Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The eponymous Kyurangers is a team of warriors composed of humanoids, androids, and animalistic aliens from different star systems who serve as members of the Rebellion (リベリオン, Riberion), an insurrection army fighting to liberate the universe from the evil Jark Matter syndicate, using the powers of magical stones called Kyutamas. [2]
The 2-beating combinations (referred to above as "bombs") are called slams, and their rules are: A single 2 is beaten by any quartet or a double sequence of 3+ pairs (same as above) A pair of 2s is beaten by 2 consecutive quartets or a double sequence of 5+ pairs; A triplet of 2s is beaten by 3 consecutive quartets or a double sequence of 7+ pairs
G Men is a 1935 Warner Bros. crime film starring James Cagney, Ann Dvorak, Margaret Lindsay and Lloyd Nolan in his film debut. According to Variety, the movie was one of the top-grossing films of 1935. [ 3 ]
Kyuranger is considered the fifth space-themed series [a] whose primary motifs are constellations and Greco-Roman mythology, and it is also the first Super Sentai series to introduce nine regular members in the beginning instead of five or fewer like previous installments. The team later gains three additional members, increasing the number to ...
[2] In 2011, he started his music career under the producer Tatsuro Mashiko, who is a composer. In 2014, Kishi left LDH. On 1 December 2016, he announced that he is represented with Yōdō from K-Dash. [3] [non-primary source needed] In 2017, Kishi joined the cast of Uchu Sentai Kyuranger, playing Stinger / Sasori Orange. He also starred in the ...
Gay magazines in Japan, along with much gay culture, are segregated by 'type' [1] (e.g., muscular men, older men, specific occupations); G-men was founded in 1995 to cater to gay men who preferred "macho fantasy", as opposed to the sleeker, yaoi-inspired styles popular in the 1980s, and focused on "macho type" (muscular, bearish men) and gaten-kei (ガテン系, blue-collar workers).
Gang vs. G-Men is the fourth in the Gyangu series of films [3] and the first in the series to be directed by Fukasaku. [2] Fukasaku went on to also direct the seventh film in the series, League of Gangsters (1963). [4] Gang vs. G-Men was the first film shot by Fukasaku in color.
The lên đồng ritual in process. Múa mồi (fire dance) in lên đồng ritual. Lên đồng (Vietnamese: [len ɗə̂wŋm], chữ Nôm: 𨖲童), votive dance, "to mount the medium", [1] or "going into trance" [2]) is a ritual practiced in Vietnamese folk religion, in which followers become spirit mediums for various kinds of spirits.