View allAll Photos Tagged terror
Captain Terror was the leader of the Car Acrobatic Team (the team with Snake Oiler) in the anime, and I wanted to make his car as well.
Terror Illustrated / Heft-Reihe
[Cover title is Adult Tales of Terror Illustrated]
> Features illustrated text stories
cover: Reed Crandall
EC (An Original EC Picto-Fiction Magazine) / USA 1955
Reprint / Comic-Club NK 2010
ex libris MTP
Tower of Terror, Tokyo DisneySea
Tokyo Disney Resort, Tokyo, Japan
Though it contains essentially the same ride system as its US counterparts, Tokyo's Tower of Terror is in a league of its own when it comes to theme. No Twilight Zone tie-in here, instead you enter the world of Harrison Hightower, a cross between the most interesting man in the world and your basic decrepit hotel owner. The effects contained within are awesome and literally jaw dropping the first time we saw them (followed by trying to figure out how it worked every time after that).
I shot this just about closing time in DisneySea as the last riders were finishing up. No tripods are allowed here (unlike US parks) so I used my GreenPod to prop up my camera. I wound up really liking the interest the ground added to the shot because of my low angle, something I might not have captured if I had a tripod.
I hope you enjoy the shot, thanks for looking!
6/705
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He's such a little terrorist, with 6 weeks and biting,nibbling,mouthing every thing he can find, even our feet, hands and face (he has a special taste for ears), still he's so darn cute!
The world trade center from brooklyn ..Also crossing the brooklyn bridge with world trade center on fire..Various crowd sceens at city hall..W trade tower falls down and people running shot on west street ..Both towers fall shots on west street at world trade center fireman .Trying to hose down buring cars and firetrucks caught on fore from the debrte of bldg
Title: Terror Keep.
Author: Edgar Wallace.
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton.
Date: 1958.
Artist: George Chrichard.
Terror Tournament, J. M. Flynn (Jay Flynn)
Ace Double D-409, 1959
Cover artist's signature is illegible
The Moscow Monsters
Book :
Tomasz Kizny
La Grande Terreur En URSS 1937 - 1938
Editions Noir Sur Blanc
2013
Alekseï Grigorievitch Jeltikov
Exécuté à Moscou en 1937
Entre 1937 et 1938, les répressions atteignent un pic en URSS : Staline fait assassiner des centaines de milliers de personnes sur tout le territoire. Cette période, qui commence seulement à être documentée suite à l’ouverture partielle des archives, est aujourd’hui désignée comme la Grande Terreur.
De 2008 à 2011, Tomasz Kizny mène une véritable enquête sur cette vague de violence de l’État Soviétique contre ses propres citoyens. En Russie, en Ukraine et en Biélorussie, en collaboration avec l’Association Memorial, il réalise un travail photographique qui documente le crime et présente une topographie de la Terreur : lieux d’exécutions et de fosses communes, photographies des proches des disparus, objets retrouvés lors des fouilles ...
Le cœur du livre consiste en une série de bouleversants portraits de condamnés, pris dans les geôles du NKVD après leur arrestation et quelques jours avant leur exécution. Il s’agit d’une puissante accusation documentaire du Totalitarisme Soviétique, qui vient donner un visage aux victimes de Staline.
CD :
Nicolas Werth
Le Goulag
De Vive Voix
2002
Design by Paul Cox
iTunes :
The Moscow Monsters
Death Is Slowly Coming
Factory
FAC41
GMAlexeï Rykov ...
New York City Mayor Eric Adams delivers remarks at the National September 11th Memorial Museum’s 30th Anniversary Commemoration of the 1993 World Trade Center attack, on Sunday, February 26, 2023. Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office
Tower of Terror ride at Disney Worlds Magic Kingdom theme park.
If you use this image please credit to Hello Jessie
Llegando a 48 minifiguras.
De izquierda a derecha:
Caballero del Terror - Serie 15
Rufián - Serie 16
Mesut Özil - Serie Selección Alemania
Mario Götze - Serie Selección Alemania
Glam Metal Batman - Serie Batman Movie
Alien Clásico - Serie 6
Villano Extraterrestre - Serie 3
La Dama Élfica - Serie 17
Reina del Hielo - Serie 16
Zane - Serie Ninjago
The Topography of Terror on Niederkirchnerstrasse (formerly Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse) is located on the site of buildings during the Nazi regime that housed the SS Reich Main Security Office, the headquarters of the Sicherheitspolizei, SD, Einsatzgruppen and Gestapo. The Gestapo and SS headquarters buildings were largely destroyed by Allied bombing during early 1945; the ruins were demolished after the war. The boundary between the American and Soviet zones of occupation ran along Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse, thus the street soon became a fortified boundary. The Berlin Wall ran along the south side of the street (renamed Niederkirchnerstrasse). The wall here was never demolished. The section adjacent to the Topography of Terror is the longest extant segment of the outer wall.
The first exhibitions on the site took place in 1987, as part of Berlin's 750th anniversary. The cellar of the Gestapo headquarters, where many political prisoners were tortured and executed, was found and excavated. The site was then turned into an open-air memorial and museum, protected from the elements by a canopy, detailing the history of Nazi repression. A joint exhibition was shown both at the site and in East Germany in 1989. In 1993, three years after German reunification, a foundation established to take care of the site initiated chose architect Peter Zumthor to design a permanent museum. However, construction was stopped due to funding problems after the concrete core of the structure had been built, which stood on the site for nearly a decade until it was demolished in 2004 and a new building begun. Construction of the new Documentation Center according to a prize-winning design by the architect Ursula Wilms and the landscape architect Heinz W. Hallmann was finished in 2010.
Nino wanted to see Craig's Terror Drome. Craig didn't take many pictures of the Terror Drome because it was so big and hard to get out, but I did find this one in his photo collection :D
The infamous "Twilight Zone: Tower of Terror" ride at Disney World's Hollywood Studios (formerly MGM). Upon entering the ride, you are greeted by Rod Serling, the host of the Twilight Zone, who talks about the hotel being struck by lightning and the workers and guests now being ghostly beings. After viewing that, you enter an elevator shaft, where you travel through space and time until you feel yourself shooting up 13 stories. Once at the top of the hotel, the door at the verrrrrry top opens up and lets you know that yes, you are infact 13 stories in the air, and yes, you are about to plummit down all 13 of those stories quite quickly. It's a blast!
Mayor Eric Adams visits "Terror on Totten" the NYPD's haunted house at Fort Totten, Queens on Saturday, October 29, 2022. Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office
- Die Institutionen des NS-Terrors -
Auf dem Gelände der „Topographie des Terrors”, neben dem Martin-Gropius-Bau und unweit des Potsdamer Platzes, befanden sich von 1933 bis 1945 die wichtigsten Zentralen des nationalsozialistischen Terrors: das Geheime Staatspolizeiamt mit eigenem „Hausgefängnis”, die Reichsführung-SS, der Sicherheitsdienst (SD) der SS und während des Zweiten Weltkriegs auch das Reichssicherheitshauptamt.
- Baudenkmal Berliner Mauer -
Die Berliner Mauer wurde weltweit zum Symbol der Teilung Deutschlands nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg und darüber hinaus Symbol des Kalten Krieges zwischen Ost und West.
Der Bau der Mauer begann am 13. August 1961. Mit dieser über 150 km langen Grenzsperranlage riegelte die Regierung der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik (DDR) Ost-Berlin und das übrige Gebiet der DDR hermetisch ab. Zwischen Oktober 1949 und August 1961 waren mehr als 2,7 Millionen Menschen aus der DDR geflohen, mehrheitlich über die Sektorengrenzen zwischen Ost- und West-Berlin. Die Mauer sollte diesen Flüchtlingsstrom unterbinden und jeden unkontrollierten Grenzübergang unmöglich machen.
Die Sperranlage bestand aus mehreren Abschnitten: einer „Vorderlandmauer” und einer „Hinter-landmauer”, einem Grenzstreifen mit Kolonnenweg, Wachtürmen und Sperrbefestigungen. Bis 1989 kamen an der Berliner Mauer mindestens 136 Menschen zu Tode, 98 von ihnen waren Flüchtlinge. Die meisten fielen den Schüssen der DDR-Grenztruppen zum Opfer.
Die Reformpolitik der Sowjetunion, die rasch anwachsende Protestbewegung der DDR-Bevölkerung, aber auch die inzwischen mögliche Flucht tausender DDR-Bürger über das osteuropäische Ausland führten am 9. November 1989 zum friedlichen „Fall” der Mauer. Wenig später wurden die ersten Teile der Mauer niedergerissen. Noch vor der Wiedervereinigung Deutschlands am 3. Oktober 1990 war sie weitgehend aus dem Stadtbild Berlins verschwunden.
Das 200 m lange Reststück der Mauer an der Niederkirchnerstraße – die hier die Grenze zwischen den Bezirken Mitte (Ost-Berlin) und Kreuzberg (West-Berlin) markierte – wurde auf Wunsch der „Topographie des Terrors” mit allen Spuren der Zerstörung aus der Zeit des Mauerfalls erhalten und 1990 unter Denkmalschutz gestellt. Das Mauerfragment ist heute Bestandteil des Dokumentationszentrums Topographie des Terrors. Als eines der wenigen noch erhaltenen Mauerreste in der Stadt ist es auch eine der zentralen Stationen innerhalb des vom Berliner Senat entwickelten „Gesamtkonzepts Berliner Mauer”.
Stiftung Topographie des Terrors
Rechtsfähige Stiftung öffentlichen Rechts
Niederkirchnerstraße 8
10963 Berlin
Telefon: 030-254509-0
Öffnungszeiten
täglich 10 - 20 Uhr
Außenbereiche bis Einbruch der Dunkelheit (spätestens 20 Uhr)
Schließtage
24., 31. Dezember und 1. Januar
Eintritt frei
E-Mail: info@topographie.de
Internet: www.topographie.de
________________________________________________
- The institutions of Nazi terror -
Between 1933 and 1945, the central institutions of Nazi persecution and terror – the Secret State Police Office with its own “house prison,” the leadership of the SS and, during the Second World War, the Reich Security Main Office – were located on the present-day grounds of the “Topography of Terror” that are next to the Martin Gropius Building and close to Potsdamer Platz.
- Berlin Wall Monument -
The Berlin Wall became an international symbol of the division of Germany after the Second World War and also of the Cold War between East and West. Construction of the Berlin Wall began on August 13, 1961. The government of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) built this more than 150-kilometer-long barrier to hermetically seal off East Berlin and the rest of the territory of the GDR. More than 2.7 million people fled the GDR between October 1949 and August 1961, the majority of them across the border separating Berlin’s Eastern and Western sectors. The Wall was designed to halt this stream of refugees and make it impossible to cross the borders unchecked. The installation consisted of several sections: a Vorderlandmauer (front wall) and a Hinterlandmauer (back wall), an inner track with a patrol path, watchtowers, and barrier fortifications. By 1989 at least 136 people had lost their lives at the Wall, 98 of them while trying to flee. Most of them were shot down by GDR guards. Reforms in the Soviet Union, the rapidly growing protest movement in the GDR population, as well as the flight of thousands of GDR citizens via Eastern European countries led to the peaceful “fall” of the Wall on November 9, 1989. Soon afterwards the first sections of the barrier were torn down. Even before the reunification of Germany on October 3, 1990, the Wall had largely disappeared from the Berlin landscape.
At the request of the “Topography of Terror,” the remaining 200 meters of the Wall at Niederkirchnerstraße – which marked the border between the districts of Mitte (East Berlin) and Kreuzberg (West Berlin) – have been preserved with all the traces of the destruction that occurred during the transitional period. This fragment of the Wall, designated a historic monument in 1990, now forms part of the Topography of Terror Documentation Center. As one of the few surviving sectors of the Wall in the city, it is also one of the central sites in the “Overall Concept for the Berlin Wall” developed by the Berlin Senate.
Topography of Terror Foundation
A foundation under public law
Niederkirchnerstraße 8
10963 Berlin
Phone: 0049 30 254509–0
Opening Hours
Daily 10 a.m. – 8 p.m.
The outdoor grounds are accessible until dusk (not later than 8 p.m.)
Closed on Dec 24th, 31st, Jan 1st
Admission free
e-mail: info@topographie.de
Website: www.topographie.de/en/