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As Ladybug, Marinette's signature ability is creation (through her Lucky Charm superpower). Marinette appears in most Miraculous media, including the main series, the film, the Roblox game, the mobile running game, and the comic books. Marinette's character was inspired by a young woman wearing a ladybug-themed T-shirt who once worked with Astruc.
Alya was initially unaware of Marinette's double life like everyone else before the fourth season when the latter confines her identity as Ladybug to her. [18] Since then, Alya continues to support Marinette in her new role as Guardian of the Miraculous. She usually uses the Fox Miraculous to transform into "Rena Rouge" ("Red Fox"). [19]
Michele Kirichanskaya characterized Adrien as Marinette's "crime-fighting partner" and described the "dynamics" between the two of them as "captivating". [5] She said Adrien's "romantic dynamic" with Marinette "contributes much" to the show's "drama and comedy", adding that the series "creates a love quadrangle by only using two individuals". [5]
Marinette (Vodou), a cruel and vicious loa (spirit) in Haitian Vodou; Marinette Dupain-Cheng, a.k.a. Ladybug, the female title character of the French animated series Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir; Marinette Pichon (born in 1975), a French football player; Marinette Yacht (1954–1991), a line of motor yachts built by Aluminum ...
Marinette's classmates Alix Kubdel and Lê Chiến Kim have a race at the Trocadéro. She entrusts her heirloom pocket watch to her classmates to safeguard it, but it is accidentally destroyed. Alix is akumatized into "Timebreaker", who can make people fade from existence by touching them, giving her the energy to travel back in time.
Mary Loretta Hartley (born June 21, 1940) is an American film and television actress. She is possibly best known for her roles in film as Elsa Knudsen in Sam Peckinpah's Ride the High Country (1962), Susan Clabon in Alfred Hitchcock's Marnie (1964), and Betty Lloyd in John Sturges' Marooned (1969).
Through the tale of Marinette’s life journey, Verrier says the film tackles many timely themes such as the “violence against women and within families, sports as a means of empowerment ...
Donald Jasper Harris, OM (born August 23, 1938) is a Jamaican-American economist and emeritus professor at Stanford University, known for applying post-Keynesian ideas to development economics. [2]