Description: A rough, yet elegant banner. The pattern on the banner holds meaning too. Heihachi, the woodcutting samurai, makes it for them, and it reflects some of his whimsy and quiet mischief. The six circles on the top represent the six "proper" samurai in their company. The symbol at the bottom means "tanbo" or rice paddy. It's supposed to represent the farmers who the samurai are defending. (It's interesting that the samurai each get their own symbol, but the farmers are still lumped into one big group; some class differences are still in place). Between them stands a triangle representing Kikuchiyo: the outsider of the bunch who stands balanced between the samurai and the peasants they're protecting.
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Description: Danger: Diabolik (Italian: Diabolik) is a 1968 action crime film directed and co-written by Mario Bava, based on the Italian comic series Diabolik by Angela and Luciana Giussani.
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Description: My favorite Micronaut. Winged terror of Inner Space, REPTO, by the excellent Ken Kelly.
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Description: Back when Toys became interactive teaching instruments. Big Trak started a generation of programmers on the digital path.
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Description: Big Jim's P.A.C.K.: Dr. Steel, the enforcer... with the ghastly gleaming hand. Based on the Jack Kirby package artwork.
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Description: Coffy is a 1973 American blaxploitation action thriller film written and directed by Jack Hill. The story is about a black female vigilante played by Pam Grier who seeks violent revenge against a heroin dealer responsible for her sister's addiction. Produced and distributed by American International Pictures (AIP), Coffy was the third Jack Hill film to star Grier, after The Big Doll House and The Big Bird Cage. Grier would go on to boost her career as the leading "femme fatale" of blaxploitation for the rest of the 1970s.
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