Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The ponytail was included so that Leela, like the other main characters in Futurama and Groening's other cartoon The Simpsons, would be recognizable in silhouette. [14] During the many stages of character design, Groening decided to give Leela a large nose just for fun, but the animators resisted the idea, believing that it was unnatural.
Pages in category "Fictional characters missing an eye" The following 57 pages are in this category, out of 57 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Basilisk, a large one-eyed mutant in Marvel Comics' New X-Men; Orb (comics), a Marvel Comics super-villain, primarily an adversary of Ghost Rider Shuma-Gorath (or Shuma Gorath), a giant eye with tentacles in the Marvel comics universe, first appearance in Marvel Premiere #10 September 1973
She is one of the few characters in the cast to routinely display competence and the ability to command, and routinely saves the rest of the cast from disaster, but suffers extreme self-doubt because she has only one eye and grew up as a bullied orphan. She first believes herself an alien but later is revealed to be a mutant. Leela is also an ...
A slightly insane weasel who wears a leaf for an eye patch. Voiced by Simon Pegg. One-eyed Weasel Leafie, a Hen into the Wild: A weasel who is the main antagonist of the movie, She persists in hunting Leafie and the ducks for food. She lost her eye during a battle with the guard duck Wanderer when he clawed her eye, but killed Wanderer and his ...
C. Cassie Cage; Caiera; Calendar Girl (DC Comics) California Girls (comic) Nancy Callahan; Captain Kate; Antimony Carver; Bianca Castafiore; Cat Claw; Cathy; Joanie Caucus
Jinx is a fictional character from the G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero toyline, comic books and animated series. She debuted in 1987 as the G.I. Joe Team's female ninja, and since then her code name has been the identity of several other incarnations of the same character, including one of Snake Eyes' apprentices in G.I. Joe: Sigma 6, Chuckles' undercover contact in G.I. Joe: Cobra, and Storm ...
Betty Boop was unique among female cartoon characters because she represented a sexual woman. Other female cartoon characters of the same period, such as Minnie Mouse, displayed their underwear or bloomers regularly, in the style of childish or comical characters, not a fully defined woman's form. Many other female cartoons were merely clones ...