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Las imperfecciones y asimetrías que ponen en los rostros a veces crean efectos... Interesantes... He visto orejas que parecen escamas y algunos rostros con "marcas" o cicatrices que dan mal rollito.
Mola mucho para tener un background de PNJ infinito. Lo usaré en un futuro
O M G
Anatoly Yurevych Moskvin (Russian: Москвин, Анатолий Юрьевич, born 1 September 1966) is a Russian academic and linguist from Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, who was arrested in 2011 after the mummified bodies of twenty-six girls between the ages of three and fifteen were discovered in his apartment. After exhuming the bodies from local graveyards, Moskvin mummified the bodies himself before dressing and posing them around his home. Moskvin's parents, who shared the apartment with him, had seen the mummies but had mistaken them for large dolls.
Si cuando digo que los de letras puras están "tocaos del ala"...
Creo que el admin ha corregido como una decena de pares de corchetes en mi mensaje anterior. Gracias.
O M G
Anatoly Yurevych Moskvin (Russian: Москвин, Анатолий Юрьевич, born 1 September 1966) is a Russian academic and linguist from Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, who was arrested in 2011 after the mummified bodies of twenty-six girls between the ages of three and fifteen were discovered in his apartment. After exhuming the bodies from local graveyards, Moskvin mummified the bodies himself before dressing and posing them around his home. Moskvin's parents, who shared the apartment with him, had seen the mummies but had mistaken them for large dolls.
A partir de la hora y media se habla de Anatoly en este estupendo podcast:
O M G
Anatoly Yurevych Moskvin (Russian: Москвин, Анатолий Юрьевич, born 1 September 1966) is a Russian academic and linguist from Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, who was arrested in 2011 after the mummified bodies of twenty-six girls between the ages of three and fifteen were discovered in his apartment. After exhuming the bodies from local graveyards, Moskvin mummified the bodies himself before dressing and posing them around his home. Moskvin's parents, who shared the apartment with him, had seen the mummies but had mistaken them for large dolls.
A partir de la hora y media se habla de Anatoly en este estupendo podcast:
*se pone a rebuscar en su carpeta de asesinos*
¡Ajá! Yo sabía que este tipo me sonaba. Lo tenía en la recámara para usarlo de modelo de PNJ para un módulo.
En la antigua URSS hay cada uno suelto que parece una competición monstruosa.
Que yo solo he puesto el principio, pero lean...
Moskvin has stated that he felt great sympathy for the dead children and felt that they could be brought back to life by either science or black magic. He enclosed the remains in the dolls in an attempt to give them functional bodies to be used when he eventually discovered a way to bring them back to life, feeling that their physical remains were too decayed and ugly for them to feel comfortable or happy. Moskvin said that he was aware that he was committing a crime, but felt the dead children were "calling out" to him, begging to be rescued.
En la antigua URSS hay cada uno suelto que parece una competición monstruosa.
Esto me recuerda al "El Niño 44" del que hay película en Netflix.
"En la USRSS no hay asesinos en serie. Eso es producto del capitalismo de occidente"
Imagino que es un punto de vista muy occidental. Sino lo habéis visto la recomiendo, nada que ver con los mitos.
Gracias Anakleto, me apunto la de "El niño 44".
Sobre Chikatilo recomiendo Ciudadano X, buena película del 95 (en su día la vi en el cine) sobre este asesino y la investigación que llevó a su captura.
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