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King of Hearts (original French title: Le Roi de cœur) is a 1966 French/Italian international co-production comedy-drama film directed by Philippe de Broca and starring Alan Bates and Geneviève Bujold. The film is set in a small town in France near the end of World War I. As the Imperial German Army retreats, they booby trap the whole town to ...
Jin Habari (羽張 迅, Habari Jin) The previous Blue King and the late predecessor to Reisi Munakata. He was killed by Gōki Zenjō. Yayoi Yoshino (吉野 弥生, Yoshino Yayoi) A general Affairs Section clerk who works at Scepter 4. She is a good friend of Seri Awashima. She appears in K: Days of Blue. Akito Minato (湊 秋人, Minato Akito)
King of Hearts is a 1936 British romance film directed by Oswald Mitchell and Walter Tennyson and starring Will Fyffe, Richard Dolman and Googie Withers. It was produced by Butcher's Film Service, and made at Cricklewood Studios in London .
HOMRA, led by Mikoto Suoh the Third and Red King, attacks a hotel owned by a gang before being confronted by Scepter 4, led by Reisi Munakata the Fourth and Blue King. . Meanwhile, at Ashinaka High School, an entire campus built on an island, Yashiro Isana gathers unwanted lunch items from other students and makes his way to one of the school rooftops in order to eat with his p
The time goes on and Temujin is enthroned as the King of Mongolia. He changes his name to Genghis Khan and pledges to avenge his long-time enemy, the Jin Dynasty. Genghis Khan finally acknowledges Kuchi as his own son, and they decide to fight together, but Kuchi is killed by the enemy. The lonely battle of Genghis continues without end.
King of Hearts (German: Herzkönig) is a 1947 German comedy film directed by Helmut Weiss and starring Hans Nielsen, Aribert Wäscher, and Sonja Ziemann. [1] The film was the first production of Artur Brauner's CCC Films, which would develop into a leading company in West German cinema. It was made at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin.
"Aozora" (青空, "Blue Sky") was the eighth single by the Japanese band The Blue Hearts. The song was recut from the group's third album Train-Train. This song was written in opposition to the continuing apartheid of the time. [citation needed] "Heisei no Blues" (平成のブルース), the B-side track, was not on the album Train-Train.
"Hito ni Yasashiku" (人にやさしく, Be Kind to People) was the first single by the Japanese band The Blue Hearts. It was first released on an independent label on February 25, 1987, before the band signed with a record company. Lyrics and music were written by Hiroto Kōmoto, the band's lead vocalist, and was arranged by The Blue Hearts ...