Posts made to promote other games will be removed. Posts of history entirely unrelated to War Thunder should be posted instead to /r/history, /r/aviation, /r/WWIIplanes, /r/AirCraftPorn, /r/TankPorn, etc.This means just having a witty related caption or title is not enough. Memes must be clearly visually relevant to War Thunder.Posts with "clickbait" titles will be removed.Īll content should be clearly relevant to the game of War Thunder and its vehicles.If your submission has an unclear title you should submit a top-level comment explaining the content.r/WarThunder aims to make its content clear from a quick glance. This is understood to include multiple posts by different users regarding the same topic. Submitting low-effort posts of any kind in quick succession will lead to post removals and may lead to a ban.If submitting multiple videos/gifs/images in a short time period, post them in a single text post with descriptions for each individual item.Posts made within an hour of each other will be removed. Users are limited to two posts in any given 24-hour period. It is not a catch-all flair for jokes and satire. individual screenshots or minor discoveries. The DATAMINE flair is for substantive datamining posts.It is intended only for official War Thunder news from Gaijin sites and sources. Unflaired posts don't get an upvote button and incorrectly flaired posts may be removed. Your account must be 3 days old to comment and at least 30 karma to post here.įlair your post appropriately after submitting. Submit a link Submit text post Please activate this subreddit's custom style for access to extra functionality such as content filters Rules Whatever the truth, he makes for an entertaining lead character and the film is another Studio Ghibli triumph. There are several theories that fans of the film have posited about Marco’s appearance with some saying that it’s meant to be taken figuratively, that he sees himself as a pig and has taken that form in his mind, whereas others point to the fact that you glimpse him morphing into a human during one scene and another character apparently sees him change back to human at the end. This B1 features an image of a photograph that is glimpsed in the film and explained by one character to be the last surviving photo of Marco as a human (the scribbled face at the top). When Marco and Piccolo’s niece return to the islands the stage is set for a dogfight between Curtis and the flying pig. The pig survives the crash and transport his damaged aircraft to Milan where an engineer named Piccolo and his niece work to repair and improve it. When a cocky American pilot joins forces with the pirates he goes after Marco, shooting his plane down and then claims to have killed him. A backstory explains that Marco was once a human pilot for the Italian airforce but it is intimated that he deserted from it at a certain point – one sequence sees him recalling an dogfight that saw all of his squadron killed – and for reasons that are never made clear he was turned into a pig (one character talks about a ‘curse’). The film is set between the two World Wars and focuses on the story of the titular pig, actually named Marco, who pilots an armed flying boat which he uses to defend ships and other planes against bands of pirates who attack and steal valuables from unlucky travellers. When compared to other Studio Ghibli films, Porco Rosso is set in more recognisable ‘real world’ locations, including islands off the Adriatic coast and the Italian city of Milan (even if it’s topographically inaccurate).
Originally planned as a short feature to be played onboard Japanese Airlines flights, and based on Miyazaki’s manga The Age of the Flying Boat, the scope of the project changed and it was made into a full-length film. This is the scarce B1 size Japanese poster for the release of master animator Hayao Miyazaki‘s 1992 film Porco Rosso. Title Porco Rosso AKA Kurenai no buta (Japan - original title) Year of Film 1992 Director Hayao Miyazaki Starring Shûichirô Moriyama, Tokiko Katô, Bunshi Katsura, Greg Ellis, Tsunehiko Kamijô, Akemi Okamura, Akio Ôtsuka, Hiroko Seki Origin of Film Japan Genre(s) of Film Animation | Adventure | Fantasy | Romance Type of Poster B1 Style of Poster - Origin of Poster Japan Year of Poster 1992 Designer Unknown Artist Studio Ghibli Size (inches) 28 12/16" x 40 7/16" SS or DS SS Tagline.