Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Devil May Care, by Teri Thornton, 1961; Devil May Care, an album by Claire Martin, 1993 "The Devil May Care (Mom & Dad Don't)", a song by the Brian Jonestown Massacre from Give It Back!, 1997; Devil May Care (EP) or the title song, by Susperia, 2005; The Devil May Care, an album by 67 Special, 2007; Devil May Care, an EP by Iron Steel, 2008
Devil May Care is a James Bond continuation novel written by Sebastian Faulks. It was published in the UK by Penguin Books on 28 May 2008, the 100th anniversary of the birth of Ian Fleming, the creator of Bond. The story centers on Bond's investigation into Dr. Julius Gorner, a megalomaniac chemist with a deep-seated hatred of England.
Devil May Care: Dr. Julius Gorner Import opium into Britain, and force Bond to pilot an airliner into Soviet territory and bomb it, making it appear to be the UK's doing. Bond gains control of the airliner and crashes it into a mountainside. Shot by Bond, he jumps into a river to escape, where he is torn apart by a boat's paddles.
Devil May Care is an American adult animated comedy television series created by Emmy Award winner Douglas Goldstein (Robot Chicken) and starring Alan Tudyk and Asif Ali. [1] It follows life in a newly gentrified and urban Hell, and the evolving friendship between Devil and his freshly-arrived social media manager, Beans.
Take care of the pennies, and the pounds will take care of themselves; Talk is cheap; Talk of the Devil, and he is bound to appear; Talk of Angels, and hear the flutter of their wings; Tell me who your friends are, and I'll tell you who you are [25] Tell the truth and shame the Devil (Shakespeare, Henry IV) The age of miracles is past
Almost two years after her ouster from NBC, Megyn Kelly is back with a company of her own.The former Fox News and NBC anchor announced on Thursday that she's launching an independent media company ...
His paintings of warrior-heroes covered in pictorial tattoos included lions, tigers, dragons, koi fish, and peonies, among other symbols. The peony became a masculine motif, associated with a devil-may-care attitude and disregard for consequence. [47] Famous painters of peonies have included Conrad Gessner (ca. 1550) and Auguste Renoir in 1879.
R.L. Stevenson – The Black Arrow While man-at-arms and sellswords of the era usually wore armor of necessity, their counterparts in later romantic literature and film (see below) often did not, and the term evolved to denote a daring, devil-may-care demeanor rather than brandishment of accoutrements of war.