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La Calavera Catrina ("The Dapper [female] Skull") is an image and associated character originating as a zinc etching created by the Mexican printmaker and lithographer José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913). The image is usually dated c. 1910 –12. Its first certain publication date is 1913, when it appeared in a satiric broadside (a newspaper ...
Madballs Classic Series 1 consists of five re-designed Madballs characters from the original Series 1 (Screamin' Meemie, Skull Face, Bash Brain, Slobulus and Horn Head) and also the first new Madballs character since the toy line's original demise in the mid- to late 1980s: Repvile, an angry, blue, scabrous reptilian. Newly designed sculpts for ...
In the original cartoon series, Ram Man is rather short, whereas in the 2002 series he is very large, one of the tallest heroes. He wears an armored helmet in both series, although in the 2002 series he is shown to remove it at times, displaying his short-cropped blonde hair and metal skull cap. He did not use the action figure's axe in the ...
Adam B. Vary said the original cartoon series contains gay subtext, which the live-action movie Masters of the Universe almost turns into explicit text, [61] portraying a "tragic unrequited romance between He-Man and Skeletor", singling out Skeletor's "warped obsession" with He-Man and He-Man never showing an interest in women. [62]
The Mayor of Halloween Town is depicted as a short, fat man who has the appearance of a giant candy corn with a cone-shaped double-sided head, wearing a tall hat, a spider necktie, and a ribbon of office that says "Mayor" on it. His head has two faces: one is peach-skinned, rosy-cheeked, and smiling while the other is white-skinned, pale and ...
Reproduction of the restored Gran calavera eléctrica (Grand electric skull), by Posada 1900–1913 The Calavera Maderista, in the Museo Nacional de Arte, Mexico City The workshop of Posada, Mexico, ca 1900. He began to work with Antonio Vanegas Arroyo , until he was able to establish his own lithographic workshop. From then on Posada undertook ...
It is a large hollow green castle, consisting of two halves connected by a hinge. The toy is designed to open for play and close for storage. A carrying handle is molded into the top of the castle. A large skull decorates the front, with a hinged "Jawbridge" allowing access to the interior, through the "mouth" opening.
A skeleton emerges from the grave and frolics, but at the sound of the owl, the skeleton hides behind a grave. Upset about overreacting to the owl's hooting, the skeleton detaches its head from its neck and chucks it at the owl, knocking the owl's feathers off. Then the head bounces back to the grave and returns to its body.