Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Innocent Venus (Japanese: イノセント・ヴィーナス, Hepburn: Inosento Vīnasu) is a Japanese anime television series which began broadcasting on the Wowow network in Japan on July 26, 2006 at midnight.
A young dark-haired man of few words and absolutely deadly combat abilities. Unarmed, in a Light Warrior suit, or piloting his Gladiator mech, Jō takes out the enemy with alarming ease. After piloting a gladiator tears stream down his face, something he regards as almost like a side-effect. While in Phantom Jō worked as Jin's partner.
Mean Girls is a 2004 American teen comedy film directed by Mark Waters and written by Tina Fey.It stars Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams, Tim Meadows, Ana Gasteyer, Amy Poehler, and Fey.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Yousei Teikoku (Japanese: 妖精帝國, Hepburn: Yōsei Teikoku, German: Das Feenreich; lit."Fairy Empire") is a Japanese rock band formed in 1997. Their music mixes elements of gothic metal, heavy metal, electronic and classical music.
Al MacAfee – A parody of Joe Louis Clark, David Alan Grier plays a strict, yet clueless shop teacher with a bad hip. He is known for working as a Hall Monitor and using a bullhorn to yell at innocent students and teachers, while being oblivious to bad things going on around him, as well as the consistent rejection by a fellow female teacher (played by Kim Wayans), with whom he is infatuated.
The story focuses on Kenichi Shirahama, a 15-year-old high school student and a long-time victim of bullying.At the beginning of the story, he befriends transfer student Miu Fūrinji; and desires to become stronger, he follows her to Ryōzanpaku, a dojo housing several masters of diverse martial arts, led by her grandfather, the undefeated martial artist Hayato Fūrinji.
Innocent (Japanese: イノサン, Hepburn: Inosan, from the French word) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shin-ichi Sakamoto, based on Masakatsu Adachi 's book The Executioner Sanson. [2] It was published in Shueisha's Weekly Young Jump from January 2013 to April 2015, and compiled into nine tankōbon volumes.