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The Snow Woman was released in Japan on April 20, 1968. [4] It was released in the United States as Snow Ghost by Daiei International Films with English subtitles in 1969. [3] The film was released on VHS by Daiei Home Video on July 8, 1994 [5] and on DVD on July 25, 2014 by Kadokawa Shoten. [6]
Crystal Brilliant Snow Jenne was born in Sonora, California on May 30, 1884. [2] In 1887, she migrated to the Alaska Territory with her parents, who worked as a troupe of actors to entertain the miners. [1] As her father joined the Klondike Gold Rush, they moved to Circle City where her father built an opera house. [2]
Yuki-onna illustration from Sogi Shokoku Monogatari. Yuki-onna originates from folklores of olden times; in the Muromachi period Sōgi Shokoku Monogatari by the renga poet Sōgi, there is a statement on how he saw a yuki-onna when he was staying in Echigo Province (now Niigata Prefecture), indicating that the legends already existed in the Muromachi period.
Snow Woman (story; Japanese: ゆきおんな, romanized: Yuki-onna), a story in the Tokyo Kodomo Club; The Snow Women (novella), a 1970 sword-and-sorcery novella by Fritz Leiber; The Snow Woman (novel), a 1968 novel by Stella Gibbons; The Snow Woman (film; Japanese: 怪談雪女郎, romanized: Kaidan Yukijorō, lit.
Killer Frost is a name used by several female supervillains and superheroes appearing in comic books published by DC Comics: Crystal Frost, Louise Lincoln, and Caitlin Snow. All three usually have some connection to the superhero Firestorm .
Zhong Kui: Snow Girl and the Dark Crystal (Chinese: 钟馗伏魔:雪妖魔灵; sometimes marketed in the US as simply Snow Girl and the Dark Crystal) is a 2015 3D fantasy action adventure film directed by Peter Pau and Zhao Tianyu and starring Chen Kun, Li Bingbing, Winston Chao, Yang Zishan, Bao Bei'er, and Jike Junyi. [4]
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The Glass Coffin has been compared to Snow White, which shares the motif of the woman inside a glass coffin. “The Glass Coffin” first appeared in the 1837 collection of the Grimms’ fairy tales.