Grrrrrrrr -eetings .   here is a fun and fantastic addition to your costume gear, or the perfect gift for any fan.

You are buying the EXACT drivers license shown.   Please check it closely and see all of the interesting information on the card,
and all of the unique details.

If is a Credit Card Size rendition  of an official identification card.

It is approximately in Size:    3 in. x 2 in.                    It is constructed of plastic and it is very realistic like an authentic drivers license.

What fun you will have presenting this to the BANK TELLER or Grocery Store Cashier the next time you are ask for identification....

Guaranteed to get a laugh.

I am delighted to combines purchases to save you money on shipping.    Shipping is by US Postal Service FIRST CLASS MAIL with TRACKING .

Thanks most kindly, Harry


fun facts from wikipedia..

Freddy Krueger
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from Freddy krueger)
For other uses, see Freddy Krueger (disambiguation).
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Freddy Krueger
A Nightmare on Elm Street character
Freddy Krueger.JPG
Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger
First appearance     A Nightmare on Elm Street
Created by     Wes Craven
Portrayed by     Robert Englund (1984–2003)
Jackie Earle Haley (2010)
Information
Aliases     The Springwood Slasher
Classification     Serial killer[1]
Primary location     Springwood, Ohio
Signature weapon     Clawed glove

Frederick Charles "Freddy" Krueger is a character of the A Nightmare on Elm Street film series. He first appeared in Wes Craven's A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) as a burnt serial killer who uses a glove armed with razors to kill his victims in their dreams, causing their deaths in the real world as well. In the dream world, he is a powerful force and almost completely invulnerable. However, whenever Freddy is pulled into the real world, he has normal human vulnerabilities. Krueger was created by Wes Craven, and had been consistently portrayed by Robert Englund since his first appearance. In the 2010 franchise reboot, he was portrayed by Jackie Earle Haley. In 2011, Freddy appeared as a playable character in the video game Mortal Kombat.[2] Over the course of the series, Freddy has battled numerous survivors including Nancy Thompson.[3]

In the Nightmares on Elm Street comics, a popular alias is used, known as The Springwood Killer.[4]

Freddy is a dream-demon who attacks his victims from within their dreams. He is commonly identified by his burned, disfigured face, red-and-green striped sweater, brown fedora, and trademark metal-clawed brown leather glove only on his right hand. This glove was the product of Krueger's own imagination, the blade having been welded by himself. Robert Englund has said many times that he feels the character represents neglect, particularly that suffered by children. The character also more broadly represents subconscious fears.

Wizard magazine rated Freddy the 14th greatest villain,[5] the British television channel Sky2 listed him 8th,[6] and the American Film Institute ranked him 40th on its "AFI's 100 Years... 100 Heroes and Villains" list.[7] In 2010, Freddy won an award for Best Villain (formerly Most Vile Villain) at the Scream Awards.

Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the sequel to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. For prequel to the original film, see Leatherface (2017 film). For other uses, see Leatherface (disambiguation).
Leatherface:
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III
TCM3.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by     Jeff Burr
Produced by     Robert Engelman
Written by     David J. Schow
Based on     Characters created
by Kim Henkel
Tobe Hooper
Starring    

    Kate Hodge
    William Butler
    Ken Foree
    Tom Hudson
    Viggo Mortensen
    Joe Unger
    R.A. Mihailoff

Music by    

    Jim Manzie
    Pat Regan

Cinematography     James L. Carter
Edited by     Brent A. Schoenfeld
Distributed by     New Line Cinema
Release date
   

    January 12, 1990

Running time
    81 minutes
Country     United States
Language     English
Box office     $5.8 million

Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III is a 1990 American slasher film directed by Jeff Burr. The film is the second sequel to the 1974 film The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and stars Kate Hodge, William Butler, Ken Foree, Tom Hudson, Viggo Mortensen, Joe Unger, and R.A. Mihailoff.

The film was distributed by New Line Cinema, who bought the rights to the franchise from The Cannon Group. Initially, this film was given an X-rating by the Motion Picture Association of America, which limited the studio's release possibilities. After the studio made cuts, it was re-rated R, and New Line released it on January 12, 1990. It was refused classification in the UK upon its initial release. It has since been released on home video in both unrated and rated versions, and a cut version was accepted with an 18 certificated in the UK.


The list
Heroes
Rank     Hero     Actor     Film     Year     Notes
1.     Atticus Finch     Gregory Peck     To Kill a Mockingbird     1962     Loosely based upon the father of Harper Lee
2.     Indiana Jones     Harrison Ford     Raiders of the Lost Ark     1981    
3.     James Bond     Sean Connery     Dr. No     1962    
4.     Rick Blaine     Humphrey Bogart     Casablanca     1942    
5.     Will Kane     Gary Cooper     High Noon     1952    
6.     Clarice Starling     Jodie Foster     The Silence of the Lambs     1991    
7.     Rocky Balboa     Sylvester Stallone     Rocky     1976    
8.     Ellen Ripley     Sigourney Weaver     Aliens     1986    
9.     George Bailey     James Stewart     It's a Wonderful Life     1946    
10.     T. E. Lawrence     Peter O'Toole     Lawrence of Arabia     1962     Historical figure
11.     Jefferson Smith     James Stewart     Mr. Smith Goes to Washington     1939    
12.     Tom Joad     Henry Fonda     The Grapes of Wrath     1940    
13.     Oskar Schindler     Liam Neeson     Schindler's List     1993     Historical figure
14.     Han Solo     Harrison Ford     Star Wars     1977    
15.     Norma Rae Webster     Sally Field     Norma Rae     1979     Based upon southern mill worker Crystal Lee Sutton
16.     Shane     Alan Ladd     Shane     1953    
17.     Harry Callahan     Clint Eastwood     Dirty Harry     1971    
18.     Robin Hood     Errol Flynn     The Adventures of Robin Hood     1938    
19.     Virgil Tibbs     Sidney Poitier     In the Heat of the Night     1967    
20.     Butch Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid     Paul Newman
and Robert Redford     Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid     1969     Historical figures
21.     Mahatma Gandhi     Ben Kingsley     Gandhi     1982     Historical figure
22.     Spartacus     Kirk Douglas     Spartacus     1960     Historical figure
23.     Terry Malloy     Marlon Brando     On the Waterfront     1954    
24.     Thelma Dickinson and Louise Sawyer     Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon     Thelma & Louise     1991    
25.     Lou Gehrig     Gary Cooper     The Pride of the Yankees     1942     Historical figure
26.     Superman     Christopher Reeve     Superman     1978    
27.     Bob Woodward
and Carl Bernstein     Robert Redford
and Dustin Hoffman     All the President's Men     1976     Historical figures
28.     Juror #8     Henry Fonda     12 Angry Men     1957    
29.     General George Patton     George C. Scott     Patton     1970     Historical figure
30.     Lucas (Luke) Jackson     Paul Newman     Cool Hand Luke     1967    
31.     Erin Brockovich     Julia Roberts     Erin Brockovich     2000     Historical figure
32.     Philip Marlowe     Humphrey Bogart     The Big Sleep     1946    
33.     Marge Gunderson     Frances McDormand     Fargo     1996    
34.     Tarzan     Johnny Weissmuller     Tarzan the Ape Man     1932    
35.     Alvin York     Gary Cooper     Sergeant York     1941     Historical figure
36.     Rooster Cogburn     John Wayne     True Grit     1969    
37.     Obi-Wan Kenobi     Alec Guinness     Star Wars     1977    
38.     The Tramp     Charlie Chaplin     City Lights     1931    
39.     Lassie     Pal     Lassie Come Home     1943    
40.     Frank Serpico     Al Pacino     Serpico     1973     Historical figure
41.     Arthur Chipping     Robert Donat     Goodbye, Mr. Chips     1939    
42.     Father Edward     Spencer Tracy     Boys Town     1938     Historical figure
43.     Moses     Charlton Heston     The Ten Commandments     1956     Biblical figure
44.     Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle     Gene Hackman     The French Connection     1971     Based upon New York City Police Detective Eddie Egan
45.     Zorro     Tyrone Power     The Mark of Zorro     1940    
46.     Batman     Michael Keaton     Batman     1989    
47.     Karen Silkwood     Meryl Streep     Silkwood     1983     Historical figure
48.     The T-800     Arnold Schwarzenegger     Terminator 2: Judgment Day     1991    
49.     Andrew Beckett     Tom Hanks     Philadelphia     1993    
50.     General Maximus Decimus Meridius     Russell Crowe     Gladiator     2000    
Villains
Rank     Villain     Actor     Film     Year     Notes
1.     Dr. Hannibal Lecter     Anthony Hopkins     The Silence of the Lambs     1991    
2.     Norman Bates     Anthony Perkins     Psycho     1960     Loosely based upon killer Ed Gein
3.     Darth Vader     David Prowse (voiced by James Earl Jones)     The Empire Strikes Back     1980    
4.     The Wicked Witch of the West     Margaret Hamilton     The Wizard of Oz     1939    
5.     Nurse Ratched     Louise Fletcher     One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest     1975    
6.     Mr. Potter     Lionel Barrymore     It's a Wonderful Life     1946    
7.     Alex Forrest     Glenn Close     Fatal Attraction     1987    
8.     Phyllis Dietrichson     Barbara Stanwyck     Double Indemnity     1944    
9.     Regan MacNeil (as possessed by "Satan")     Linda Blair (voiced by Mercedes McCambridge)     The Exorcist     1973    
10.     The Evil Queen     Voice of Lucille La Verne     Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs     1937    
11.     Michael Corleone     Al Pacino     The Godfather Part II     1974    
12.     Alex DeLarge     Malcolm McDowell     A Clockwork Orange     1971    
13.     HAL 9000     Voice of Douglas Rain     2001: A Space Odyssey     1968    
14.     The Alien     Bolaji Badejo     Alien     1979    
15.     Amon Goeth     Ralph Fiennes     Schindler's List     1993     Historical figure
16.     Noah Cross     John Huston     Chinatown     1974    
17.     Annie Wilkes     Kathy Bates     Misery     1990    
18.     The Shark     "Bruce"[2]     Jaws     1975    
19.     Captain Bligh     Charles Laughton     Mutiny on the Bounty     1935     Historical figure
20.     Man     Voiced by Paul Starrs     Bambi     1942    
21.     Mrs. Eleanor Iselin     Angela Lansbury     The Manchurian Candidate     1962    
22.     Terminator     Arnold Schwarzenegger     The Terminator     1984    
23.     Eve Harrington     Anne Baxter     All About Eve     1950    
24.     Gordon Gekko     Michael Douglas     Wall Street     1987    
25.     Jack Torrance     Jack Nicholson     The Shining     1980    
26.     Cody Jarrett     James Cagney     White Heat     1949    
27.     Martians     Various     The War of the Worlds     1953    
28.     Max Cady     Robert Mitchum     Cape Fear     1962    
29.     Reverend Harry Powell     Robert Mitchum     The Night of the Hunter     1955    
30.     Travis Bickle     Robert De Niro     Taxi Driver     1976    
31.     Mrs. Danvers     Judith Anderson     Rebecca     1940    
32.     Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker     Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway     Bonnie and Clyde     1967     Historical figures
33.     Count Dracula     Bela Lugosi     Dracula     1931    
34.     Dr. Szell     Laurence Olivier     Marathon Man     1976    
35.     J.J. Hunsecker     Burt Lancaster     Sweet Smell of Success     1957     Based upon columnist Walter Winchell
36.     Frank Booth     Dennis Hopper     Blue Velvet     1986    
37.     Harry Lime     Orson Welles     The Third Man     1949    
38.     Caesar Enrico Bandello     Edward G. Robinson     Little Caesar     1931    
39.     Cruella De Vil     Voice by Betty Lou Gerson     One Hundred and One Dalmatians     1961    
40.     Freddy Krueger     Robert Englund     A Nightmare on Elm Street     1984    
41.     Joan Crawford     Faye Dunaway     Mommie Dearest     1981     Historical figure
42.     Tom Powers     James Cagney     The Public Enemy     1931    
43.     Regina Giddens     Bette Davis     The Little Foxes     1941    
44.     Baby Jane Hudson     Bette Davis     What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?     1962    
45.     The Joker     Jack Nicholson     Batman     1989    
46.     Hans Gruber     Alan Rickman     Die Hard     1988    
47.     Tony Camonte     Paul Muni     Scarface     1932    
48.     Verbal Kint     Kevin Spacey     The Usual Suspects     1995    
49.     Auric Goldfinger     Gert Fröbe (voiced by Michael Collins)     Goldfinger     1964    
50.     Detective Alonzo Harris     Denzel Washington     Training Day     2001    
The characters

    The Silence of the Lambs and It's a Wonderful Life are the only films to place a character in the top ten of both lists. In addition, Batman, and Schindler's List are the only other films to have characters appear on both lists.
    Four franchises have both a hero and villain listed for separate films: the Alien is from Alien while Ellen Ripley is listed for the sequel, Aliens; Darth Vader is listed for The Empire Strikes Back while Han Solo and Obi-Wan Kenobi are cited for A New Hope; the Terminator is listed as a villain for The Terminator and as a hero for Terminator 2: Judgment Day; and James Bond is listed for Dr. No while Auric Goldfinger of Goldfinger was the only Bond villain cited.
    The Terminator is the only character to be listed as both a villain (The Terminator) and a hero (Terminator 2: Judgment Day).  Within the films, these are different but physically identical characters, both played by Arnold Schwarzenegger.
    Four characters from four different Stanley Kubrick films appear: three villains (Alex DeLarge, HAL 9000, and Jack Torrance) and one hero (Spartacus).
    On each list, there appears only a single character of African descent: Virgil Tibbs as a hero for In the Heat of the Night and Alonzo Harris as a villain for Training Day.
    Only eight human heroines and fifteen villainesses are listed. The heroine Lassie is female, though she was portrayed by a male dog in all television shows and movies featuring the character.
    Twelve-year-old Regan MacNeil from The Exorcist is the youngest human character on the list.  However, the evil dæmon that possessed her throughout the film, Pazuzu, is implied to be centuries, if not millennia, old.
    Lassie, the Terminator, and Superman are the only non-human heroes.  The shark from Jaws, the Terminator, HAL 9000, the Martians, and the Alien are the only non-human villains.
    In Bambi, "Man" specifically refers to the man who killed Bambi's mother. He is also the only character on either list not to appear on screen in any way.
    Only three characters from animated films appear, all as villains: Queen Grimhilde, "Man", and Cruella de Vil.  All are in Walt Disney Animation Studios films.

The actors

    Gary Cooper is the only actor to appear three times on the list; in all three instances, he appears on the heroes list.
    Twelve actors appear twice on the same list: James Cagney, Bette Davis, Robert Mitchum, Faye Dunaway, and Jack Nicholson on the villains list; and Humphrey Bogart, Henry Fonda, Harrison Ford, Paul Newman, Robert Redford, and James Stewart on the heroes list.
    Al Pacino and Arnold Schwarzenegger are the only actors to appear on both lists. Schwarzenegger appears on both lists portraying different Terminators, while Pacino appears as characters from unrelated films.
    Out of all the actors who appear on the list, twenty-one of them—Kathy Bates, Marlon Brando, Gary Cooper, Russell Crowe, Robert Donat, Michael Douglas, Sally Field, Louise Fletcher, Jodie Foster, Gene Hackman, Tom Hanks, Anthony Hopkins, Ben Kingsley, Frances McDormand, Gregory Peck, Julia Roberts, George C. Scott, Kevin Spacey, Spencer Tracy, Denzel Washington, and John Wayne—received Academy Awards for their performances. Gary Cooper won twice, once for Will Kane and once for Alvin York (he also received a third nomination, for the role of Lou Gehrig).  Of the remaining actors, Judith Anderson, Anne Baxter, Warren Beatty, Linda Blair, Humphrey Bogart, Glenn Close, Bette Davis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Ralph Fiennes, Henry Fonda, Alec Guinness, Angela Lansbury, Charles Laughton, Paul Muni, Liam Neeson, Paul Newman, Robert De Niro, Laurence Olivier, Peter O'Toole, Al Pacino, Susan Sarandon, Sylvester Stallone, Barbara Stanwyck, James Stewart, Meryl Streep, and Sigourney Weaver were also nominated, but did not win.






Michael Myers (Halloween)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Myers
Halloween character
Michaelmyers2007.JPG
Tyler Mane as Michael Myers in Halloween (2007)
First appearance     Halloween
Created by     John Carpenter
Debra Hill
Portrayed by     Nick Castle
Tony Moran (unmasked)
Will Sandin (child)
Dick Warlock
George P. Wilbur
Don Shanks
Chris Durand
Brad Loree
Tyler Mane
Daeg Faerch (child)
Chase Wright Vanek (child)
Information
Classification     Mass murderer[1]
Signature weapon     Kitchen knife
Location     Haddonfield, Illinois

Michael Myers is a fictional character from the Halloween series of slasher films. He first appears in John Carpenter's Halloween (1978) as a young boy who murders his older sister, then fifteen years later returns home to murder more teenagers. In the original Halloween, the adult Michael Myers, referred to as The Shape in the closing credits, was portrayed by Nick Castle for most of the film, with Tony Moran and Tommy Lee Wallace substituting in during the final scenes. The character was created by Debra Hill and John Carpenter and has appeared in nine films, as well as novels, multiple video games, and several comic books.