#Anne Altieri
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The Christmas Special Day 2: A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965)
The Christmas Special Day 2: A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965)
Director: Bill Melendez Writer: Charles M. Schulz Cast: Peter Robbins, Christopher Shea, Kathy Steinberg, Tracy Stratford, Chris Doran, Geoffrey Ornstein, Karen Mendelson, Sally Dryer, Ann Altieri, Bill Melendez Plot: It’s nearly Christmas, but Charlie Brown (Peter Robbins) can’t seem to find it within himself to enjoy the season. Nobody is sending him any Christmas cards, his little sister Sally…
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#1965#A Charlie Brown Christmas#Animation#Ann Altieri#Bill Melendez#Charles Schulz#Chris Doran#Christmas#Christopher Shea#Comic Strip#Geoffrey Ornstein#Karen Mendelson#Kathy Steinberg#Peanuts#Peter Robbins#Sally Dryer#Tracy Stratford
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🕸🕯MASTERLIST🕯🕸
Requests: Open / Closed
𝗔𝗻𝘆 𝘀𝗽𝗲𝗰𝗶𝗳𝗶𝗰 𝗿𝗲𝗾𝘂𝗲𝘀𝘁𝘀 (𝘃𝗶𝗮 𝗳𝗶𝗰𝘀) 𝘁𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗣𝗲𝗱𝗼𝗽𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗶𝗮, 𝗥𝗮𝗽𝗲, 𝗡𝗲𝗰𝗿𝗼𝗽𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗶𝗮, 𝗖𝗼𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗽𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗶𝗮, 𝗘𝗺𝗲𝘁𝗼𝗽𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗶𝗮 𝗲𝘁𝗰: 𝘄𝗶𝗹𝗹 𝗯𝗲 𝗻𝗼𝘁 𝗯𝗲 𝘄𝗿𝗶𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗻 𝘂𝗽
"𝙸𝚏 𝙸 𝚏𝚎𝚎𝚕 𝚕𝚒𝚔𝚎 𝚒𝚝, 𝙸 𝚖𝚒𝚐𝚑𝚝 𝚝𝚊𝚔𝚎 𝚌𝚎𝚛𝚝𝚊𝚒𝚗 𝚛𝚎𝚚𝚞𝚎𝚜𝚝𝚜 𝚏𝚘𝚛 𝚏𝚊𝚗𝚏𝚒𝚌𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗 𝚊𝚗𝚍 𝚊𝚛𝚝𝚠𝚘𝚛𝚔:"
Update/s: --
♡♤|~•○Who I write for○•~|♤♡
》 🄻🄾🅁🄳🅂 🄾🄵 🄲🄷🄰🄾🅂
- Dead
- Euronymous
- Necrobutcher
- Hellhammer
- Bård Faust
- Occultus
- Metalion
- Ann-Marit
》 🄷🄾🅁🅁🄾🅁/🅂🄻🄰🅂🄷🄴🅁🅂
- Michael Myers
- Jason Voorhees
- Freddy Krueger
- Leatherface
- Pinhead
- Candyman
- Hannibal Lecter
- Carrie White
- Brahms Heelshire
- Bo Sinclair
- Vincent Sinclair
- Lester Sinclair
》 🅃🄷🄴 🄱🄾🅆🄴🅁🅂 🄶🄰🄽🄶
- Henry Bowers
- Patrick Hockstetter
- Victor Criss
- Belch Huggins
》 🅂🄲🅁🄴🄰🄼 🄺🄸🄻🄻🄴🅁🅂
- Billy Loomis
- Stu Matcher
- Mickey Altieri
- Debbie Salt**
- Roman Bridger
- Charlie Walker
- Jill Roberts
- Richie Kirsch
- Amber Freeman
- Detective Bailey
- Quinn Bailey
- Ethan Landry
》 🄲🅁🄴🄴🄿🅈🄿🄰🅂🅃🄰
- Jeff The Killer
- Jane Everlasting
- Nina The Killer
- BEN_Drowned
- Eyeless Jack
- Bloody Painter
- Clockwork
- Ticci Toby
》 🅂🄻🄴🄽🄳🄴🅁🅅🄴🅁🅂🄴
- The Operator/Slenderman (Creepypasta)
- Evan/Habit (EverymanHYBRID)
- Alex Kralie
- Jay Merrick
- Masky Timothy Wright
- Hoodie Brian Thomas
》 🅃🄷🄴 🄱🄻🄰🄲🄺 🄿🄷🄾🄽🄴
- Albert Shaw
- Finney Blake
- Robin Arellano
- Vance Hopper
- Bruce Yamada
- Billy Showalter
- Griffin Stagg*
- Gwendolyn Blake*
》 🄶🅁🄸🅂🄷🄰🅅🄴🅁🅂🄴
- Alexander Morozova
- Alina Starkov
- Malyen Oretsev
- Kaz Brekker
- Inej Ghafa
- Jesper Fahey
- Wylan Van Eck
- Nina Zenik
- Matthias Helvar
- Zoya Nazyalensky
- Nikolai Lantsov
- Tolya Yul-Bataar
- Tamar Kir-Bataar
》 🄻🄾🅁🄳 🄾🄵 🅃🄷🄴 🅁🄸🄽🄶🅂
- Bilbo Baggins
- Frodo Baggins
- Samwise Gamgee
- Meriadoc (Merry) Brandybuck
- Peregrine (Pippin) Took
- Aragorn (Son of Arathorn)
- Boromir (Son of Denethor II)
- Faramir (Son of Denethor II)
- Thorin Oakenshield
- Fili (Of Thorin's company)
- Kili (Of Thorin's company)
- Gimli (Son of Gloin)
- Thranduil (King of Mirkwood)
- Legolas Greenleaf (Son of Thranduil)
- Tauriel (Head of Mirkwood Elven-Guards)
- Lord Elrond (Lord of Rivendell)
》 🅃🄷🄴 🅄🄼🄱🅁🄴🄻🄻🄰 🄰🄲🄰🄳🄴🄼🅈
- Luther Hargreeves
- Diego Hargreeves
- Allison Hargreeves
- Klaus Hargreeves
- Five Hargreeves
- Ben Hargreeves
- Vanya/Viktor Hargreeves
》 🄼🄸🅂🅂 🄿🄴🅁🄴🄶🅁🄸🄽🄴'🅂 🄷🄾🄼🄴 🄵🄾🅁 🄿🄴🄲🅄🄻🄸🄰🅁 🄲🄷🄸🄻🄳🅁🄴🄽
- Alma Peregrine
- Jacob Portman
- Emma Bloom
- Enoch O'Connor
- Millard Nullings
- Fiona Fraunfeld
- Hugh Apiston
- Horace Somnusson
- Victor Bruntley
- Bronwyn Bruntley
- Olive Elephanta*
- Claire Densmore*
》 🄾🅃🄷🄴🅁
- Cronos (Venom)
- Quorthon (Bathory)
- Lurch (Addams Family)
(*) Will not, under any circumstances, write smut
(**) If you're into them then I won't deprive you ig
#Lords of Chaos#Horror/Slashers#Scream Killers#Creepypasta#Slenderverse#The Black Phone#Grishaverse#Lord of the Rings#The Umbrella Academy#Miss Peregrine's home for peculiar children#Other#x reader#requests#smut#fluff#angst#fanfiction#Masterlist
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"Scream"
First movie in the franchise.
Killer(s) Billy Loomis and Stuart Maucher.
Based in Woodsboro, California. Filmed in many different Californian towns.
Released in 1996.
Kill count: 8
"Scream 2"
Featuring a special follow up by Billy's mom.
Killer(s) Nancy Loomis and Mickey Altieri.
Based in Windsor college, Ohio. Filmed in Los Angeles, California, and Atlanta Georgia.
Released in 1997.
Kill count: 10
"Scream 3"
The only Scream movie with one killer. Director, and brother
Killer(s) Roman Bridger
Based in Hollywood. Filmed in many different locations in LA.
Released in the year 2000.
Kill count: 10
"Scream 4"
Biggest time jump in the franchise.
Killer(s) Jill Roberts and Charlie Walker.
Based in Woodsboro. Filmed in Ann Arbor and etc.
Released in 2014.
Kill count: 11
"Scream" (5)
First Scream film not directed by Wes Craven.
Killer(s) Richie Kirsh and Amber Freeman.
Based in Woodsboro. Filmed in Wilmington NC.
Released in 2022
Kill count: 8
"Scream VI" (6)
Only Scream film with a post credits scene.
Killer(s) Detective Bailey, Quinn Bailey, and Ethan Landry.
Based in NYC. Filmed in Montreal Canada.
Released in 2023.
Kill count: 13
Scream 7! Coming out late 2025 or early 2026!
#scream#horror#billy loomis#scream franchise#scream 1996#stu macher#scream 7#scream 2#scream 4#scream 5#scary movies#scary#horror child#stuart macher#nancy loomis#mickey altieri#roman bridger#charlie walker#jill roberts#amber freeman#richie kirsch#tatum riley#randy meeks#detective bailey#quinn bailey#ethan landry
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mw from members?
hello, love ! get ready for a pretty long list ! luke skywalker, han solo, jaina & jacen solo & ben skywalker (star wars), janet van dyne, tommy and billy maximoff, hela odinsdottir, jennifer walters, sharon carter, agatha harkness, carol danvers, maggie lang, mantis, queen ramonda, okoye, nakia, the dora milaje, nate richards/iron lad, bruce banner, wong, peter quill, drax, melina vostokoff, darren cross/modok, howard stark (mcu), marlene (tlou), forty quinn, henry quinn-goldberg, sherry & cary conrad (you), mike wheeler, henry creel, jim hopper and joyce byers (stranger things), queen anne of austria, d'artagnan, aramis, athos, & porthos (the musketeers), missandei, cersei lannister, jaime lannister, arya stark, sansa stark, jon snow, rhaegar targaryen, lyanna stark (game of thrones), victoire, dominique, & louis weasley, molly and ginny weasley, james potter, gabrielle delacour, (harry potter), harwin strong, aemond targaryen, aegon targaryen ii, daeron targaryen, jaehaera and maelor targarye, laena velaryon, baela targaryen, rhaena targaryen, aemma arryn (house of the dragon), tommy shepherd, billy kaplan, victor von doom, jericho drumm, teddy altman, pietro maximoff, erik lehnsherr, lorna dane, logan howlett, gabby kinney, jubilation lee, akihiro, ororo munroe, warren worthington iii, julian keller, alani ryan (marvel comics), adonis creed, bianca creed, rocky (creed), amanda young, adam stanheight, jill tuck, lawrence gordon, ezekiel banks, william schenk (saw), dewey riley, tatum riley, casey becker, roman bridger, nancy loomis, randy meeks, marta meeks, charlie walker, jill roberts, trevor sheldon, kate roberts, richie kirsch, wayne bailey/kirsch, judy hicks, wes hicks, liv mckenzie, sarah darling, mikey altieri, derek feldman, rebecca walters, jenny randall, anthony perkins, ross hoss, vince schneider, leslie macher, christopher stone (scream) would be very much wanted !
#multifandom rp#town rp#city rp#au rp#appless rp#mumu rpg#marvel rp#scream rp#game of thrones rp#mumu rp#oc rp#wal: most wanted
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TENEBRAE (1982) – Episode 234 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
“<Evil chuckle> When I realized Christiano Berti was the killer… and it didn’t take me long to realize that. <Evil chuckle> The rest, Mr Germani, was like writing a book. A Book!” Book ’em, Dan-o! Wait. Wrong media. Join your faithful Grue Crew – Chad Hunt, Bill Mulligan, Crystal Cleveland, and Jeff Mohr – as they take a cue from the 70s Grue Crew and take in some Giallo, Dario Argento-style with Tenebrae (1982).
Decades of Horror 1980s Episode 234 – Tenebrae (1982)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
American author Peter Neal, who – while in Rome promoting his latest murder-mystery novel – becomes embroiled in the search for a serial killer who may have been inspired to kill by his novel.
Writer/Director: Dario Argento
Produced by: Claudio Argento (producer), Salvatore Argento (executive producer), Allan Scott (producer: English version)
Music by: Massimo Morante, Fabio Pignatelli, Claudio Simonetti (as Simonetti-Morante-Pigatelli)
Cinematography by: Luciano Tovolin (director of photography)
Film Editing by: Franco Fraticelli
First Assistant Director: Lamberto Bava
Second Assistant Director: Michele Soavi
Special Effects by: Giovanni Corridori (special effects)
Production Services – New York: William Lustig (uncredited)
Selected Cast:
Anthony Franciosa as Peter Neal
John Saxon as Bullmer
Daria Nicolodi as Anne
Giuliano Gemma as Detective Germani
Christian Borromeo as Gianni
Mirella D’Angelo as Tilde
Veronica Lario as Jane McKerrow
Ania Pieroni as Elsa Manni
Eva Robins as Girl on Beach
Carola Stagnaro as Detective Altieri
John Steiner as Christiano Berti
Lara Wendel as Maria Alboretto
Isabella Amadeo as Bullmer’s secretary
Mirella Banti as Marion
Lamberto Bava as Elevator Repairman #1 (uncredited)
It’s time for another 1980s feature from director Dario Argento with a return to the Giallo sub-genre. The film is Tenebrae – or Tenebre (original title) or Ténèbres (French) – and features Anthony Franciosa, John Saxon, and Daria Nicolodi. Argento was inspired by a series of incidents that saw an obsessed fan telephone the director to criticize him for the damaging psychological effects of his previous work. The telephone calls culminated in death threats towards Argento, who channeled the experience into the writing of Tenebrae with a double helix of a plot.
At the time of this writing, Tenebrae is available to stream from Wicked Horror TV, Shudder, Kanopy, and Plex. It is also available on Blu-Ray and 4K Ultra HD from Synapse Films.
This is the Decades of Horror Grue Crews’ xth encounter with Argento. Here are their other Argento episodes if you care to check them out.
THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE (1970) – Episode 190 – Decades of Horror 1970s
THE CAT O’ NINE TAILS (1971) – Episode 149 – Decades of Horror 1970s
DEEP RED (1975) — Episode 77 — Decades of Horror 1970s
SUSPIRIA (1977) — Episode 58 — Decades of Horror 1970s
PHENOMENA (1985) – Episode 168 – Decades of Horror 1980s
DARK GLASSES (2022, SHUDDER) – Gruesome Magazine #369
Every two weeks, Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1980s podcast will cover another horror film from the 1980s. The next episode’s film, chosen by Crystal, will be George Romero’s Monkey Shines (1988). Oh yeah. We love monkeys with sharp utensils!
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans – so leave them a message or comment on the Gruesome Magazine Youtube channel, on the Gruesome Magazine website, or email the Decades of Horror 1980s podcast hosts at [email protected].
Check out this episode!
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Watching: A Charlie Brown Christmas on Google TV
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2017:251 — A Charlie Brown Christmas
(1965 - Bill Melendez) ***** Rewatch
Alternative posters.
#TV#1965#A Charlie Brown Christmas#Bill Melendez#Charles M. Schulz#Peter Robbins#Christopher Shea#Tracy Stratford#Cathy Steinberg#Geoffrey Ornstein#Karen Mendelson#Sally Dryer#Chris Doran#Ann Altieri#Vince Guaraldi#five stars
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Every fictional/celerity crush I've ever had in my lifetime that I remember.
Gray Fullbuster-Fairy Tale
Ezra Scarlet-Fairy Tale
Sasuke Uchiha-Naruto
Kiba Inuzuka-Naruto
Gil-Bubble Guppies
Shadow-Sonic
Blaze-Sonic
Bunnymund-Rise of the guardians
Jack Frost-Rise of the guardians
Cedric Diggory-Harry Potter
Ginny Weasley-Harry Potter
Harry Potter-Harry Potter
Hermione Granger-Harry Potter
Robert Pattison
Louis Partridge
Noah Schnapp
Steve Harrington-Stranger Things
Nick Austin
Jaden Hossler
Fred Weasley-Harry Potter
Tom Riddle-Harry Potter
Luna Lovegood-Harry Potter
Remus Lupin-Harry Potter
Scott McCall-Teen Wolf
Mike Wheeler-Stranger Things
Eddie Munson-Stranger Things
Nancy Wheeler- Stranger Things
Max Mayfield-Stranger Things
Robin Buckley-Stranger Things
Ben Barnes
Andrew Garfield
Alex Turner
Dylan O'Brien
Thomas Brodie-Sangster
blue female bird from Rio
Draco Malfoy-Harry Potter
Robecca Steam-Monster High
Joyce Byers-Stranger Things
Leonardo Dicaprio
Juliet-1996 Romeo+Juliet
Adrian Pucey-Harry Potter
Taylor Swift
Harry Styles
Adrian Greensmith
Kevin Schlieb-Metal Lords
Isis Hainsworth
Dolly Parton
Shelby Eatenton Latcherie- Steel Magnolias
Gilbert Blythe-Anne With an E
Diana Berry- Anne With an E
Mary Lacroix-Anne With an E
Momona Tamada
Malia Baker
Nick Wilde-Zootopia
Judy Hopps-Zootopia
Gazelle-Zootopia
Jennifer Aniston
Silvermist-Tinkerbell
Fawn-Tinkerbell
Iridessa-Tinkerbelle
Rosetta-Tinkerbell
Vidia-Tinkerbell
Zarina-Tinkerbell
Rory Gilmore-Gilmore Girls
Lorelai Gilmore-Gilmore Girls
Logan Huntzberger-Gilmore Girls
Tristian Dugray-Gilmore Girls
Michel Gerard-Gilmore Girls
Edmund Pevensie-Narnia Prince Caspian-Dawn Treader
Lucy Pevensie-Narnia Dawn Treader
Prince Caspian-Narnia
Aslan-Narnia
Reepicheep-Narnia
Adam Banks-Mighty Ducks
Charlie Conway-Mighty Ducks
Luis Mendoza-Mighty Ducks
Jesse Hall-Mighty Ducks
Averman-Mighty Ducks
Ken Wu-Mighty Ducks
Connie Moreau-Mighty Ducks
Guy Germaine-Mighty Ducks
Julie "the cat"-Mighty Ducks
Russ Tyler-Mighty Ducks
Conrad Fisher-The Summer I Turned Pretty
Kevin Copeland-White Chicks
Tiffany-Boo! A medea Halloween
Fluttershy-Equestria Girls
Applejack-Equestria Girls
Rarity-Equestria Girls
Jade West-Victorious
Beck Oliver-Victorious
Andre Harris-Victorious
Matt Bennet
Victor Frankenstein-Frankenweenie
Elsa Van Helsing-Frankenweenie
Victor Van Dort-Corpse Bride
Emily the Corpse Bride-Corpse Bride
Joe Farrier-Dumbo 2019
Matt Sturniolo
Theodore Lawrence-Both Little Woman
Meg March-Both Little Woman
Yeah Yeah-Sandlot
Wendy-Sandlot
Beth Harmon-Queen's Gambit
Jolene-Queen's Gambit
Benny Watts-Queen's Gambit
Sherlock Holmes-Enola Holmes
Enola Holmes-Enola Holmes
Edith-Enola Holmes
Karen Smith-Mean Girls
Mitch Rapp-American Assassin
Chrissy Cunningham-Stranger Things
Dean Thomas-Harry Potter
Belle-Beauty and the Beast
Tiana-Princess and the Frog
Anna-Frozen
Jasmine-Aladdin
Megara-Hercules
Flynn Rider-Tangled
Jane Porter-Tarzan
Gothel-Tangled
Jessica Rabbit-Who Framed Roger Rabbit
Allison Argent-Teen Wolf
Lydia Martin-Teen Wolf
Isaac Lahey-Teen Wolf
Kira Yukimura-Teen Wolf
Theo Raeken-Teen Wolf
Peter Hale-Teen Wolf
Deucalion-Teen Wolf
Cora Hale-Teen Wolf
Jimmy Borrelli-Chicago Fire
Sylvie Brett-Chicago Fire
Prince Naveen-Princess and the Frog
Prince Phillip-Sleeping Beauty
Milo James Thatch-Atlantis:The lost Empire
Jim Hawkins-Treasure Planet
Wilbur Robinson-Meet the Robinsons
Franny Robison-Meet the Robinsons
Sarah Sanderson-Hocus Pocus
Max Dennison-Hocus Pocus
Allison-Hocus Pocus
Thackery Bink-Hocus Pocus
Gwen-Total Drama Island
LaShana-Total Drama Island
Bridgette-Total Drama Island
Duncan-Total Drama Island
Izzy-Total Drama Island
Lindsay-Total Drama Island
Dark Heart-Care Bears 2
Nicholas-The Care Bears Movie
Violet Baudelair-A series of unfortunate events
Klaus Baudelair-A series of unfortunate events
Alexa- Alexa and Katie
Katie-Alexa and Katie
Niccolo Govender Rossi-Baby
Chiara Altieri-Baby
Susan Wilson-Tick Tick Boom
Eduardo Saverin-The Social Network
Ashlynn Ella-Ever After High
Briar Beauty-Ever After High
Lizzie Hearts-Ever After High
Duchess Swan-Ever After High
Dexter Charming-Ever After High
Artemis Hidalgo-Through my Window
Apolo Hidalgo-Through my Window
Kate Dibiasky-Don't look up
Yule-Don't look up
Sherman-Peabody and Sherman
Hiccup-How to train your dragon
Astrid-How to train your dragon
Nick Nelson-Heart Stopper
Elle Argent-Heart Stopper
Sam Sparks-Cloudy with a chance of meatballs
Mr. Bruner-Edge of seventeen
Krista-Edge of seventeen
Smurfette-Smurfs
George Cooper-Young Sheldon
Princess Amber-Sofia The first
Prince James-Sofia the first
Queen Miranda-Sofia the first
Jake Sully-Avatar
Neytiri-Avatar
Rose Dawson-Titanic
Jack Dawson-Titanic
Jim Carroll-Basket Ball Diaries
Ellen Dryver-Dumplin
Zed-Z-O-M-B-I-E-S
Hector Zeroni-Holes
Hiro Hamada-Big hero 6
Honey Lemon-Big Hero 6
Ferb-Phineas and Ferb
Vanessa Doofinshnirt-Phineas and Ferb
Violet Parr-The Incredibles
Elastagirl-The Incredibles
Will Turner-Pirates of the Caribbean
Captain Hook-Once upon a time
Percy Jackson-Percy Jackson
Grover-Percy Jackson
diaval-Maleficent
The Darkling-Shadow and Bone the BOOK version
Neil Perry-Dead Poets Society
#harry potter#narnia#stranger things 4#queen's gambit#british men#matt sturniolo#conrad fisher#gilmore girls#enola holmes#arctic monkeys#mighty ducks#steddie#little woman#tim burton#victorious#dylan o'brien#tinkerbell#disney#metal lords#fairytale#naruto#teen wolf#percy jackson#ever after high#shadow and bone#care bears#total drama#pirates of the carribean#hocus pocus
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Armyangxls’ Masterlist
Fluff=💗 Angst=💔
*=Gender neutral **=Fem reader
Fear Street
Nick Goode
The New Weirdo From Shadyside Part one two three four five six seven eight **💗💔
Kate Schmidt
The New Weirdo From Shadyside part
eight 💗**
Simon Kailvoda
Love So Soft 💗*
Deena Johnson
Cozy Night In 💗💝*
Scream
Richie Kirsch
Online Friends 💗*
Wes Hicks
Meeting The Friends 💗*
Mickey Altieri
Blind Love 💗*
Chilling Adventures of Sabrina
Nick Scratch
The Sweethearts Dance 💗💝*
Outer Banks
JJ Maybank
Rainy Birthday*
Nancy Drew
Ryan Hudson
Halloween Movie Marathon 🎃*
Nancy Drew
Cozied In A Christmas Blizzard 🎄*
DC Stargirl
Cindy Burman
Halloween Sleepover 🎃*
Matching Christmas Dresses 🎄*
Stranger Things
Eddie Munson
Dumb Heroes*
Fate The Winx Saga
Riven
I Kinda Sorta Like You 💗💔*
Booksmart
Nick
Halloween Drabble 💗🎃*
Anne of Green Gables(1985)
Gilbert Blythe
Christmas Ball 💗🎄*
Last updated on 2/2/2024
#plus size reader#fate the winx saga#fear street#rivenfatewinxsaga#Booksmart#booksmart x reader#rivenoneshot#Booksmartnick#neurodivergent reader#nickbooksmart
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For reviews of boy’s love manga, LGBT+ books and indie music, visit my blog >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> https://neverhollowed.com/ <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
MANGA: Koi Saku Potager - Mita Homura
REVIEW: Real Trouble by Elle Keaton
Soundtrack: Trouble Artist: Cage The Elephant Album: Tell Me I’m Pretty
MOVIE FEATURE: Cicada
LAST YEAR I WAS READING…(September 15, 2021)
DESERT ISLAND CASTAWAYS: Natalina Reis
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Punk Disco Bohemian by Arya F. Jenkins (Excerpt & Giveaway)
RELEASE BLITZ: Tapped By My Roommate by D.J. Jamison (Excerpt & Giveaway)
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Ruby’s Price by Giovanna Reaves (Excerpt)
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Breaking The Shackles by Mell Eight (Excerpt & Giveaway)
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Arbor’s Descent by J.L. Brown (Excerpt & Giveaway)
SERIES TOUR: When We Were Young by Maggie Blackbird (Giveaway + Q & A with Author)
RELEASE BLITZ: A Touch Of Fever by Nazri Noor (Excerpt & Giveaway)
BOOK BLITZ: In The Absence Of Light by Adrienne Wilder (Excerpt & Giveaway)
BLOG TOUR: Playing Offside by Jax Calder (Excerpt & Giveaway)
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Bookends by Brenda Murphy (Excerpt & Giveaway)
COVER REVEAL: By The Red Moonlight by Amanda Meuwissen (Excerpt & Giveaway)
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Resisting The Dream by Ann Marie James (Excerpt & Giveaway)
RELEASE BLITZ: Pines and Violets by V.L. Locey (Giveaway)
RELEASE BLITZ: Finley Embraces Heart And Home by Anyta Sunday (Excerpt & Giveaway)
RELEASE BLITZ: The Vampyr’s Husband by Jessamyn Kingley (Excerpt)
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Escape by Sean Ian O’Meidhir & Connal Braginsky (Excerpt & Giveaway)
BLOG TOUR: Caged In Darkness by Amy Thorne (Excerpt & Giveaway)
NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Raven’s Call by Jaxon Altieri (Excerpt)
BLOG TOUR: Descent Of Ravens by A.C. Andrews (Excerpt & Giveaway)
COVER REVEAL: Pick Me by May Archer (Giveaway)
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Hello my friend can I get a rundown of all of the characters that you do in this blog? I have a bad memory and It’s honestly better for me if I have a list..... sorry if that’s too much to ask! It if is then feel free to delete this ask!
I do have a list, don't worry ^^ If you wanna check again, just look up ‘Character List’ in the search bar on this blog.
Here!
Creepypasta:
BEN Drowned
Bloody Painter / Helen Otis
Candy Cane
Candy Pop
Clockwork / Natalie Ouellette
Dark Link
Eyeless Jack
Grinny Cat
Hobo Heart
Hoodie / Brian
Jane the Killer / Jane Richardson
Jason the Toymaker
Jeff the Killer / Jeffry Woods
Kagekao
Laughing Jack
Laughing Jill
Masky / Tim
Nathan the Nobody / Nathan Lux
Nina the Killer / Nina Hopkins
Nurse Ann / Ann Lusen Mia
Offenderman
Puppeteer / Jonathan Blake
Sally Williams
Seadeater
Slenderman
Smile Dog
Sonic. Exe
Splenderman
Ticci Toby / Toby Erin Rogers
Trenderman
Zalgo
Disney Villains
Alameda Slim || Home On The Range (2004)
Bill Cipher || Gravity Falls (2012)
Captain James Bartholomew Hook || Peter Pan (1953), Return To Neverland (2002)
Clayton || Tarzan (1999)
Cruella DeVill || 101 Dalmatians (1961)
Dr Facilier || The Princess And The Frog (2009)
Evil Queen Grimhilde || Snow White (1937)
Gaston || Beauty And The Beast (1991 or 2017)
Goob || Meet The Robinsons (2007)
Governor Ratcliff || Pocahontas (1993)
Hades || Hercules (1997)
Hans || Frozen (2013)
Horned King || The Black Cauldron (1985)
Jafar || Aladdin (1992)
Judge Claude Frollo || The Hunchback Of Notre Dame (1996)
Lady Tremaine || Cinderella (1950), Cinderella II: Dreams Come True (2002), Cinderella III: A Twist in Time (2007)
Long John Silver || Treasure Planet (2002)
Lyle Rourke || Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001)
Maleficent || Sleeping Beauty (1959)
Mother Gothel || Tangled (2010)
Prince John || Robin Hood (1973)
Professor Ratigan || The Great House Detective (1986)
Queen Narissa || Enchanted (2007)
Queen of Hearts || Alice In Wonderland (1951 and 2010), Through The Looking Glass (2016)
Scar || The Lion King (1994)
Shan Yu || Mulan (1998)
Shere Khan || The Jungle Book (1967 or 2016), The Jungle Book 2 (2003)
Sykes || Oliver & Company (1988)
Turbo/King Candy || Wreck It Ralph (2012)
Ursula || The Little Mermaid (1989)
Yzma || The Emperors New Groove (2000), Kronk’s New Groove (2005)
Slashers / Horror Villains
Billy Loomis || Scream (1996)
Bubba Sawyer || The Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise (1974-1986) (ORIGINAL)
Carrie White || Carrie (1976) (ORIGINAL)
Chucky / Charles Lee Ray || Childs Play franchise (1988-2017) (ORIGINAL)
Chop Top Sawyer || The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986)
Drayton Sawyer || The Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise (1974-1986) (ORIGINAL)
Debbie Loomis || Scream 2 (1997)
Freddy Krueger || A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise (1984-2003) (ORIGINAL)
Inkubus || Inkubus (2011)
Jason Voorhees || Friday the 13th franchise (1980-2003) (REMAKE AND ORIGINAL)
Jedidiah Sawyer || Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013) (REMAKE #2)
Jennifer Check || Jennifer’s Body (2009)
Jill Roberts || Scream 4 (2011)
Luda Mae Hewitt || The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning (2006) (REMAKE #1)
Mayor Buckman || 2001 Maniacs (2005) (ORIGINAL- So far)
Michael Myers || Halloween franchise (2007-2009) (REMAKE)
Mickey Altieri || Scream 2 (1997)
Midnight Man || The Midnight Man (2016)
Pamela Voorhees || Friday the 13th franchise (1980-2003) (REMAKE AND ORIGINAL)
Patrick Bateman || American Psycho (2000)
Pennywise || It (1990)
Pennywise || It (2017)
Roman Bridges || Scream 3 (2000)
Sheriff Hoyt/ Charlie Hewitt || The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning (2006) (REMAKE #1)
Stu Macher || Scream (1996)
The Man || Hush (2016)
Thomas Hewitt || The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning (2006) (REMAKE #1)
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[TASK 150: HAITI]
In celebration of Caribbean American Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 640+ Haitian faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK - examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Annette Auguste (1940 or 1941) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Suzanne de Passe (1946) Haitian, French / Unspecified Caribbean - television, music and film producer.
TiCorn / Cornelia Schütt (1953) Haitian [German] - singer.
Mimerose Beaubrun (1956) Afro-Haitian - musician and writer.
Florence Regina (1960) Afro-Haitian - actress, producer and director.
Susan Fales-Hill (1962) Afro-Haitian / Unknown - producer, author, and screenwriter.
Marjorie Vincent (1964) Afro-Haitian - Miss America 1991.
Barbara Prézeau-Stephenson (1965) Afro-Haitian - artist and art historian.
Garcelle Beauvais (1966) Afro-Haitian - actress and model.
Emeline Michel (1967) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Mona Scott-Young (1967) Afro-Haitian - television producer and entrepreneur.
Trina McGee (1969) Afro-Haitian, possibly other - actress.
Meta Golding (1971) Haitian / Unknown - actress.
Isabelle Racicot (1972) Afro-Haitian / French - tv host and radio host.
Ava DuVernay (1973) African-American, Louisiana Creole [African, French], distant Haitian and Belgian - director, producer, and screenwriter.
Roxane Gay (1974) Afro-Haitian - writer, professor, editor, and commentator.
Gaelle Adisson (1974) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Jacki-O / Angela Kohn (1975) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
Régine Chassagne (1976) Haitian - musician.
Daphnée Duplaix (1976) Afro-Haitian, French, Italian - actress and model.
Michelle Buteau (1977) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Lebanese] / Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, French] - actress, comedian, and podcast host.
Vanessa Cantave (1977) Afro-Haitian - chef.
Célimène Daudet (1977) Haitian / French - pianist.
Sandra Prosper (1978) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Marlyne Barrett (1978) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Numa Perrier (1979) Afro-Haitian - actress, director, writer, producer, and visual artist.
Fabienne Colas (1979) Afro-Haitian - actress, director, and producer.
Angelique Bates (1980) Afro-Haitian, Unspecified Native American - actress, comedian, and rapper.
Nikki M. James (1981) Afro-Haitian / Afro-Vincentian - actress and singer.
Ephaniela Isma (1982) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Misty Jean (1983) Afro-Haitian - singer and Miss West Indies.
Dawn Richard (1983) Creole [French, African, possibly other], Afro-Haitian - singer, songwriter, and actress.
Karen Civil (1984) Afro-Haitian - social media and digital media marketing strategist.
Leyla McCalla (1985) Afro-Haitian - classical and folk musician.
Alizée Gaillard (1985) Haitian / Swiss - model.
Mélissa Laveaux (1985) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Sarodj Bertin (1986) Haitian - Reina Hispanoamericana 2012.
Malinda Panton (1988) Afro-Haitian - youtuber (Pantons Squad) and instagrammer (dimplez_103).
Annie Borgard (1988) Afro-Haitian - model.
Rutshelle Guillaume (1988) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Anastagia Pierre (1988) Afro-Haitian - model.
Anedie Azael (1988) Afro-Haitian - model and Miss Universe Haiti 2011.
Moxiie / Ehlie Luna (1988) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Alisha Wainwright (1989) Afro-Haitian / Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Mama Cax / Née Cacsmy Brutus (1989) Afro-Haitian - model and blogger.
Riva Nyri Précil (1989) Afro-Haitian / Russian, Irish - singer, songwriter, and author.
Matti Domingue (1989) Afro-Haitian - instagrammer (mattidomingue).
Cécile McLorin Salvant (1989) Afro-Haitian / French - singer.
Devyn Rose / Tanya Dormevil (1989) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Eliza Reign (1990) Afro-Haitian - instagrammer (elizareign_).
Raquel Pélissier (1991) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Filipina] - model and Miss Universe Haiti 2016.
Hayley Law (1992) Afro-Haitian - actress and singer.
Lisa Drouillard (1992) Afro-Haitian - model, Miss Universe Haiti 2015, and Miss New York Teen USA 2011.
Jenny Florvil (1993) Afro-Haitian - instagrammer (agirlaandacloset).
Christie Desir (1993) Afro-Haitian - actress, model, Miss Universe Haiti 2014, and Miss International Haiti 2014.
Fatima Altieri (1993) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Samantha Colas (1993) Afro-Haitian - Miss Haiti 2018.
Christela Jacques (1993) Afro-Haitian - model and Miss Universe Haiti 2012.
Bibi Bourelly (1994) Afro-Haitian, African-American / Moroccan - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Aurora Perrineau (1994) Afro-Haitian, African-American / Irish, English, French, German - actress and model.
Zenie (1994) Afro-Haitian - youtuber (IAMSOZENIE).
Tajah Ferjuste (1995) Afro-Haitian - youtuber (Tajah Ferjuste).
Mondiana Pierre (1996) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Syrian] - model and Miss Haiti 2013.
Jasmine Louis (1997) Afro-Haitian - actress and screenwriter.
Abby Nicole (1997) Afro-Haitian - YouTuber.
Athésia (?) Afro-Haitian - singer-songwriter, dancer, and composer.
Sabrina Barnett (?) Haitian [Taino, Sicilian] / Cuban [Taino, Italian] - singer-songwriter and model.
Nadege August (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Farrah Boulé (?) Afro-Haitian, Cuban - rapper.
Vicky Jeudy (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Bertrand Béoty (?) Haitian, Moroccan / Cuban - singer.
Sharon Pierre-Louis (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Natalie Paul (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Steph Lecor (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Blandinna Melky Jean (?) Afro-Haitian - part of hip hop sibling duo Melky Sedeck.
Yanick Étienne (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Azéde Jean-Pierre (?) Afro-Haitian - fashion designer.
Sasha Compère (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Marie Blanchard (?) Afro-Haitian - actress and model.
Sharlene Royer (?) Afro-Haitian / French Canadian - stunt actress.
Lisa Roumain (?) Italian, Haitian, Scottish - actress and producer.
Mirlande Amazan (?) Afro-Haitian, Cuban, Syrian - actress, producer and writer.
Melissa Toussaint (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Denise Milfort (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Whitney Andrews (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Nafeesa Monroe (?) Afro-Haitian, African-American / German, Irish - actress.
Alexandra Foucard (?) Dominican, Haitian / French, Spanish - actress and producer.
Nzingah Oniwosan (?) Afro-Haitian - model and multidisciplinary artist.
Herveline Moncion (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Vanessa Noel (?) Haitian, Dominican - actress.
Jessica Fontaine (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Cynthia D. Hilaire (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Karina Chery (?) Haitian, Dominican - actress.
Joelle Jeremie (?) Afro-Haitian / Unknown - actress.
Cindy Raphael (?) Haitian, Bahamian - actress.
Reel Rose (?) Haitian, Cuban - actress.
Farrah Cine (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Karm Syndia (?) Afro-Haitian - actress, producer and director. .
Ashley Fabien (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Auberth Bercy (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Mylarah Silverne (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Rafaelle Miggiano (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Dominique LaFleur (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Rachel Ann Jerome (?) Afro-Haitian - actress.
Ketsia (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Donna Denizé (?) Afro-Haitian - poet.
Jenny Laroche (?) Afro-Haitian - actress, dancer, singer, and choreographer.
Olivia Boisson (?) Afro-Haitian - ballet dancer.
Luisah Teish (?) Afro-Haitian - author and teacher.
Clara D.D. Philor (?) Afro-Haitian - Miss Haiti International 2010 (Instagram: msclarap)
Kiana (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (___tuh)
Shemeka Dort (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (queendort)
Jicyra Johnson (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (jicyraa)
Jadah Blue (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (therealjadahblue)
Lulu Simmons (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (misslulusimmons)
Marie Duponcy (?) Afro-Haitian - model (Instagram: marieduponcy)
Katrina D.(?) Afro-Haitian - model (Instagram: _k.lorene)
Widley Oge (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (DarkskvnBeauty)
Dajah Vamour (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (dajahvamour)
Malani Ca$h (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (realmalanicash)
Belle Dimanche (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (she_is_belle)
Cassandra Chéry (?) Afro-Haitian - Miss Haiti 2017 (Instagram: casscheryofficial)
Nedjina (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (nedjiners)
Daphnée Renae (?) Afro-Haitian - Intagrammer (daphneerenae)
Beverly Pierre (?) Haitian, Dominican - Intagrammer (bev_the_best)
Phyllisia Ross Ross (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Saskya Sky (?) Afro-Haitian - singer and actress.
Rebecca Zama (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Princess Eud (?) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
Stichiz (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Ayiiti Coles (?) Haitian, Chilean, French - singer.
Anie Alerte (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Ashira IsLove (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Miu Haiti (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Darline Desca (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Queen Bee (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Tamara Suffren (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Renette Desir (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Mikaelle Aimee Cartright (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Shassy (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Jehyna Sahyeir (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Kasoumee (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Naida Lynn (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Marlène Dorcena (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Katia Cadet (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Stephie Morency (?) Afro-Haitian - beauty pageant contestant.
Suzana Sampeur (?) Afro-Haitian - beauty pageant contestant.
Seydina Allen (?) Afro-Haitian - Miss World Haiti 2015 and Miss Global Haiti 2018.
Carolyn Desert (?) Afro-Haitian - beauty pageant contestant.
Ketsia Lioudy (?) Afro-Haitian - beauty pageant contestant.
Jasmine Rose (?) Afro-Haitian - YouTuber and Instagrammer (msjasminerose).
Aube Jolicoeur (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Tico Ohamu Armand (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Kiki Barth (?) Afro-Haitian - model and former Miss Haiti.
Sophia Clerius (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Jodelle Duverseau (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Clara Luce Lafond (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Nehemie (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Berlange Presilus (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Belouka Almonacy (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
F - Athletes:
Antoinette Gauthier (1955) Haitian - sprinter.
Rose-Marie Gauthier (1955) Haitian - sprinter.
Mireille Joseph (1955) Haitian - sprinter.
Marie-Louise Pierre (1955) Haitian - sprinter.
Pat Fidelia (1959) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Gina Faustin (1960) Afro-Haitian - fencer.
Sheila Viard (1960) Haitian - fencer.
Deborah Saint-Phard (1964) Afro-Haitian - hurdler.
Dayana Cadeau (1966) Afro-Haitian - bodybuilder.
Nadine Domond (1975) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Nadine Faustin-Parker (1976) Afro-Haitian - hurdler.
Marie Ferdinand-Harris (1978) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Kencia Marseille (1980) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Melissa St. Vil (1983) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Neyssa Etienne (1983) Haitian - tennis player.
Ange Jean Baptiste (1984) Haitian - judoka.
Ginou Etienne (1985) Afro-Haitian - spinter.
Wisline Dolce (1986) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Barbara Pierre (1986) Afro-Haitian - sprinter.
Jennifer Elie (1986) Afro-Haitian - tennis player.
Kimberly Boulos (1987) Haitian - footballer.
Samantha Brand (1988) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Manoucheka Pierre Louis (1989) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Kimberly Hyacinthe (1989) Afro-Haitian - sprinter.
Marie Yves Dina Jean Pierre (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Farah Jacques (1990) Afro-Haitian - track and field athlete.
Jennifer Abel (1991) Afro-Haitian - diver.
Linouse Desravine (1991) Afro-Haitian - judoka
Marlena Wesh (1991) Afro-Haitian - sprinter.
Mulern Jean (1992) Afro-Haitian - hurdler.
Kensie Bobo (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Woodlyne Robuste (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Roselord Borgella (1993) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jessica Gelibert (1994) Afro-Haitian - hurdler.
Victoria Duval (1995) Afro-Haitian - tennis player.
Amandine Pierre-Louis (1995) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Mari Osaka (1996) Afro-Haitian / Japanese - tennis player.
Naomi Osaka (1997) Afro-Haitian / Japanese - tennis player.
Batcheba Louis (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Naomy Grand'Pierre (1997) Afro-Haitian - swimmer.
Aniya Louissaint (1988) Afro-Haitian - taekwondo practitioner.
Nérilia Mondésir (1999) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Darline Radamaker (1999) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Britheny Joassaint (1999) Haitian - footballer.
Nephtalie Jean-Louis (?) Afro-Haitian - paralympic javelin thrower and paralympic shot putter.
M:
Frankétienne / Franck Étienne (1936) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Unspecified White] - writer, poet, playwright, painter, and musician.
Andrew Cyrille (1939) Afro-Haitian - jazz drummer.
Lee Holdridge (1944) Haitian [Puerto Rican / Unknown] - composer.
Jean Jacques Clark Parent (1951) Afro-Haitian - writer, poet, composer, singer, playwright, novelist, and philosopher.
Jeff Gardere (1956) Afro-Haitian - psychologist and media personality.
Richard Auguste Morse (1957) Afro-Haitian / Puerto Rican [Unspecified White] - musician.
Jean-Paul Bourelly (1960) Afro-Haitian - guitarist.
Sweet Micky / Michel Martelly (1961) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Harold Perrineau (1963) Afro-Haitian / African-American - actor.
Thyme Lewis (1966) Norwegian, Scottish, Irish, Haitian, Unspecified Native American - actor.
Beethova Obas (1984) Afro-Haitian - musician.
Bigga Haitian / Charles Andre Dorismond (1964) Afro-Haitian - singer and musician.
Gary Dourdan (1966) African-American, Unspecified Native American, Franco-Haitian, Jewish, Irish, Scottish - actor.
Alan Cavé (1966) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Fabrice Rouzier (1967) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Unspecified White] - pianist, producer, and entrepreneur.
Jean-Claude La Marre (1967) Afro-Haitian - writer, director, and film and actor.
Jimmy Jean-Louis (1968) Afro-Haitian - actor and model.
Dave / Trugoy the Dove / David Jude Jolicoeur (1968) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
Wyclef Jean (1969) Afro-Haitian - rapper, musician and actor.
Anthony Kavanagh (1969) Afro-Haitian - actor, singer, comedian, and tv presenter.
DBR / Daniel Bernard Roumain (1970) Afro-Haitian - composer, performer, and violinist.
Sal Masekela / Selema Masekela (1971) Haitian / South African - actor, singer, tv host, and sports commentator.
Torch / DJ Haitian Star / Frederik Hahn (1971) Afro-Haitian / German - rapper.
Charles-Henry Joseph (1971) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Sacha Jenkins (1971) Afro-Haitian - producer, filmmaker, writer, musician, artist, curator, and chronicler.
Gabriel Casseus (1972) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Arly Lariviere (1972) Afro-Haitian - singer, keyboardist, and composer.
Benz Antoine (1972) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Pras / Praskazrel Samuel Michel (1972) Afro-Haitian - rapper and actor.
Jon Theodore (1973) Haitian / Unknown - drummer.
Maxwell / Gerald Maxwell Rivera (1973) Haitian / Puerto Rican - singer, songwriter, record producer, and actor.
Roi Heenok / Henoc Beauséjour (1973) Afro-Haitian - rapper, producer and entrepreneur.
Jean Duverger (1973) Mexican [Haitian, French] - actor, tv presenter, and dancer.
Carlos Jean (1973) Afro-Haitian / Galician - DJ and producer.
Hugues Gentillon (1974) Afro-Haitian - director, screenwriter, producer, and scientist.
Roberto Martino (1975) Haitian [Lebanese, Unspecified Other] - singer, guitarist, and composer.
DJ Whoo Kid / Yves Mondesir (1975) Afro-Haitian - DJ.
Jamie Hector (1975) Afro-Haitian - actor.
MiCKael / Mickael Guirand (1975) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Jerry Duplessis (1975) Afro-Haitian - musician.
J-Live / Jean-Jacques Cadet (1976) Afro-Haitian - rapper, DJ and producer.
Capone / Kiam Akasi Holley (1976) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
JBeatz / Jean Robert (1976) Afro-Haitian - rapper and producer.
Vladimir Thelisma (1976) Afro-Haitian actor, director, screenwriter, and sociologist.
Haitian Fresh / Jimmy Revolus (1976) Haitian - rapper.
Kery James / Daddy Kery / Alix Mathurin (1977) Guadeloupean [Afro-Haitian] - rapper-songwriter, singer, dancer, producer, and philanthropist.
Pastor Troy / Micah LeVar Troy (1977) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
Pierre Gage (1977) Haitian, Jamaican - singer.
Reynaldo Martino (1978) Haitian [Lebanese, Unspecified Other] - singer, guitarist, and composer.
Alibi Montana / Nikarson Saint-Germain (1978) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
Patrick Bruno (1978) Afro-Haitian - actor.
BélO / Jean Bélony Murat (1979) Afro-Haitian - composer and guitarist.
Won-G / Won-G Bruny / Wondge Bruny (1980) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
Quddus (1980) Haitian - actor and TV host.
Wesli / Wesley Louissaint (1980) Afro-Haitian - musician.
Alain Chanoine (1981) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Travie McCoy (1981) Afro-Haitian / Irish, Unspecified Native American - rapper, singer and songwriter.
Woodson Michel (1981) Afro-Haitian - singer and actor.
Shad Gaspard (1981) Haitian, Curaçaoan - professional wrestler and actor.
Jonathan Paul Cambry (1982) Afro-Haitian / Unknown - pianist.
Ligel Lambert (1982) Afro-Haitian - artist and educator.
Eric Andre (1983) Afro-Haitian / Ashkenazi Jewish - actor, comedian, and tv host.
Gilbert Mirambeau Jr. (1983) Afro-Haitian - scriptwriter, writer, and producer.
Flav Gabel (1984) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Rob Fury (1985) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jeff Chery (1987) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
Jay Chevery (1987) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Erlin Geffrard (1987) Afro-Haitian - multi-media visual artist and musician.
Sol / Sol Moravia-Rosenberg (1988) Afro-Haitian / Russian Jewish - hip hop artist.
J. Perry / Jonathan Perry (1988) Afro-Haitian - singer, songwriter, and composer.
Steven Daniel Brun (1988) Afro-Haitian - actor.
BigO / Olivier Martelly (1988) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, French, Possibly Other] - singer.
Alee Chery (1989) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jason Derulo (1989) Afro-Haitian - singer, songwriter, and dancer.
Sergio Sylvestre (1990) Afro-Haitian / Mexican [Sicilian, Possibly Other] - singer.
Sean Joseph-Amerthil (1990) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Elijah Blake (1992) Haitian / Dominican - singer.
Sandro Martelly (1992) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, French, Possibly Other] - singer.
Rich the Kid / Dimitri Roger (1992) Afro-Haitian - rapper and songwriter.
KAYTRA / KAYTRANADA / Kaytradamus / Louis Celestin (1992) Afro-Haitian - DJ and producer.
Michael Brun (1992) Afro-Haitian / Guyanese [Chinese, Unspecified Other] - DJ, guitarist, violinist, keyboardist, and producer.
Jephte Pierre (1992) Afro-Haitian - reality tv star.
Hunter Page-Lochard (1993) Afro-Haitian, Unspecified White / Nunukul, Yugambeh - actor.
Alexandre Parada (1995) Haitian - youtuber (Alex and Bella).
Ralph Souffrant (1996) Afro-Haitian - model.
Luka Sabbat (1997) Afro-Haitian, Irish, English, German - actor and model.
Yani Martelly (1997) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, French, Possibly Other] - singer.
Prince 930 (2000) Afro-Haitian - instagrammer (_prince933).
EJDaGoat (2001) Afro-Haitian - youtuber (EJDaGoat).
Tyrone Edmond (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Emmanuel Pierre-Antoine (?) Afro-Haitian - ballroom dancer.
Ronald Selmour (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Mike Estime (?) Afro-Haitian - actor and comedian.
Pierrot Al-Khal (?) Haitian [Lebanese] - musician.
Abner Genece (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jerry Lamothe (?) Afro-Haitian - screenwriter, director, producer and actor.
Tyrone Edmond (?) Afro-Haitian - model.
Panou (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jean Beauvoir (?) Afro-Haitian - singer and musician.
Frantz N. Cesar (?) Haitian, Puerto Rican - bass guitarist (HOAX).
Kangol Kid / Shaun Shiller Fequiere (?) Afro-Haitian - producer, songwriter, break dancer, and emcee.
Qwote (?) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Farel Sedeck Guerschom Jean (?) Afro-Haitian - part of hip hop sibling duo Melky Sedeck.
Félix Cumbé / Critz Sterlin (?) Dominican [Haitian] - singer.
Eddy François (?) Afro-Haitian - singer and musician.
D'Ron D1 Maingrette (?) Afro-Haitian - Esports caster.
Kerby Jean-Raymond (?) Afro-Haitian - fashion designer.
John Steve Brunache (?) Afro-Haitian - musician.
Jephté Guillaume (?) Afro-Haitian - musician.
Val Jeanty (?) Afro-Haitian - musician.
André Toussaint (?) Afro-Haitian - musician.
Jacques Colimon (?) Afro-Haitian - actor and poet.
Sam Jules (?) Haitian, Swedish / Italian - actor.
Yves Beneche (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Guyviaud Joseph (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jacques Derosena (?) Haitian, Dominican, French, Italian - actor.
Frantzdy Alexandre (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jetto Dorsainville (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jean Elie (?) Afro-Haitian - actor and producer.
Jamaar Simon (?) Haitian, Belizean - actor.
Hugues Faustin (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Luc Stephen (?) Afro-Haitian - film executive, writer, and producer.
Jean Jean (?) Haitian [Dominican] - actor and director.
Ricardo Manigat (?) Afro-Haitian - actor and writer.
Max Philisaire (?) Afro-Haitian - producer, director and screenwriter.
Armand Andre (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Reggie P. Louis (?) Afro-Haitian - actor, director and producer.
Luco Pierre (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Luce Metrius (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Enock Dorestan (?) Afro-Haitian - artist designer, indie filmmaker and screenwriter.
Patrick J. Nicolas (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Ted Pierre (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Steve Clerge (?) Haitian, Cuban - actor.
Shion Etienne (?) Haitian, Dominican - actor.
Woodson Louis (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Tirf Alexius (?) Afro-Haitian - actor, producer and director.
Dj Roddy-Yo / Rodrigue Gourdet (?) Afro-Haitian - DJ.
Alexander Vincent (?) Haitian / Dominican - actor.
Erickson Dautruche (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Jamar Germain (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Didier Elysee (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Louis Raphael Jones (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Wester Joseph (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Graphy Jules (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
DL Incognito / Oliver Nestor (?) Afro-Haitian - rapper and producer.
Irdens Exantus (?) Afro-Haitian - actor.
Harve Pierre (?) Afro-Haitian - writer, singer, and producer.
Vince Valholla / Vince Eyma (?) Afro-Haitian - record producer, arranger, manager, and entrepreneur.
Stiv S. (?) Afro-Haitian - Instagrammer (stiv.simien)
Keylow (?) Afro-Haitian - producer (Instagram: keylowkeem)
Gardy Girault (?) Afro-Haitian - musician, DJ, remixer and record producer.
Mike Classic (?) Afro-Haitian - rapper.
M - Athletes:
Guy Saint-Vil (1942) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Maurice Charlotin (1944) Afro-Haitian - long-distance runner.
Freddy Elie (1946) Venezuelan [Haitian] - footballer.
Philippe Vorbe (1947) Haitian [French] - footballer.
Eddy Antoine (1949) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Pierre Bayonne (1949) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Wilner Nazaire (1950) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Frantz St. Lot (1950) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Serge Racine (1951) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Wilner Piquant (1951) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Frantz Mathieu (1952) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Haiti Kid (1954) Afro-Haitian - professional wrestler - has dwarfism.
Yvon Joseph (1957) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Jacques LaDouceur (1959) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Tony Fernández / Octavio Antonio Fernández Castro (1962) Dominican [Afro-Haitian, Possibly Other] - baseball player.
Mario Elie (1963) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Claude Vilgrain (1963) Afro-Haitian - hockey player.
Ronald Agénor (1964) Afro-Haitian - tennis player.
Olden Polynice (1964) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Julian Yan (1965) Dominican [Afro-Haitian, Possibly Other] - baseball player.
Ernst Laraque (1970) Afro-Haitian - judoka
Golman Pierre (1971) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Pierre Richard Bruny (1972) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Rodney St. Cloud (1973) Afro-Haitian - bodybuilder.
Wagneau Eloi (1973) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Joel Brutus (1974) Afro-Haitian - judoka.
Johnny Descolines (1974) Afro-Haitian - sprinter.
Stalin Colinet (1974) Haitian / Dominican - American football player.
Francis Bouillon (1975) Haitian / French - ice hockey player.
Dudley Dorival (1975) Afro-Haitian - hurdler.
Sebastien Vorbe (1976) Haitian [Afro-Haitian / French] - footballer.
Alfonso Soriano (1976) Afro-Haitian / Dominican - baseball player.
Dadi Denis (1976) Afro-Haitian - sprinter.
Adler Volmar (1977) Afro-Haitian - judoka.
Adonis Stevenson (1977) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Ernst Atis-Clotaire (1977) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean-Luc Grand-Pierre (1977) Afro-Haitian - hockey player.
Abraham François (1977) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Marc Calixte (1978) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Vladimir Edouard (1978) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Bermane Stiverne (1978) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
William Joseph (1979) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Yves Desmarets (1979) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Yves Jabouin (1979) Afro-Haitian - mixed martial artist.
Patrice Bernier (1979) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Raymond Fontaine (1980) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
André Mattsson (1980) Afro-Haitian - ice hockey player.
Vernand Morency (1980) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Steve Josue (1980) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Carlos Joseph (1980) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Jacques Cesaire (1980) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Josué Mayard (1980) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Moise Joseph (1981) Afro-Haitian - middle-distance runner.
Olivier Occéan (1981) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Josue Deprez (1981) Afro-Haitian - judoka.
Peguero Jean Philippe (1981) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Pierre Valmera (1981) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Jean-Jacques Pierre (1981) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Samuel Dalembert (1981) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Monès Chéry (1981) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Gino Lanisse (1981) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Kim Jaggy (1982) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Elkana Mayard (1982) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Dominique Jean-Zéphirin (1982) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Rochel Chery (1982) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Georgi Joseph (1982) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Jonathan Vilma (1982) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Jean-Jacques Nkouloukidi (1982) Haitian / Congolese - race walker.
D'Anthony Batiste (1982) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Herby Fortunat (1982) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean Pascal (1982) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Maximo Nelson (1982) Dominican [Afro-Haitian, Possibly Other] - baseball player.
Regi Nooitmeer / Regillio Nooitmeer (1983) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Andre Berto (1983) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Azea Augustama (1983) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Maxime Fortunus (1983) Afro-Haitian - hockey player.
Maxime Fortunus (1983) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Frantz Bertin (1983) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Max Jean-Gilles (1983) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
James Edson Berto (1983) Afro-Haitian - mixed martial artist.
Jerrod Laventure (1983) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Marc Hérold Gracien (1983) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean-Robens Jerome (1983) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Radhames Liz (1983) Dominican [Afro-Haitian, Possibly Other] - baseball player.
Ovince Saint Preux (1983) Afro-Haitian - mixed martial artist.
Osvaldo Jeanty (1983) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Rashad Jeanty (1983) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Davin Joseph (1983) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Antonio Cromartie (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Kénold Versailles (1984) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Samyr Lainé (1984) Afro-Haitian - triple jumper.
Ricardo Pierre-Louis (1984) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Patrick Janvier (1984) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Tudor Sanon (1984) Afro-Haitian - taekwondo practitioner.
Ronald Hilaire (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Josué Cajuste (1984) Afro-Haitian - paralympic athlete.
Quincy Douby (1984) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Pierre Thomas (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Jean Beausejour (1984) Chilean [Afro-Haitian / Mapuche] - footballer.
Steve Octavien (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Johnathan Joseph (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Yvenson Bernard (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Gosder Cherilus (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Elvis Dumervil (1984) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Stéphane Guillaume (1984) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jonal Saint-Dic (1985) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Gary Ambroise (1985) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Leonel Saint-Preux (1985) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Maxime Boisclair (1985) Afro-Haitian - hockey player.
Max Hilaire (1985) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Fabrice Noël (1985) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Lesly Fellinga (1985) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jason Chery (1985) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Félix Pie (1985) Dominican [Afro Dominican] - baseball player.
Taylor Griffin (1986) Afro-Haitian, Afro-American / English - basketball player.
James Marcelin (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Pascal Millien (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean-Dimmy Jéoboam (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Max Ferdinand (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Frantz Joseph (1986) Afro-Haitian / Unknown - American football player.
Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie (1986) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Mackenzy Bernadeau (1986) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Marc Dile (1986) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Ron Girault (1986) Afro-Haitian / Unknown - American football player.
Stanley Arnoux (1986) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Wedson Anselme (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Cliff Avril (1986) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Fernando Guerrero (1986) Afro-Haitian / Dominican - boxer.
Alain Gustave (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Pierre Garçon (1986) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Ricky Jean Francois (1986) Afro-Haitian - American football playe
Leger Douzable (1986) Afro-Haitian / Unknown - American football player.
Jeff Adrien (1986) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Jean Alexandre (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean-Eudes Maurice (1986) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Lecsinel Jean-François (1986) French Guianan [Afro-Haitian] - footballer.
Emmanuel Sarki (1987) Haitian [Nigerian] - footballer.
Olivier Sajous (1987) Afro-Haitian - tennis player.
Lemuel Jeanpierre (1987) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Jeffrey Julmis (1987) Afro-Haitian - sprinter.
Judelin Aveska (1987) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Romain Genevois (1987) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Neil Magny (1987) Haitian, Dominican - mixed martial artist.
Vladimir Ducasse (1987) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Louis Delmas (1987) Afro-Haitian - American football player
Steward Ceus (1987) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Da'Mon Cromartie-Smith (1987) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Steven Lorrius (1987) Afro-Haitian - sprinter
Réginal Goreux (1987) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Bidrece Azor (1988) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
William Vainqueur (1988) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Gilbert Bayonne (1988) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Pierre-Rudolph Mayard (1988) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Johny Placide (1988) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jhohanny Jean (1988) Dominican [Afro-Haitian] - taekwondo practitioner.
Kervin Bristol (1988) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Junior Galette (1988) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Eniel Polynice (1988) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Jozy Altidore (1989) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Belony Dumas (1989) Haitian - footballer.
Wilde-Donald Guerrier (1989) Haitian - footballer.
Sammuel Lamur (1989) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Emmanuel Lamur (1989) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Listner Pierre-Louis (1989) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Sony Norde (1989) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean Fanor (1989) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Blake Griffin (1989) Afro-Haitian, Afro-American / English - basketball player.
Jason Pierre-Paul (1989) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Widlin Calixte (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Kevin Lafrance (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Fabien Vorbe (1990) Haitian [Afro-Haitian / French] - footballer.
Steeven Joseph-Monrose (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Kevin Pamphile (1990) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Fitzgerald Toussaint (1990) Afro-Haitian / African-American - American football player.
Pierre Desir (1990) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Jayson DiManche (1990) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Peterson Joseph (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Marcell Dareus (1990) Afro-Haitian / Unknown - American football player.
Soni Mustivar (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Mechack Jérôme (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Bitielo Jean Jacques (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Max Touloute (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Charles Hérold Jr. (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Whitney Mercilus (1990) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Corey Liuget (1990) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Sébastien Thurière (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Shelby Printemps (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Hervé Bazile (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Ricardo Adé (1990) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Stanley Jean-Baptiste (1990) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Giovani Bernard (1991) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Kevin Pierre-Louis (1991) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Corey Lemonier (1991) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Frantz Dorsainvil (1991) Afro-Haitian - swimmer.
Terrence Fede (1991) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Josh Gordon (1991) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Fafà Picault (1991) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Marc Fenelus (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Darrell Wesh (1992) Afro-Haitian - sprinter.
Vladimir Pascal (1992) Haitian [Afro-Guadeloupean, French] - footballer.
Jeff Luc (1992) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Stefan Jerome (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jeff Louis (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Brian Sylvestre (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Rudolphe Joly (1992) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Kenny Chery (1992) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Andrew Jean-Baptiste (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Kervens Belfort (1992) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Cady Lalanne (1992) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Dadi Nicolas (1992) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Orlando Calixte (1992) Dominican [Afro-Haitian] - baseball player.
Domingo Germán (1992) Dominican [Afro-Haitian, Possibly Other] - baseball player.
Jandel Gustave (1992) Dominican [Afro-Haitian, Possibly Other] - baseball player.
Dominique Easley (1992) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Cody Lalanne (1992) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Delano Williams (1993) Afro-Haitian, Afro-Turks and Caicos Islander - sprinter.
Zach Auguste (1993) Afro-Haitian, Greek - basketball player.
Alex Junior Christian (1993) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Miguel Sanó (1993) Dominican [Afro-Haitian] - baseball player.
Karl Joseph (1993) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Marc-Eddy Norelia (1993) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Casper Hyltoft (1993) Haitian - footballer.
Abel Thermeus (1993) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean Ambrose (1993) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Christiano François (1993) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Rénald Metelus (1993) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Paulson Pierre (1993) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Mackensie Alexander (1993) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Steeven Saba (1993) Haitian [Lebanese, Possibly Other] - footballer.
Nerlens Noel (1994) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Duckens Nazon (1994) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Samuel Pompée (1994) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jeff Coby (1994) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Dumy Fédé (1994) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jems Geffrard (1994) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Sonni Natestad (1994) Afro-Haitian, Faroese, Danish - footballer.
Luis Pie / Luisito Pié (1994) Dominican [Afro-Haitian] - taekwondo athlete.
Mike Maignan (1995) French Guianan [Afro-Haitian / French] - footballer.
Erickson Lubin (1995) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Stéphane Lambese (1995) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Frantzdy Pierrot (1995) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Presnel Kimpembe (1995) Haitian / Congolese - footballer.
Sony Michel (1995) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Anthony Duclair (1995) Afro-Haitian - ice hockey player.
Dylan Saint-Louis (1995) Haitian / Congolese - footballer.
Nicholas Baptiste (1995) Haitian - ice hockey player.
Djery Baptiste (1995) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Touki Toussaint / Dany Gilbert Toussaint (1996) ¾ Afro-Haitian, ¼ Kenyan - baseball player.
Derrick Etienne (1996) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Miki Cantave / Mikaël Cantave (1996) Afro-Haitian / Afro-Guadeloupean - footballer.
Bryan Alceus (1996) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Skal Labissière (1996) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Carlens Arcus (1996) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Zachary Herivaux (1996) Afro-Haitian / Japanese - footballer.
Schnider Hérard (1996) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Brian Chevreuil (1997) Afro-Haitian / Reunionnais - footballer.
Djimy Alexis (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Richardson Hitchins (1997) Afro-Haitian - boxer.
Estevan Florial (1997) Afro-Haitian / Dominican - baseball player.
Jean-Kévin Augustin (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Yoann Etienne (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jonel Désiré (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean-Kévin Duverne (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Andy Faustin (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jimmy-Shammar Sanon (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Allan Saint-Maximin (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Deondre Francois (1997) Afro-Haitian - American football player.
Benji Michel (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Bryan Labissiere (1997) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jean-Ricner Bellegarde (1998) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Richelor Sprangers (1998) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Denso Ulysse (1998) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Leverton Pierre (1998) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Zachary Brault-Guillard (1998) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Hannes Delcroix (1999) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Yassin Fortuné (1999) Afro-Haitian / Algerian - footballer.
Luguentz Dort (1999) Afro-Haitian - basketball player.
Ronaldo Damus (1999) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Bicou Bissainthe (1999) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Wilson Isidor (2000) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Josué Duverger (2000) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Jonathan David (2000) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Steeve Saint-Duc (2000) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
Shanyder Borgelin (2001) Afro-Haitian - footballer.
NB:
Ari Geffrard / Ariam Geffrard (1992) Afro-Haitian - Genderfluid Trans Man (He/Him/His) - model, blogger, designer, artist, and instagrammer (justariam).
Indya Moore (1995) Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Taino], Dominican [Afro-Dominican, Taino] / Puerto Rican - Non-Binary (They/Them/Their) - actor and model.
Problematic:
Luck Mervil (1967) Afro-Haitian - actor and singer - charged for sexual exploitation.
Zoë Saldaña / Zoë Saldaña-Perego (1978) Haitian, Dominican, Puerto Rican, Lebanese - actress and dancer. - Believes racism and “people of color” aren’t real, darkened her skin and used a prosthetic nose to play dark-skinned Nina Simone, and supported James Gunn’s pedophilic tweets.
Max B / Charley Wingate (1978) Afro-Haitian - rapper - sentenced to 75 years in prison on conspiracy charges pertaining to armed robbery, kidnapping, aggravated assault and felony murder.
21 Sa**ge / Shéyaa Bin Abraham-Joseph (1992) Afro-Haitian, Afro-Dominiquais, Afro-Saint Vincentian - rapper-songwriter and producer. - His stage name involves an anti-native slur despite not being native, in his song ASMR he had anti-semitic lyrics, and made tweets supporting rape culture.
Kodak Black (1997) Afro-Haitian - rapper - filmed a woman doing sex acts without her consent, misogynist and colorism saying that “he prefers light-skinned women over those with dark skin” and that “light-skinned women are easier to break down” and “black women are "too gutter." Also said that he’d "wait" for the girlfriend of late rapper Nipsey Hussle, who was shot and killed a few days beforehand.
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1982 Tenebre aka Ténebres aka Tenebrae
Direct Dario Argento
1982
Tenebre aka Tenebres aka Tenebrae
Data di uscita: 28 ottobre 1982 (Italia)
Regista: Dario Argento - authorized page
Musica composta da: Goblin, Claudio Simonetti Fabio Pignatelli, Massimo Morante
Paese di produzione: Italia 🇮🇹
Interpreti e personaggi
Anthony franciosa: Peter Neal
Giuliano Gemma: capitano Germani
John Saxon: Bullmer
Daria Nicolodi: Anne
Mirella D'Angelo: Tilde
Veronica Lario: Jane McKerrow
Ania Pieroni: Elsa Manni
Eva Robin's: ragazza della spiaggia
Christian Borromeo: Gianni
Carola Stagnaro: ispettrice Altieri
John Steiner: Cristiano Berti
Lara Wendel: Maria Alboreto
Isabella Amadeo: segretaria di Bullmer
Mirella banti: Marion
Ennio Girolami: manager del grande magazzino
Marino Masè: John
Fulvio Mingozzi: Alboreto il portiere
Giampaolo Saccarola: dottore
Ippolita Santarelli: prostituta
GUEST Lamberto Bava: riparatore
GUEST Michele Soavi: fidanzato di Maria
Tenebre è un film del 1982 diretto da Dario Argento. La pellicola rappresenta il ritorno di Argento al genere thriller che lo ha reso famoso, dopo i primi due episodi della "Trilogia delle tre madri", caratterizzati da un orrore soprannaturale.
Argento nella regia è assistito da Lamberto Bava e Michele Soavi, futuri registi di pellicole del terrore e presenti nel film anche in brevi cameo (Bava nel ruolo di un addetto alla riparazione di un guasto e Soavi nel doppio ruolo di fidanzato di Lara Wendel e corteggiatore di Eva Robin's in un flashback).
Argento ha rivelato che la genesi di Tenebre è stata influenzata da uno spiacevole incidente accadutogli nel 1980 quando venne molestato da un fan ossessivo. Secondo quanto dichiarato da Argento, l'ammiratore lo perseguitava telefonandogli di continuo, giorno dopo giorno, fino a quando gli confessò di volerlo uccidere. Anche se la minaccia si dimostrò infondata e il tutto si risolse in una bolla di sapone, Argento trovò l'esperienza che gli era capitata terrificante e scrisse Tenebre come risultato delle sue paure.
A dispetto del suo titolo, Argento diede disposizione al suo operatore Luciano Tovoli di girare le scene del film con la maggiore luce possibile. Girato principalmente a Roma, molte delle scene del film sono ambientate di giorno, o in interni fortemente illuminati. Il regista spiegò che stava adottando: "... uno stile di fotografia moderno, discostandomi deliberatamente dalle atmosfere scure e cupe della tradizione del cinema espressionista tedesco a cui l'horror si era sempre rifatto".
A tal proposito, è emblematica la scena dell'omicidio del personaggio interpretato da John Saxon, girata in pieno giorno in una piazza assolata e affollata di passanti.
Il regista disse anche che la visione del film di Andrzej Żuławski Possession (1981) aveva fortemente influenzato la sua decisione di girare Tenebre con un'illuminazione forte.
Nonostante la produzione italiana, quasi tutti gli attori del film recitarono in inglese per incrementare le possibilità di successo internazionale negli Stati Uniti. Solo successivamente il film venne doppiato in italiano per il mercato nazionale.
“Tagli e censure”
La scena dell'uccisione di Jane, interpretata da Veronica Lario futura moglie di Silvio Berlusconi, fu pesantemente tagliata per la prima visione televisiva, avvenuta nel marzo 1986 su rete Fininvest, come ultimo appuntamento di una rassegna del cinema argentiano. A onor del vero, la sequenza fu censurata per poter abbassare il divieto di visione dai minori di 18 anni ai minori di 14 e consentire la messa in onda del film.
Fu poi lo stesso Argento a mostrare la scena nella trasmissione Giallo, su Rai 2, nell'autunno 1987.
Nella versione trasmessa in televisione nel 1986 furono ridotte altre scene violente: la sequenza finale in cui il killer viene trafitto dalle punte della scultura è resa molto meno cruenta (non si vede mai la punta che passa il corpo da parte a parte, né il sangue che cola subito dopo); la scena in cui la ragazza viene uccisa a colpi di accetta in casa dell'assassino ha inquadrature in cui non si vede mai l'arma colpire la vittima.
A causa dell'estrema violenza di alcune scene, e di alcune tematiche per l'epoca scabrose, Tenebre uscì nelle sale con il divieto ai minori di 18 anni.
“Le location del film”
Molte location esterne del film appartengono al quartiere romano dell'Eur e sono a pochi passi da un isolato nel quale, undici anni prima, Dario Argento aveva filmato alcuni esterni di 4 mosche di velluto grigio. In particolare per Tenebre le zone dell'Eur più rintracciabili sono quelle di Cesare Pavese, Palasport e Basilica dei SS Pietro e Paolo.
La scena dell'omicidio di Bullmer è stata invece girata al centro commerciale "Le Terrazze" di Casal Palocco.
“Curiosità”
Il film andò bene al botteghino italiano, piazzandosi al 16º posto degli incassi della stagione cinematografica 1982-83.
Circola in Italia, seppure stampata in un numero limitatissimo di copie, un'edizione non autorizzata in super 8. Tra tutti i titoli di Argento esistenti su questo formato (ed escludendo Il gatto a nove code, i cui diritti per la stampa in super 8, vennero ufficialmente acquistati dalla Sil.ma) è l'unico ad essere accettabile per qualità.
Nella sequenza del bar, ad un certo punto si sente in sottofondo la colonna sonora di Zombi di George A. Romero, composta dai Goblin.
Alcune scene di Tenebre (e di altri film di Dario Argento) sono presenti nel videoclip della canzone Worlock (1989) della band canadese Skinny Puppy, in particolare la sanguinosa scena dell'amputazione della mano di Veronica Lario.
#tenebre 1982#tenebre#tenebres#tenebrae#dario argento#dario argento movie#darioargento#horror movies#film horror#horrormovies#italian horror#horror film#80s horror#80s movies#80s#giallo fever#giallofever#italian cult#cult#italian giallo#cinema cult#italian sexy comedy#international cult#gialli#giallo#veronica lario#mirella dangelo#mirella d’angelo#giuliano gemma#daria nicolodi
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Top: Carol Christian Poell/Fe-Male 2010/CORD-PTC Jacket (Made for me from men’s pattern)
Carol Christian Poell/Fe-Male 2010/CORD-PTC Long Johns (Made for me from men’s pattern). Worn over long black socks. Avantindietro (2009) handmade oxfords by Maurizio Altieri (also specially made in my size.)
Interior: Ann Demeulemeester White Tank Top w Black Tank layered over it.
Ann Demeulemeester “Necklace Georgette Powder”
Bottom Left: (same as top without jacket and necklace); Bottom Right: Ann Demeulemeester white tank. Comme des Garcons AW 2015 Harness over mini skirt/pant top worn over CCP Long Johns, black socks and Avantindietro handmade oxfords. Lad Musician felt hat.
MBD
#MBD#MetroBulotDodo#Carol Christian Poell#CCP#MBD Archive#Lad Musician#Ann Demeulemeester#Avantindietro#Carpe Diem#Maurizio Altieri#WAYWT#StyleZeitgeist#Comme des Garcons#CDG#Comme des Garcons AW 2015#MetroBulotDodo Collection#MBD Styling#Style#Fashion#FuckTrump
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SUMMARY Fifty years after a nuclear holocaust, mankind is decimated and the surviving nations—the western-influenced Market and the Russian-influenced Confederation—have agreed to outlaw traditional open war. In their place, disputes are settled with gladiator-style matches between giant robots operated by pilots called “robot jox” who are contracted to fight ten matches. The Confederation champion is Alexander (Paul Koslo), who has killed his last nine opponents thanks in part to a spy in the Market leaking information to the Confederation. The Market’s champion, Achilles (Gary Graham) has won nine fights and will fight his final match against Alexander for the territory of Alaska. Achilles is supported by robot designer “Doc” Matsumoto (Danny Kamekona) and strategist Tex Conway (Michael Alldredge), the only jox to win all ten of his contract fights.
As Achilles gets the upper hand in the match, Alexander launches a rocket fist at him. The projectile goes out of control and heads toward the bleachers. Achilles intercepts the projectile but his robot takes the full force of the impact and is knocked into the crowd, killing over 300 people. The referees declare the match a draw and order a rematch, but Achilles, shaken by what happened, declares this was his contractual tenth match and announces his retirement. He goes to live with his brother Philip and his family, and finds he is publicly branded a traitor and a coward. Meanwhile, a new jox is chosen to face Alexander, a genetically engineered “gen jox” named Athena (Anne-Marie Johnson), who is the first female jox. Worried for Athena and attracted to her, Achilles returns to the Market and agrees to fight Alexander again, infuriating Athena.
As Achilles’ robot is rebuilt, Matsumoto refuses to divulge any knowledge of its new weapons so it cannot be leaked by the spy, and Conway confides in Achilles he believes Matsumoto is the spy. Conway confronts Matsumoto in his office. Matsumoto reveals he has analyzed Conway’s final fight and deduced that the “lucky” laser hit Conway claims allowed him to defeat a clearly superior opponent was in fact deliberately aimed; Matsumoto accuses Conway of being a Confederation agent. Conway confesses and shoots Matsumoto, who secretly records the deed as part of the mission briefing. Conway informs the Market leadership that Matsumoto was the spy. On the day of the fight Athena drugs Achilles and steals his jox suit to commandeer the robot. Unable to stop the fight once she takes the field, the Market decides to support her. While watching Matsumoto’s briefing on the robot’s new weaponry, the footage of Conway killing Matsumoto is played and Conway jumps down the robot’s elevator shaft to his death.
Alexander takes the field against Athena. Athena takes the early advantage, but Alexander overpowers her and incapacitates the robot. The fight is declared in Alexander’s favor and referees order him to stand down. Achilles arrives on the field and takes over the robot from Athena while Alexander smashes the referee hovercraft; the two jox stand to continue the fight. Both robots take to the air and a short space battle ensues. Alexander critically damages Achilles’ robot, forcing him to crash land and flee for cover to the arm of Alexander’s robot Athena sliced off earlier in the fight. Achilles hotwires the arm to launch its fist at Alexander, destroying his robot. Alexander emerges from the wreckage and the two battle with poles before Achilles finally convinces Alexander a match does not have to end with the death of a jock. Alexander throws down his weapon, and they salute each other with the jox’s traditional “crash and burn” fist bump.
DEVELOPMENT Gordon conceived Robot Jox while making Dolls in Rome. “I’m a big fan of the Japanese Transformer toys,” he explained from his office, which overlooks Sunset Boulevard. “While there have been animated cartoons based on these giant robots, no one has ever attempted a live-action feature about them. It struck me that it was a natural fantasy for the big screen-and a terrific opportunity to take advantage of the special effects that are available today.”
Steve Burg’s 1986 concept art
Gordon approached science-fiction writer Joe Haldeman to write a screenplay based on Gordon’s original story itself based on the story of Achilles from Homer’s Iliad-having worked with him two years prior on an ambitious stage adaptation of Haldeman’s most celebrated book, The Forever War: Dennis Paoli (co-author of Gordon’s Re-Animator and From Beyond) put the final draft through various rewrites.
“Joe is part of an Air Force think tank to develop weaponry for the future,” explained Gordon, “so he was able to incorporate a lot of actual existing technology into the script and to hypothesize where it might all lead. Then we started storyboarding the film. The reaction to Dave’s footage was excellent, and Charlie was able to get the project rolling on a projected $10 million budget-a huge budget for an Empire film. I think Charlie saw it as Empire’s chance to move up into larger-budget films.”
“Haldeman did 11 drafts of the script,” the director recalls. “Joe’s experience in Vietnam was helpful here because the story’s about our future, 50 years after an atomic war. The world is basically broken down into two superpowers: The Market, which is like the Common Market except that Japan and the United States are part of it, and the Confederation, which is everybody else. Earth has vowed no war will ever take place again, so international disputes are settled by single combat between pilots of huge robots.” These pilots are called robot jockeys or robot jocks
The sequence, using robots designed by Kevin Altieri, was storyboarded by Altieri from the prologue to the script by science fiction writer Joe Haldeman, set in a snowscape where a heavy fog covers an apparent “elephants’ graveyard” of broken, battered robots, the fallen warriors of a robotic battlefield. Here and there among the shells, fires sputter near the latest casualties while a big, menacing robot stands over its victim.
“I thought it turned out very well,” said Allen of the test footage. “The style is quite different from anything else we did subsequently because it was all shot interior while everything else has been done exterior. It didn’t splice together perfectly because it depended upon live-action which hadn’t been shot.”
PRE-PRODUCTION Six months passed while Empire continued efforts to raise financing for the film while at the same time revising the effects complexities of the script to bring them in line with budget realities, mostly by simplifying the robot action. During these delays designer Altieri left the production to accept work as a full-time director at DIC Animation Studios.
Gordon said he brought Cobb into the project “to bring a real sense of believable technology to the robots, so they could be something an audience could accept as a reality as opposed to a cartoon show. Cobb designs things that could actually work,” said Gordon. “What we ended up with was a look that was different from the look of the Japanese toys. It’s very utilitarian and it looks big, like it has the power to do what it has to do.”
Cobb explained that when he was approached by Gordon to work on ROBOT JOX he was already committed to another project and could only work on weekends. “When I left, I told them they should make Steve Burg production designer or give him the clout of production designer because he was the only person that knew how the robots went together and was the only person that could police the construction,” said Cobb. “They just walked all over him. Eventually it was wrenched out of his hands. Everything went to pot when he left. The designs got really confused. The final shape and form of the film has obviously had problems, too.”
“I was most intrigued to design the cabs and how the interactive body motions were translated by waldos to the entire robot. I was trying to think of a reason for transformation. If it could translate into different modes of fighting, that might make sense. The idea really is silly, of course, but I wanted to keep it believable and then over and above it all, it’s humorous. It’s not a serious picture, and it isn’t meant to be.”
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Cobb was also asked to design robotic parts made of heavy-duty plastic (with metal armatures underneath) which special FX supervisor David Allen could reshape, using different models for different shots during the film’s major transformation sequences. Another Cobb-assisted movie is Stuart Gordon’s Robot Jox. “Again, that was in my conceptual design mode, so I basically opted to do all the key technology and moved on. Steve Burg was involved, and carried out many of my designs. We wanted a kind of non-Japanese version of a Transformer robot, which is very, very clever technologically speaking. We weren’t going to have them turn into semi-trucks or something, but we were going to have them break apart and operate in different functions and modes. I always liked the idea where the entire head became a little aircraft. I believe that has been changed-now the whole robot flies and changes.
According to Allen, Cobb came up with a new look for Achilles and Alexander, the main robojock pilots, their robots, and a few sets, including a gantry and silo. When the project encountered more delays, Cobb too, departed. “I suspect that payments to Ron started to flag,” said Allen. “There was sort of a painless transition. Ron left Steve Burg in charge to do the refinements and subsequent modifications.”
Steve Bury was brought in to assist Cobb with the robot detailing, since Cobb had a limited amount of time to devote to the project. “We were constantly referring to Ron’s drawings, and Steve continued to report back to Ron to show him what he was doing and to get Ron’s approval. As a matter of fact, Ron and Steve hit it off so well that they’ve worked together ever since.”
LIVE ACTION PHOTOGRAPHY Robot Jox began principal photography at Empire’s Rome facilities in January 1987, and wrapped in April. Gordon then turned over the post-production effects to Allen, who had selected El Mirage, a dry lake bed near the Mojave Desert, as the site for filming of the live-action robot skirmishes. (Some stop-motion work would be done at Allen’s Burbank studios; the live-action filming made use of the 5-foot, 50-pound cable-controlled models of Achilles and Alexander.)
“There wasn’t too much choice as far as shooting outdoors because Empire didn’t own a local stage we could work on,” Allen explained. “And even then it would have to have been huge; we would have had to hang and paint a cyclorama and then put tables out and light everything artificially. We would have been into a tremendous set rental situation over an extended period of time, which would have been a huge cash drain.”
El Mirage was chosen for its brilliant blue skies and unobstructed panorama, but the year of on-again, offagain shooting that transpired-Allen and his crew would make a total of three trips out to the desert location proved to be anything but smooth sailing. The weather was so temperamental Allen considered it a good day if he got two or three good shots in the can.
The heat wasn’t so bad, but as we were in a geothermally unstable area, we were at the mercy of the elements,” Allen said. “We had to contend daily with clouds, rain, dust storms and hellishly high winds-our outhouse got blown over constantly. Sometimes the dust was so bad you couldn’t see in front of you. When that happened, we’d go back to the motel or drive back to L.A. When it rained the lake bed would fill up and our cars were in danger of getting stuck.”
Numerous delays caused by the weather-and requests made by Gordon for additional effects-made location shooting more costly than Empire budgeted for. Still, Allen bristles at the suggestion that his unit work might have set the film back. The location shooting was probably more expensive than Empire expected, yeah. However the problem wasn’t that we were breaking the bank but that we weren’t getting money sent to us regularly enough. If by week four we didn’t have a check, we had to go back to L.A. Rain or shine I still had to put up 10 or 12 guys in a motel.”
David Allen
SPECIAL EFFECTS PHOTOGRAPHY With the designs set, the robots were finally transferred from the drawing table into three-dimensional models, constructed in two sizes: a stop motion size of about 20 inches tall and a larger cable-articulated miniature, closer to 50 inches high. Allen pointed out that the robot miniatures were particularly difficult to build because their joints had to be cosmetic as well as practical.“A robot doesn’t have implied’ joints like a foam rubber model,” said Allen. “It has actual working interstices: the hinges and swivels and all the hydraulics and the pistons have to be tracked. It isn’t like rubber that just mushes out of its own way. If you don’t design it right, the joints will all freeze up and lock. A robot can look good and be totally musclebound or joint bound.”
“The transformations sort of suffered due to the realities of the schedule and the budget,” said Burg. “The changes were generally not that extensive. The rocket mode, for example, had some wings pulled out and cockpits reoriented, but it was still recognizable as being the same thing, whereas with some of the TRANSFORMERS cartoons, it looks completely different. That would have been possible, but it would have taken an enormous amount of time to figure it out cleverly and would have taken a lot more resources to execute.”
Dennis Gordon, a long-time Allen associate, supervised the construction of the robot miniatures for Allen. Ron Thornton was brought in to head another construction team, and Mark Goldberg and Patrick Cox of the Local Motion Company were hired to build the cable-activated controls and armatures. Mark Rappaport built many of the robot’s weapons. Construction crews of up to twenty craftsmen worked for many months to complete the miniatures.
During this time, Allen was working full-time for ILM in San Rafael on BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED, a four month assignment he had accepted during one of the many production delays on ROBOT JOX. The ILM work stretched into a full year, keeping Allen away from his shop except for weekend visits to supervise the progress of building the ROBOT JOX miniatures. Allen compared overseeing the consortium of effects people at work to “managing D-Day.” During the weekend visits to his LA studio, Allen also completed stop-motion work for Gordon’s DOLLS.
Good actors are essential in selling special effects, making them seem believable, and Gordon said he felt that his cast was very good at “being able to create that sense of combat, one-on-one, which depends on the actors involved to be able to react with each other and play off of each other. The feeling that we were going for was something like ROCKY,” said Gordon. “There are real ups and downs in these battles and real emotional reactions to things that are going on. The robots are basically tools and weapons that are carrying out the war of these men.
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David Allen began post-production work on the carefully storyboarded robot battles, filming stop-motion at his studio and taking a crew out to a dry lake bed in El Mirage, near the Mojave desert, to film the large cable-activated robots live. Allen executed the stop-motion work with Paul Jessel, who animated the Achilles robot after Athena takes control.
Said Allen about working with Gordon, “Stuart is a person who showed himself to be quite decided about things, but he doesn’t dig in his heels. He accepts realities when .he’s satisfied that what he wants is impractical or not possible. I had a pretty free hand considering what I imagine Stuart is like on a set where he would usually be expecting to control his movies—that’s what any director expects to do. He was pretty good about letting us work in a loose kind of way. Of course, the [story]boards are very important. I don’t deviate from them too much unless I have to or I feel I can improve them or in some cases I just feel they are not very filmic. My changes have usually been appreciated rather than resented. I think we have a good relationship compared to the horror stories I often hear about with other directors.”
“Conceptually, filming there was a wonderful idea but, in reality, it turned into a huge ordeal for Dave’s crew because they were shooting out there for almost a year, completely at the mercy of the desert. When they came back, they all looked like Lawrence of Arabia.”
Additional robot weaponry includes cannons, machine guns and a Smart missile, on which is mounted a video camera for point of-view shots. For hand-to-hand combat, there are saws, drills and a magnesium flare which can suddenly blind an opponent.
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But, says Gordon, “the human story must be the center of it all. No matter how great your FX are, if the audience doesn’t care about the people, then there’s no movie. That’s why I was drawn to the story of Achilles, the warrior who doesn’t want to fight anymore but is forced back into it because of his lover’s death. That’s the center of ours as well, though we’ve put it into science-fiction terms.”
Along with some stop-motion FX added later, Allen and his crew shot on location in the Mojave Desert utilizing large models for these mechanical effects; others were used for pyrotechnic explosions, while some doubled as “stunt robots” for shots in which they couldn’t destroy their carefully detailed models.
“By shooting in Death Valley, David was able to do extensive foreground miniature work, as opposed to doing it optically in post-production,” explains the director. “So most of the effects work was done in the camera, which gives it a very realistic, seamless look, because you’re seeing real mountains, sky and sunlight behind these robots.” This technique also offered the filmmakers a tremendous depth of field, keeping both the foreground and background in focus.
The live location shooting of the big miniature robots at El Mirage proved to be the biggest headache for Allen. When the location work cost Empire more than expected, Allen’s crew had to pack up and leave until more funds became available. All in all, Allen and his crew made three extended trips out into the desert. “I think if you took all the periods and added them up, we were out there for at least six or seven months,” said Allen. “That’s a long time to have a second unit crew on location. We made a very large commitment to that decision. It was a decision dictated by my recommendation, but also by practicalities.” The alternative would have been to shoot in an enormous warehouse or hanger with cycloramas, which would have been an even more expensive proposition for Empire, according to Allen.
“It takes a certain daring to shoot outdoors,” said Allen about the decision. “That’s why movies were made indoors for thirty years, because of the pressures of the industry to force predictability and control on the product. There were a lot of problems in El Mirage. We underestimated those problems.”
According to Gordon, one of the reasons the effects are taking so long is that Allen is shooting in sunlight out in the desert to incorporate real mountains and skies as a backdrop. The vastness of the desert is being used to combine the miniature robots with vast cheering throngs of spectators by shooting the cable-controlled models up close with a stadium set far in the background.
Allen is also shooting background plates for stop-motion work to be completed at his own studio. “I think the effects are really going to blow people’s minds,” said Gordon. “Although this is Empire’s largest budget, anyone else attempting this picture would want to budget three times as much.”
Gordon also pegged the film’s delay to the time-consuming special effects techniques being used to bring the story’s giant, transforming, fighting robots to life. The work, supervised by Oscar nominee David Allen, is said to be spectacular by those who viewed a product reel of footage shown by Empire at the American Film Market earlier this year. To realize the film’s complex effects action inexpensively, Allen wedded today’s sophisticated puppet technology to the low-budget effects techniques used by Howard and Theodore Lydecker on the Republic serials of the ’40s, filming the robots live against real backdrops.
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“It’s an approach that I don’t think anyone would attempt unless they were looking at this as we were—from a very low budget,” said Gordon about reviving the Lydecker approach. “Rather than light a miniature on a stage, they would take the miniature outdoors and light it with sunlight, using real sky and real clouds. It gives the miniature work greater realism. The effect is seamless because it is done in the camera.”
Gordon thinks audiences will be able to notice the difference from the blue screen optical compositing techniques that have become commonplace in effects films. “I think audiences are starting to get wise to those techniques and are able to spot them and know exactly what you’re doing,” he said. “By going back to these older techniques, our effects have a freshness about them.”
Allen and his crew spent over a year in the desert shooting the film’s robot scenes using natural sunlight, painstakingly matching the variable lighting conditions for sequences filmed over a prolonged period of time. At the mercy of the elements, the crew endured wind, rain and sandstorms which often made the shooting a waiting game. Beside the weather, the financial climate at Empire resulted in its own delays. “At one point they had to shut down production and pull Allen and his crew out of the desert until the cash flow improved,” said Gordon.
Allen accomplished most of the scenes of robot warfare live, using cable-controlled models, although stop-motion is used for some scenes. He has a second set of robots that are in a smaller scale which he uses for stop-motion,” said Gordon. “When he’s not able to get the large ones to do it, he uses stop-motion. One of the things that I am amazed at is that he’s able to meld the two in terms of being able to go from a stop motion shot to a puppeted shot. I don’t think the audience will be able to tell the difference in most of the cases. It’s a wonderful blend.”
Allen was pleased with the realism provided by the natural lighting and backdrops, but using a natural sky meant that the sky was always changing, making it sometimes difficult to match shots. And the sky at El Mirage was like Mark Twain’s comment about the Hawaiian Islands: “If you don’t like the weather, wait a few minutes and it’ll change.” Noted Allen dryly, the weather almost always seemed to get worse on any given day rather than better.
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Allen’s right-hand man on the shoot was associate effects director Paul Gentry. Ray Goode served as effects crew foreman and pryotechnician Joe Viskocil handled the fire and explosions. Winds proved especially bedeviling for the numerous shots requiring pyro effects, blowing the fire and smoke hysterically, giving away the small scale of the miniatures. The wind also blew sand off the elevated tables that the miniatures were filmed on and into the faces of the cable operators and camera crew. The difficult shoot was exhausting to everyone on the crew. Seemingly simple sequences would take hours to get on film because the process by which the robots were manipulated had to be hidden and their movements painstakingly detailed and adjusted. But Allen is very pleased with the results that were achieved.
“A major studio could not have afforded to put up a second unit working in the conditions under which we produced these shots,” said Allen. “A lot of days we simply couldn’t do anything and had to sit it out. It would be ruinously expensive to work that way for a major studio. For them, it would have been cheaper to work indoors. But for Empire it would have been much more expensive because they were not committed to the union way of doing things. To put a second unit out under those conditions, you would have to have a lunch wagon and a guard and all the facilities and amenities. We had my old R.V. and we were like a bunch of ragtag Eagle Scouters practically.”
Looking back on the years of work on ROBOT JOX, Allen remembered with some irony his first conversation with Empire chief Charles Band about ROBOT JOX, indicating the naivete with which Empire entered into the complex effects project.
Joe Haldeman
Interview with screenwriter Joe Haldeman What kind of working relationship did you have with Stuart Gordon? Joe Haldeman: I enjoy working with Stuart because he’s one of the best administrators I’ve ever seen in the arts. He and I had many pretty good-natured arguments over what the movie was going to be about, and about what science fiction was supposed to do. He usually won, being the director. We identified the problem without actually solving it-I was trying to make an adult movie that children would enjoy, and he was trying to make a children’s movie that adults would enjoy. Those are two really different kinds of movies, and I guess we never did resolve them.
How did you get involved? Joe Haldeman: Stuart called me. He’d had two successes with From Beyond and ReAnimator, and the producer gave him more or less carte blanche. He wanted to do a hard SF movie, so he called me up and he said, “I don’t have much money, but how would you like to write a movie that actually gets made?”
And I said, “Yeah!” So, he said, “What I want to do is a science-fiction version of The Iliad.” I said, “Great,” and he said, “I’ll send you a couple-page outline.” So, I get this outline, it’s pretty much like The Iliad, except it has a love interest, and people walk around in great big robots. I worked up a proposal to pitch it to the producers. They sent us out to Los Angeles and I pitched it, and they bought it. I wrote it and rewrote it-all six drafts of it.
Did you meet with the actors? Joe Haldeman: Yeah, I loved the actors. That happened because I did six drafts, and then another draft written by somebody else came in the mail. It was just awful! I wrote Stuart a long letter detailing why he shouldn’t use that script. I didn’t hear from him for months, and I thought, “Well, that’s it.” Then, they called me in December and said, “We read your criticism, you’re completely right and we want you to write the final version. Can you be in Rome tomorrow?” You can imagine how weird that was. I said, “It’s nearly Christmas, I can’t come to Rome tomorrow. Don’t be ridiculous. I’ve got a family.” I said I would be in Rome by the first week of the New Year. They said, “OK.”
They put us up in a really grand hotel on the Via Veneto in Rome. I sat there with my little manual typewriter and rewrote the script word-for-word. It was a whole new script because I got to talk to the actors, the male and female leads. We hashed out the main characters together so that they were comfortable with them. I would get up about 2:00 a.m. and write until 7:00, when the actors were going out. I would go down and copy the pages for them, and they would get in the limo and go out to the studio to act ’em out. It was a really vibrant and exciting way to live. When you’re going through something like that, you realize, “God, this is changing my life forever!” I really loved working on that project, loved being a team player rather than being the only guy responsible for the whole product.
I’m eternally grateful to Stuart for choosing me for that. He could have chosen many people who are more tractable. I think he got a good movie out of it. You can’t tell until all the various elements come together. We got good actors, we got one hell of a good writer (Smiles), we got one of the best directors around.
And the special FX? Joe Haldeman: The special FX were great. They took us out to the studios at the largest soundstages in Europe. The story involved robots 500 feet high, and they had actually build one up to the knees inside of that huge soundstage. I don’t know what I had expected, but there were futuristic automobiles, and the interiors of futuristic homes, military training stuff. I walked into the wardrobe room, and there were 200 costumes that were made for people who before had only inhabited a universe in my mind. All of this stuff, millions of dollars and hundreds of people working thousands of hours, were all there to make solid the things that I just imagined the way I imagined a novel. That was a mind-blower! It should only happen to every science-fiction writer.
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Robot Jox (1989) Frédéric Talgorn Frédéric Talgorn, who had previously composed the music for the 1989 horror film Edge of Sanity, wrote the orchestral film score for Robot Jox, which was performed by the Paris Philharmonic Orchestra. Since Prometheus Records reissued the soundtrack in 1993, it has received generally high acclaim. An editorial review by Filmtracks.com stated that “Talgorn’s usual strong development of thematic ideas is well utilized in rather simplistic fashion in this film, perfect for the contrasting characters and their underdeveloped dimensions.”
CAST/CREW Directed Stuart Gordon
Produced Charles Band
Screenplay Joe Haldeman
Story Stuart Gordon
Music Frédéric Talgorn
Gary Graham – Achilles Anne-Marie Johnson – Athena Paul Koslo – Alexander Robert Sampson – Commissioner Jameson [sic] Danny Kamekona – Dr. “Doc” Matsumoto Hilary Mason – Professor Laplace Michael Alldredge – Tex Conway Jeffrey Combs – Spectator/Prole #1
CREDITS/REFERENCES/SOURCES/BIBLIOGRAPHY Cinefantastique v17n01 Cinefantastique v18n04 Cinefantastique v19n01-02 Horrorfan#02 Starlog#145 Starlog#158
Robot Jox (1989) Retrospective SUMMARY Fifty years after a nuclear holocaust, mankind is decimated and the surviving nations—the western-influenced Market and the Russian-influenced Confederation—have agreed to outlaw traditional open war.
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It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown is getting a 4K upgrade in time for Halloween! The classic Peanuts special will be released as a 4K Ultra HD/Blu-ray/Digital HD combo pack on September 26 via Warner Bros.
The 1966 animated television special is written by Peanuts creator Charles M. Schulz and directed by Bill Melendez (A Charlie Brown Christmas). It stars the voice talents of Peter Robbins, Sally Dryer, Kathy Steinberg, Christopher Shea, Gabrielle De, Faria Ritter, Lisa DeFaria, Ann Altieri, and Glenn Mendelson.
It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown will also be available alongside A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving and A Charlie Brown Christmas in the Peanuts Holiday Collection 4K Ultra HD set on October 10.
It’s the Great Pumpkin will include two bonus TV specials as extras. Details are below.
Special features:
Charlie Brown's All-Stars (1966) bonus special
It's Magic, Charlie Brown (1981) bonus special
This Emmy Award-nominated special, finds the Peanuts gang outfitted in costumes, ready for trick or treating and crashing Violet's Halloween party. Charlie Brown is in a ghost costume (with more eyeholes cut out than needed), Lucy dressed as a witch and Snoopy in a World War I flying ace costume. Linus decides to steadfastly hold vigil in the pumpkin patch as he awaits the Great Pumpkin.
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