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Top TV Series
The Last of Us House of the Dragon The Boys The Mandalorian The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power The Witcher Fallout Reacher Wednesday Silo Severance The Rookie Black Mirror Rick and Morty True Detective Foundation Grey's Anatomy Ted Lasso Gen V Tulsa King Only Murders in the Building The White Lotus Ahsoka Shogun (2024) The Night Agent Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Landman High Potential Lioness 3 Body Problem The Bear Fargo Daredevil: Born Again 9-1-1 Pluribus Slow Horses A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Dune: Prophecy South Park The Pitt Alien: Earth Shrinking Tracker (2024) Outlander From MobLand The Morning Show The Day of the Jackal Bridgerton FBI
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Henry Polic II
United States
Age: 68
Born: 20 Feb, 1945
Died: 11 Aug, 2013
TV Series Starring Henry Polic II
Batman: The Animated Series
Batman: The Animated Series was an animated series that premiered on September 5, 1992. The series was based on the popular Batman comics created by Bob Kane. The series focused on the adventures of Batman, a dark vigilante hero who defends Gotham City from a variety of costumed villains
Webster
A white couple become the adoptive parents of a black child whose parents died in an accident.
Monster Squad (1976)
The series stars Fred Grandy (who also starred in The Love Boat and was later elected to the United States House of Representatives) as Walt, a criminology student working as a night watchman at "Fred's Wax Museum". To pass the time, Walt built a prototype "Crime Computer" hidden in a large stone sarcophagus near an exhibit of legendary monsters. When Walt plugged in his computer, "oscillating vibrations" brought to life the wax statues of Dracula (Henry Polic II), the Wolfman (Buck Kartalian) who here was named "Bruce W. Wolf" (with one episode revealing that the "W" stood for "Were"), and Frankenstein's Monster (Michael Lane) who was referred to as "Frank N. Stein" in the credits.
When Things Were Rotten
Errol Flynn was probably spinning in his grave, but Mel Brooks's version of the antics of Robin Hood and his band of merry men is a laugh-getter. Though it's primarily a one-joke affair, Mel Brooks's brand of madness and a good cast, particularly Richard Dimitri playing the dual role of the foppish Bertram and a Chicago member of Robin's band called Renaldo, carry it off with all comedic stops pulled.
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