Showing posts with label GMC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GMC. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

1983 GMC Vandura The A-TEAM Greenlight 1:24 Dirty Version












The A-Team es una serie de televisión de acción y aventuras que se desarrolló de 1983 a 1987 Acerca de ex miembros de una unidad ficticia de las Fuerzas Especiales del ejército de los Estados Unidos. El programa impulsó la carrera del Sr. T, quien interpretó al personaje de B. A. Baracus. Casi siempre se lo ve con alrededor de 50 libras de collares y anillos de oro en cada dedo, y también usa un cinturón de levantamiento de pesas.

 

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

1979 GMC Tow Truck Captain Hook 1:25 Revell










From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Captain James Hook is the main antagonist of J. M. Barrie's 1904 play Peter Pan; or, the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up and its various adaptations, in which he is Peter Pan's archenemy. The character is a pirate captain of the brig Jolly Roger. His two principal fears are the sight of his own blood (supposedly an unnatural colour) and the crocodile who pursues him after eating the hand cut off by Pan. An iron hook replaced his severed hand, which gave the pirate his name.
Hook did not appear in early drafts of the play, wherein the capricious and coercive Peter Pan was closest to a "villain", but was created for a front-cloth scene (a cloth flown well downstage in front of which short scenes are played while big scene changes are "silently" carried out upstage) depicting the children's journey home. Later, Barrie expanded the scene, on the premise that children were fascinated by pirates, and expanded the role of the captain as the play developed. The character was originally cast to be played by Dorothea Baird, the actress playing Mary Darling, but Gerald du Maurier, already playing George Darling (and the brother of Sylvia Llewelyn Davies), persuaded Barrie to let him take the additional role instead, a casting tradition since replicated in many stage and film productions of the Peter Pan story.
According to A. N. Wilson, Barrie "openly acknowledged [that] Hook and his obsession with the crocodile was an English version of Ahab", and there are other borrowings from Melville.