Ad
related to: picture of count olaf
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Count Olaf manages to overpower Larry as the rest of his troupe swarms over him. While Count Olaf in the disguise of Captain Sham has dinner at the Anxious Restaurant with Mr. Poe and the Baudelaire children, Larry serves them food as Count Olaf's theater troupe makes sure that he sticks to the script.
One player assumes the role of Count Olaf, and the other players play the Baudelaire children. Count Olaf's objective in the game is to eliminate the guardian, while the children try to keep the guardian alive. The game employs Clever Cards, Tragedy Cards, Secret Passage Tiles, and Disguise Tiles in play.
Olaf's ramshackle house is filthy and covered in disconcerting eye images; it has a tower which the Baudelaires are forbidden from entering. Count Olaf is unpleasant, easily angered, and forces the children to perform odious chores. It becomes clear that Count Olaf is scheming to collect the Baudelaires' fortune.
And if that wasn't enough, in 2004, the movie version of the books, "Lemony Snicket's: A Series of Unfortunate Events" was released with the amazing Jim Carrey playing the villainous Count Olaf.
Jamie Harris as the Hook-Handed Man, Count Olaf's main minion. Craig Ferguson as the Person of Indeterminate Gender, one of Count Olaf's minions. Jennifer Coolidge and Jane Adams as the White-Faced Women, two of Count Olaf's minions. Cedric the Entertainer as the Constable, a local detective who is skeptical of Count Olaf. Bob Clendenin as ...
John DeSantis as the Bald Man, [19] a tall bald-headed man who is another member of Count Olaf's theatre troupe; Jacqueline and Joyce Robbins as the White-Faced Women, [18] two elderly twins who are members of Count Olaf's theatre troupe; Sara Canning as Jacquelyn Scieszka, Mr. Poe's standoffish secretary and a member of VFD. She possesses a ...
Harris stars as the vile guardian Count Olaf in the six and a half hour (8 parts - 2 per each book) episodic adaptation of the beloved children's book series. He takes care of the Baudelaire ...
Mr. Poe refuses to believe the children's claim the note was a lie by Count Olaf and takes them to dinner with him at the Anxious Clown, a cheap and grimy restaurant with an over-enthusiastic waiter. Needing a distraction to come up with a strategy, Violet puts peppermints in her own food and that of Klaus and Sunny.
Ad
related to: picture of count olaf