276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Magic Plastic 4 Colour Pack The Original Resealable Balloon Kit

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Tom's Rhinoplasty" has Mr. Garrison getting a nose job and ending up looking just like David Hasselhoff... as in a photoshopped image of Hasselhoff's head on Mr. Garrison's body. Hyperion Cantos: 'Biosculpting' seems to have replaced tattoos and piercings in the future. Martin Silenus has an artist transform him into a satyr during his stay in the City of Artists (and increase his sexual prowess while he's at it). Brawne and Johnny also encounter some punks who seem 'more insect than human', wings and all, although it's unclear whether these wings are functional or purely decorative.

In Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain this is offered at the start of the game, apparently allowing the player to choose any face they want for their version of Big Boss via Character Customization. Subverted as this turns out to be a Trolling Creator moment and the character doesn't end up getting the surgery at all. After the final mission, the player finds out that this was actually a Double Subversion— the player character is not the real Big Boss but one of his closest lieutenants. The lieutenant received a Surgical Impersonation makeover before the game started, along with hypnotherapy to make him believe that he was the real deal. This drew attention away from the genuine article, allowing him to escape and work on his own plans. Though admittedly spread out over a few continuities, Two-Face has had his face fixed and un-fixed more times than you would care to count.This is but one of the many, many miraculous wonders the Tzimisce are capable of through their unique power of Vicissitude. Laughably, raising your Appearance score using the power is Difficulty 10 (in Old World of Darkness, Difficulty is what you have to roll to succeed; the game uses a ten-sided die, so...), and if you suffer Critical Failure you get uglier. In the Vorkosigan Saga, Elli Quinn has plastic surgery to give her a new face after hers is burned off by a plasma arc leaving a "face like a boiled onion". The end result of the work causes some problems for her, as the new face is pretty enough to make many dismiss her as a useless "pretty face" instead of an experienced mercenary soldier. A feature of the Medbays in Elysium. The opening sequence features a young woman using the bays to completely change her appearance. Possibly to highlight the difference between the people on Earth who could use them to survive, and the people on Elysium who are using them primarily for cosmetic purposes. When Kruger gets his face reconstructed, the process ends up removing the distinct facial implants, and ends up de-aging Kruger significantly. He's no longer weathered and wrinkled, and it ends up removing a lot of the gray hairs out of his beard and mustache. Forest Kingdom: Literally in the Hawk & Fisher spinoff series' book 4 ( Wolf in the Fold). The sorcerer Grimm uses magic to change other peoples' looks for a fee, as he does with the spy Fenris. This happens in daytime Soap Operas when a major character is recast. A more minor character will usually get the "Other Darrin" treatment, but if the change in appearance is to be a plot point, it will be through Magic Plastic Surgery. Sometimes the character will keep their identity a secret, particularly a "bad" character who would need to conceal it. Sometimes the audience is in the know, but sometimes not. Often there is an element of doubt.

Discussed in Valentine. Detective Vaughn points out that Jeremy Melton could possibly look very different from the last time the main characters saw him (thirteen years before), even tossing in the possibility of plastic surgery to alter his appearance to look like someone they know. The film is ultimately ambiguous on whether or not Jeremy had plastic surgery or if he just grew up to look like David Boreanaz. Jigsaw has had his face fixed up a few times with no obvious leftover scarring. The Punisher will always end up scarring him again, with some variation of his original disfigurement. The Smurfs: "Plastic smurfery" is the explanation used in the original English translation of " The Smurfette" to change the title character from her original appearance into a real Smurf. The Smurfs (1981)'s version of the story eschews that and simply has Papa Smurf change her completely into a Smurf through magic.Originally it appears Michael's surgery is simply to make him unrecognizable as Michael Long. It's later revealed that he was made a dead ringer for Wilton Knight's Antagonistic Offspring, Garth.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment