LYCOS RETRIEVER
Search Results for "bert is evil"
There are 10 Retriever pages mentioning "bert is evil":
- Q*Bert
Q*Bert was the collaboration of artist Jeff Lee, programmer Warren Davis, and sound engineer David Thiel. Like many early game concepts, Q*Bert started out much differently than the eventual form in which it was released, but the result was a very innovative and fun game that did very well in the arcades. It contained a variety of features, ranging from the pseudo-3D look of the pyramid, to the physical knock sound generated from pinball hardware whenever the player fell off of the pyramid, and the famous unintelligible Q*Bert swearing that he uttered when he collided with an enemy. - Mary Poppins (1964) -- Children
Mary Poppins was a delightful romp for children and the young at heart through a make-believe world of frolic and fantasy. There were no instances of offensive material throughout the movie. While there were several occurences of "magic," there was nothing evil or sinister about any of the "magic." Mary could have been angelic. While some might consider the "We won't go to sleep!" from Michael to Mary Poppins to be arrogance and/or impudence, the obstinence was NOT at his parents. - Ann Blyth -- Mildred Pierce
Ann Blyth, in the role of Veda Pierce, had previously played a few juvenile roles in innocuous fare like Babes on Swing Street (1944) before she got to sink her teeth into the plum role in Mildred Pierce. She is so convincingly evil, mean-spirited, and obnoxious in the role that her peers nominated her for a Best Supporting Actress Oscar. - Ann Blyth -- Joan Crawford
Fine Hollywood tearjerker with Joan Crawford (in her Oscar-winning role) as the waitress-turned-businesswoman who struggles to provide a good life for her children, only to have older daughter Ann Blyth repay her by having an affair with her stepfather. Michael Curtiz directs; with Zachary Scott, Jack Carson, Eve Arden. 111 min. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono; Subtitles: English, Spanish, French; documentary; photo gallery; theatrical trailers. - Mary Poppins -- Children
Mary Poppins is a series of children's books written by P. L. Travers. The original novels were illustrated by Mary Shepard. The books feature main character Mary Poppins who is blown by the wind to Seventeen Cherry Tree Lane, London where she joins the Banks' household and cares for their children. The series is made up of eight novels published between 1935 and 1988. - Crystal Castles
Not to be confused with the Atari game of the same name, Crystal Castles are a bouncy electronic duo from Toronto. I haven't seen them live, and I doubt there's that much to see, but they could be fun (see video below) - especially if they're playing the right party....like something at Studio B (May 25) or at the Museum of Natural History with another band named after a videogame (May 25) (tickets), or something.....Video & tour dates below..... - 1944
What makes this game different from all other simulations of the 1944-45 campaign is its emphasis on the elite units of both sides. They are the units that are mentioned time and again in the histories, spearheading attacks or saving the day when the rest of the defense is crumbling around them. Thus the key to victory for both players is their deployment and use of their elite formations. Exploring this unique design hypothesis is as entertaining as it is thought provoking. - Lindsay Lohan
At three, Lindsay Lohan was a working model. As a kid she appeared in ads for dozens of products from Pizza Hut to the Gap, and co-starred with Bill Cosby in a Jell-O commercial. At six, she was one of the trick-or-treaters who rang David Letterman's doorbell on a Halloween Late Show. Her costume was made from garbage allegedly found on the D-train, and Letterman gave her a garden hose. At ten, Lohan was a semi-regular on the soap opera Another World, as Alexandra "Ally" Fowler. The following year, she made her motion picture debut as twins in Disney's 1998 remake of The Parent Trap with Dennis Quaid. - The Monkees -- Peter Tork
The four young men who became The Monkees were Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork. They were cast after ads were placed in trade publications calling for actors to play “4 insane boys” on a new television series. Among those rejected for the part was a then relatively unknown Stephen Stills. Rumors that Charles Manson ... tried out are just that, rumors. Nesmith and Tork were both already professional musicians, but Dolenz and Jones were better known as actors, and all four were trained in both improvisational comedy and performing musically as a group before the pilot episode was filmed, so that they could look and act like a cohesive band even though only their voices were being used on the initial recordings. - Bertolt Brecht -- Plays
A poet first and foremost, Bertolt Brecht's genius was for language. However, because this language is built upon a certain bold and direct simplicity, his plays often lose something in the translation from his native German. Nevertheless, they contain a rare poetic vision, a voice that has rarely been paralleled in the 20th century.