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The music video for "Na Na Na" shows the Killjoys' daily lives until Korse defeats them and captures "The Girl," while the video for "Sing" shows the Killjoys' rescue mission to get her back. When asked about the album's title in a November 2010 interview, frontman Gerard Way said that "Danger Days is what it takes to do something great. It ...
The series serves as a sequel to the My Chemical Romance album Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, focusing on the followers of a group of vigilantes trying to continue their fight against a tyrannical megacorporation in a post-apocalyptic future. [1]
The Killjoys have a young girl named Missile Kid as one of their members (portrayed by Grace Jeanette), whom BL/ind is out to capture. At the end of the video, after a standoff, the Killjoys lie defeated on the ground, and Missile Kid has been captured by Korse and the Draculoids. Korse tells the Killjoys to "Keep running."
The music video premiered on MTV.com and VH1.com and was directed by Gerard Way and Paul Brown.Picking up after the events of the "Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na)" music video, "Sing" opens with My Chemical Romance as their alter-egos (The Fabulous Killjoys) driving down a freeway tunnel on their Pontiac Firebird with brief "television advertisement" clips from Better Living Industries ...
Danger Girl is an American comic book series created by J. Scott Campbell and Andy Hartnell that started in March 1998 and is still published as a new series. The comic stars an eponymous group of three sexy female secret agents—Abbey Chase, Sydney Savage and Sonya Savage—who engage in adventures in the vein of other fictional characters like Charlie's Angels, James Bond and Indiana Jones.
Danger Girl and The Army of Darkness (2011) #1-6 When a ruthless dictator gets his hands on the Necronomicon, the Danger Girl team recruits Ash Williams to help take on the Hammer Empire's Deadite army. Co-published with IDW Publishing. Prophecy (2012) #1-7
The girls gave police false names and birth dates – and they had no IDs, according to the police report. “Let’s just cut the bullshit,” a female Miami Beach police officer told the girls.
The Danger Girl, a 1916 American silent comedy film; The Danger Girl, a 1926 American silent drama film; Danger Girl, a 1960s British short film by Harrison Marks; Danger Girl, a future film based on the eponymous comic book Danger Girl