Gun kink is when u do stuff that involves gun that make u act upπ₯΅ Most of the stuff are safe unless ur crazyπ You might get gun kinks from trauma, movies, books...
"I think i have a gun kink" said Oliwia.
"Where did u get it from?" said Brianna.
"Midari from Kaksgurui! She's my gf btw" Said Oliwia.
"Yes i agree! I hope you marry eachother!" Said Brianna.
36π 13π
An expression used to show or tell people that you have guns or muscular arms.
Hey ladies got ur tickets to tha gun show?
Gun show is this way. (Pointing downward while flexing)
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When somebody is illegally selling, transporting, or carrying firearms.
"You better be careful you who you piss off man. They're running guns."
"I heard Johnny got thrown in the bin for running guns."
10π 2π
An average gangster of the 21st century.
That guy walking this way looks an awful lot like a pussy with a gun!
10π 2π
The famous attack used by Yusuke Urameshi in the Yu Yu Hakusho anime series. Involves concentrating massive amounts of spirit energy into a single point then releasing all the energy in a massive blast emitting from his index finger.
That spirit gun almost destroyed the Dark Tournament arena.
58π 24π
Gun fu is the style of sophisticated close-quarters gunplay seen in Hong Kong action cinema and in Western films influenced by it. It often resembles a martial arts battle played out with firearms instead of traditional weapons.
The focus of gun fu is style, and the usage of firearms in ways that they were not designed to be used. Shooting a gun from each hand, shots from behind the back, as well as the use of guns as melee weapons are all common. Other moves can involve shotguns, Uzis, rocket launchers, and just about anything else that can be worked into a cinematic shot. It is often mixed with hand-to-hand combat maneuvers.
"Gun fu" has become a staple factor in modern action films due to its visually appealing nature (regardless of its actual practicality in a real-life combat situation). This is a contrast to American action movies of the 1980s which focused more on heavy weaponry and outright brute-force in firearm-based combat.
Before 1986, Hong Kong cinema was firmly rooted in two genres: the martial arts film and the comedy. Gunplay was not terribly popular because audiences had considered it boring, compared to fancy kung-fu moves or graceful swordplay of the wu shu epics. What moviegoers needed was a new way to present gunplay-- to show it as a skill that could be honed, integrating the acrobatics and grace of the traditional martial arts. And that's exactly what John Woo did. Using all of the visual techniques available to him (tracking shots, dolly-ins, slo-mo), Woo created beautifully surrealistic action sequences that were a 'guilty pleasure' to watch. There is also intimacy found in the gunplay-- typically, his protagonists and antagonists will have a profound understanding of one another and will meet face-to-face, in a tense Mexican standoff where they each point their weapons at one another and trade words.
The popularity of John Woo's films, and the heroic bloodshed genre in general, in the West helped give the gun fu style greater visibility. Film-makers like Robert Rodriguez were inspired to create action sequences modelled on the Hong Kong style. One of the first to demonstrate this was Rodriguez's Desperado (1995). The Matrix (1999) played a part in making "gun fu" the most popular form of firearm-based combat in cinema worldwide; since then, the style has become a staple of modern Western action films.
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