Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Agent J from the movies Men in Black (film), Men in Black II; Agent K from the movies Men in Black (film), Men in Black II; Agent Larabee from the 1960s spy satire/parody sitcom, Get Smart; Agent Six from Generator Rex; Agent Smith of The Matrix (franchise) Agent Vinod, from the 1977 and 2012 Indian spy films of the same name
Cipher Nine (Star Wars: The Old Republic) (Double and later triple agent) Raven (Tales of Vesperia) (triple agent) Seska (Star Trek: Voyager) Wei Shen (Sleeping Dogs) Thomas Pendrew (Sleeping Dogs) (Possible double agent) Irene Adler (Sherlock Holmes (2009 film)) (Possible triple agent) Riley Hicks (Fast & Furious 6) John Garrett Hydra operative.
The following is a list of female action heroes and villains who appear in action films, television shows, comic books, and video games and who are "thrust into a series of challenges requiring physical feats, extended fights, extensive stunts and frenetic chases." [1]
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Fictional spies. It includes fictional spies that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Fictional female spies , tasked with obtaining secret or confidential information ( intelligence ).
The Hollywood Reporter ' s Power 100 (also known as Women in Entertainment Power 100) list, published annually since 1992, is a ranking of the 100 most powerful women in entertainment—film and television executives, agents, producers and occasionally performers.
Jill Bernhardt is a Deputy DA and one of the four women crime solvers in 'The Women's Murder Club' books by James Patterson; played by Laura Harris on the 2007–2008 ABC series Women's Murder Club. Mirabelle Bevan is an ex-Secret Service agent turned debt collector who solves mysteries in a series set in 1950s Brighton by Scottish author Sara ...
They are often popularized as individual characters rather than parts of the fictional work in which they appear. Stories involving individual detectives are well-suited to dramatic presentation, resulting in many popular theatre, television, and film characters. The first famous detective in fiction was Edgar Allan Poe's C. Auguste Dupin. [1]
B. Mikaela Banes; Mrs Bardell (Pickwick Papers) Lucy Barker; Baroness (G.I. Joe) Basanti (Sholay) Cindy Bear; Andrea Beaumont; Casey Becker; Lyra Belacqua; Belle (Disney character)