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bastards

n. (plural of bastard English)

Wikipedia
Bastards (Saigon Kick album)

Bastards is the fifth and final studio album by the band Saigon Kick. The album was only released in the Far East and Japan.

Bastards (Cerebral Fix album)

Bastards is the third full-length studio album from English thrash metal band, Cerebral Fix. It is their second on Roadrunner Records and follows Tower of Spite from the previous year.

One line-up change occurred – Kev Frost replacing Andy Baker on drums and after the release, the band toured the UK and Ireland with death metal band, Obituary. The album was followed up swiftly by Death Erotica in 1992. Two cover versions were included on the album – "No Survivors", originally recorded by punk band GBH, and "Smash It Up" written by legendary band, The Damned. On the latter track, lead vocals were supplied by Blaze Bayley – at the time with Wolfsbane, but soon to be singer with Iron Maiden.

Bastards (2006 film)

Bastards (, Svolochi) is a 2006 Russian war film.

Bastards

Bastards may refer to:

  • Bastards (2006 film), a 2006 Russian film
  • Bastards (2013 film), a 2013 French film by Claire Denis
  • Bastards (2017 film), an upcoming American comedy film
  • Bastards (Cerebral Fix album), 1991
  • Bastards (Motörhead album), 1993
  • Bastards (Saigon Kick album), 1999
  • Bastards (Björk album), 2012
  • Lars Frederiksen and the Bastards, a 2000s American street punk band
Bastards (Motörhead album)

Bastards is the eleventh studio album by the band Motörhead, released 29 November 1993, on ZYX Records, the first and last for this label.

Bastards (Björk album)

Bastards (stylized as bastards) is the third remix album by Icelandic artist Björk, it was released on 19 November 2012. The album features remixes of tracks from her eighth studio album, Biophilia (2011). All of the remixes were previously released on The Crystalline Series or the Biophilia Remix Series, and they were all remastered by Mandy Parnell.

Bastards (2013 film)

Bastards is a 2013 Franco-German drama film directed by Claire Denis. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival.

Bastards (2017 film)

Bastards is an upcoming American comedy film directed by Lawrence Sher and written by Justin Malen. The film stars Owen Wilson, Ed Helms, J. K. Simmons, Terry Bradshaw, Ving Rhames, and Glenn Close. Principal photography began on October 5, 2015 in Atlanta. The film is scheduled for an January 27, 2017 release. Sher is making his directorial debut with the film.

Usage examples of "bastards".

Jap bastards tried to crash their planes into carriers and battlewagons all at once?

Some of the poor bastards from Kapiolani Park had actually starved to death before the U.

Only a fortnight ago some of those bloody bastards captured a Tyroshi merchantman in the straits.

And the fact remained, whatever games the gods played, it was hard-working dirt-poor bastards like him who suffered for it.

Grapes made him think of grapeshot and he wondered if the bastards up ahead were equipped with canister.

Sharpe, as the junior officer, would have to propose the loyal toast and pretend not to see when half the bastards wafted their mugs over their canteens.

Sharpe could not see the Mahratta army beyond their guns, but doubtless the bastards were there in force.

Once the attack was close, of course, the bastards would switch to canister and then every shot could pluck a dozen men out of the line, but for now, as the redcoats silently trudged forward, the enemy was sending round shot down the gentle slope.

They look good, but press home on the bastards and they turn and run like jack rabbits.

Maybe he was marching some new recruits to toughen the bastards, not that the skinny little brutes needed any toughening, but it was uncivil of Sullivan not to warn Crosby of his coming.

Poor bastards, Sharpe thought, so eager to climb to death, and he saw that the leading men on both ladders were officers.

Dodd said, but the priggish bastards looked as if they had just captured the city and Dodd knew it would be madness to get involved in a doomed fight to save it.

That was the respect he wanted, from the bastards in Brewhouse Lane who had said he would never amount to anything and who had whipped him bloody because he was a bastard off the streets.

He would wear a sword and a cocked hat, have braid on his jacket and spurs at his heels, and for every lash the bastards had ever laid on small Richard Sharpe he would pay them back tenfold.

Thin the bastards first, he thought, batter them, bleed them, then massacre them, but his men were too excited at the prospect of imminent victory and far too much of their fire was either going high or else being wasted on the barricade of the dead.