom (Cut the Rope) as Alex the Lion
Boo (Cut the Rope) as Wild/Savage Alex
Gingerbrave (Cookie Run) as Marty the Zebra
Blast Hornet (Megaman X3) as Melman the Giraffe
Spike Rosered (Megaman X5) as Gloria the Hippo
Anasui (JJBA Part 6) as Mason
Weather Report (JJBA Part 6) as Phil
Bruno Bucciarati (JJBA Part 5) as Skipper
Giorno Giovanna (JJBA Part 5) as Kowalski
Pannacotta Fugo (JJBA Part 5) as Rico
Narachia Ghirga (JJBA Part 5) as Private
Guido Mista and Leone Abbacchio (JJBA Part 5) as themselves/5th and 6th Penguins
Befana (Miraculous Ladybug) as Nana
Magna Centipede (Megaman X2) as King Julien
Gravity Antonion (Megaman X8) as Maurice
Strabby (Bugsnax) as Mort
The Bugsnax (Bugsnax) as The Lemurs
The Pigs (Angry Birds) as The Foosa
Wambus Troubleham (Bugsnax) as Zuba
Triffany Lottablog (Bugsnax) as Florrie
King Dedede (Kirby) as Makunga
Nibble Nom (Cut the Rope) as Young Alex
Custard Cookie III (Cookie Run) as Young Marty
Beedrill (Pokemon) as Young Melman
Carmine Rose (Cookie Run) as Young Gloria
Hooverton (Balan Wonderworld) as Teetsi
Filbo Fiddlepie (Bugsnax) as Himself/Lion Pride's Mayor
Plantman (Megaman 6) as Moto Moto
Pyrogen (Mighty No.9) as Vitaly
Fireman (Megaman 1) as Himself/Vitaly's Cousin
Om-Nelle (Cut the Rope) as Gia
Johnny Joestar (JJBA Part 7) as Stefano
Gyro Zeppeli (JJBA Part 7) as Himself/Stefano's Partner
Queen Chrysalis (My Little Pony) as Chantel DuBois
Morph Moth (Megaman X2) as Sonya the Bear
7 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Bladerunner (1982) Lobby Cards / Director Sir Ridley Scott regards this movie as probably his most personal and complete movie. At some point of this movie, each replicant has a red brightness in his or her eyes. It is most prominently seen in the replicant owl at Dr. Elden Tyrell's office. Leon Kowalski has the red glow during his Voight-Kampff test, like Rachael during her test; Rachael also has the glow in Rick Deckard's home; Pris in J.F. Sebastian's. Zhora has the glow while in the club; Roy Batty has the glow several times, most prominently while killing Tyrell. Deckard also has the shining in his eyes while talking to Rachael in his house. In July 2000, Director Sir Ridley Scott confirmed that Deckard is, in fact, a replicant. Harrison Ford takes issue with this, however. "We had agreed that he definitely was not a replicant", Ford said. In his autobiography, Rutger Hauer expressed some disappointment with Scott's revelation, because he felt that it reduced the final clash between Deckard and Batty from a symbolic "man vs. machine" battle to two replicants fighting. At some point of this movie, each replicant has a red brightness in his or her eyes. It is most prominently seen in the replicant owl at Dr. Elden Tyrell's office. Leon Kowalski has the red glow during his Voight-Kampff test, like Rachael during her test; Rachael also has the glow in Rick Deckard's home; Pris in J.F. Sebastian's. Zhora has the glow while in the club; Roy Batty has the glow several times, most prominently while killing Tyrell. Deckard also has the shining in his eyes while talking to Rachael in his house. In July 2000, Director Sir Ridley Scott confirmed that Deckard is, in fact, a replicant. Harrison Ford takes issue with this, however. "We had agreed that he definitely was not a replicant", Ford said. In his autobiography, Rutger Hauer expressed some disappointment with Scott's revelation, because he felt that it reduced the final clash between Deckard and Batty from a symbolic "man vs. machine" battle to two replicants fighting. https://www.instagram.com/p/CmNcTDlsqyN/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
12 notes · View notes
iffltd · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
o
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
                                           C          A          S          T
H   a   r   r   i   s   o   n     F o r d  .....  Rick Deckard
S   e   a   n     Y o u n g  .....  Rachael
R   u   t   g   e   r     H a u e r  .....  Roy Batty
D   a   r   y   l     H a n n a h  .....  Pris
J   o   e     T u r k e l  .....  Dr. Eldon Tyrell
J   o   a   n   n   a     C a s s i d y  .....  Zhora
M .     E   m   m   e   t       W a l s h  .....  Capt. Bryant
J   a   m   e   s     H o n g  .....  Chew
W   i   l   l   i   a   m     S a n d e r s o n  .....  J. F. Sebastian
B   r   i   o   n     J a m e s  .....  Leon Kowalski
M   o   r   g   a   n     P a u l l  .....  Holden
H   y     P   y   k   e  .....  Taffy Lewis
E   d   w   a   r   d     J a m e s     O l m o s  .....  Gaff
Tumblr media
                                              C          A          S          T
Kurt Russell  .....  M   a   c   R   e   a   d   y
A. Wilford Brimley .....  B   l   a   i   r
T. K. Carter  .....  N   a   u   l   s
David Clennon  .....  P   a   l   m   e   r
Keith David  .....  C   h   i   l   d   s
Richard Dysart  .....  C   o   p   p   e   r
Charles Hallahan  .....  N   o   r   r   i   s
Peter Maloney  .....  B   e   n   n   i   n   g   s
Richard Masur  .....  C   l   a   r   k
Donald Moffat .....  G   a   r   r   y
Joel Polis  .....  F   u   c   h   s
Thomas Waites  .....  W   i   n   d   o   w   s
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
celebrating the 40th anniversary of the releases of  BLADE RUNNER and John Carpenter’s THE THING  on June 25, 1982
Part 1  -  Casts
art by Grzegorz Domaradzki  (”Gabz”)
9 notes · View notes
orathearsonman · 8 months
Text
spending 4 hours on RPG maker MZ designing my cringefail littleguy and having him be bullied by npcs. Therapy
1 note · View note
Text
WHEN A DEAD BODY IS FOUND AT AN ANCIENT BURAL SITE, THE TEAM TRIES TO FIGURE OUT THE MOTIVE AND SYMBOLISM BEHIND THE CRIME, ON “NCIS,” MONDAY, OCT 3
“Unearth” – When a dead body is found at an ancient burial site that is thought to be cursed, the team tries to determine the motive and the symbolism behind the crime. Also, as Torres continues therapy with Dr. Grace, he discovers that their lives are in danger, on the CBS Original Series NCIS, Monday, Oct 3 (9:00-10:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network and available to stream live and on demand on Paramount+*.
REGULAR CAST:
Sean Murray
(NCIS Special Agent Timothy McGee)
Wilmer Valderrama
(NCIS Special Agent Nicholas “Nick” Torres)
Brian Dietzen
(Medical Examiner Jimmy Palmer)
Diona Reasonover
Katrina Law
(Forensic Scientist Kasie Hines)
(NCIS Special Agent Jessica Knight)
Rocky Carroll
Gary Cole
(NCIS Director Leon Vance)
(FBI Special Agent Alden Parker)
GUEST CAST:
Laura San Giacomo
(Dr. Grace Confalone)
Laith Wallschleger
(Erik Nilsson/Dozer)
Jonathan Kowalsky
(Nate Holt/Rookie)
Billy Miller
(Ezra Moretti/Second Man)
Beth Fraser
(Reporter #1)
Danny Royce
(Reporter #2)
Jane Carr
(Dr. Erica Heller)
Mike McShane
(Dr. Matthew Heller)
Grace Narducci
(Nicole)
Deborah Vancelette
(Nurse)
Marty Dew
(Daniel Vega)
WRITTEN BY: Yasemin Yilmaz
DIRECTED BY: Diana Valentine
2 notes · View notes