Thisresort is divided into four separate areas. three of which are accessible by the Hexpress, which constantly rides around the resort. A total of three Mirapo are also found here. The center of the resort houses Kaibuki Theater.
The most exciting area of the entire resort. It is a theme park with various attractions, like a ferris wheel, slides and a rollercoaster that the player can ride. Darknyan can also be found here, along with his butler, Verygoodsir. He has a quest which, after completing it, allows the player to fight and befriend him once a day. Gera Gera Land connects to the Kaibuki Theater at the West.
Located at the East side of the resort, this peaceful area is filled with many hot springs meant to relax in. Many Yo-kai can be found and fought here. However, there are very specific rules to this: If the player wants to battle said Yo-kai, they are forbidden to use any items and their Yo-kai's soul meters will start at zero. Yo-kai battled this way will also never become friends with you.
If the player sits down in the spring long enough, a text bubble with a musical note will appear above their head, and all Yo-kai's HP and soul meters will be fully replenished, similar to what Eyepos do.
Wolfit down is a restaurant that is centered in the middle of the resort, right in front of the theatre. Yo-kai usually come here to enjoy meals prepared by various Oni. The front part, which is also the entrance, houses the dining area, where some Yo-kai are actually willing to fight you. At the back right corner of the room is a small hallway. You can go left and through a door that leads to Kaibuki Theater, or you can continue forward to the kitchen.
You're able to sneak past the Oni while they aren't looking, hiding behind massive cauldrons along the way. But don't let them see you, or they will roar and you'll fall off the shelf and have to try it again. If you successfully sneak past all Oni, you'll get to the back room of the kitchen where you will find a chest with a Platinum Doll inside.
The central point of the entire resort. It's a small room with pillows on the ground and a large stage at the back. It also has doors all around the room that connect to the other parts of the resort and the underground section of the theater. The underground level is used to practice for performances and it has some elevators that will take actors up to the stage.
The master of the entire resort, Kabuking, resides here. He can be battled once a day and is needed to complete a request from him: ''Gera Gera Goodbyes''. He becomes an optional boss in this quest and even outclasses Kat Kraydel in terms of difficulty and strategy needed to even stand a chance against him.
Once the main story is complete, and when the player upgraded their watch to Rank S, one night Leggly will show up and give the player a special pass that lets them ride the Hexpress train. Once the player makes his way to the appropriate station, which is Whimsy Valley at night, A train named the Hexpress will appear and will take the player to the resort.
On their way there, however, the player first needs to solve a mystery to find out which Yo-kai stole the train's braking handle before they can even reach their destination. This eventually results in a unique boss battle against Headasteam. After fighting this boss, the Hexpress will safely arrive at its first stop: Gera Gera Land.
Bucklebreaker Station is a secret station that can only be accessed after completing the "Getting to Gera Gera" quest. After completing the quest, the player will be given the Happy-Go-Lucky Pass, which allows the Happy-Go-Lucky Express to stop at any train station at any time of day or night but easiest to find at Gera Gera Land's station. The train has a very rare chance of appearing every time the player enters a station. Once the player is lucky enough, the Express will appear and take the player to Bucklebreaker Station.
Inside the train are Yo-kai that will give the player rare items, purple chests that contain rare items, Daiz that can be fought for massive amounts of exp, and occasionally, a train car will have a shop carrying tier 3 food items, gold tags, and mighty medicine.
Once at the station, the player may talk to Bloominoko on the left to obtain a Lucky Crank-A-Coin, which can be used at the Lucky Crank-A-Kai found at the very left. Using said coin there will often reward you with very rare items or Yo-kai.
A gray, fishscaly building marked by a yellow neon dandelion, located on Nostrand Avenue in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, NY, happylucky no. 1 gallery and performance space is for the community; with space to work, learn and talk, to see and hear things and people.
The elongated rectangular box that is the interior of happylucky no. 1 frames the view to the green wall. You can experience the green wall, through the gallery, from the sidewalk, an open invitation to the natural realm. Gallery visitors can also mingle on the blue stone and pebble patio sheltered by the green wall. Every site offers the challenge of specific conditions (dimensions, exposures, surroundings...), the designers paid special attention in the selection of the wall system and the plant species that allows an evergreen effect during the winter months while offering seasonal visual interests.
A solidly caring, good person interacts with assorted eccentric, troubled characters (including one angry bigot). She exhibits responsible, sensitive behavior and a natural ability to do the right thing.
Playful banter and tossing of "falsies"; a young woman is shown in bra and panties during scene in physical therapy office; kissing and partial undressing during flirtatious sexual foreplay; some degree of uncertainty regarding the nature of the feelings between the two women in the story's central friendship.
There's one extended sequence during which a key character has a violent outburst of venomous cursing, including all forms of "f--k" and "bulls--t." Other scattered swearing and profanity includes "pissed off," "buggered off," "t-ts," "nipples," "pubic triangle," "crap," "bitch," and "bastards."
Social drinking in many scenes. The film's opening sequence follows a group of female friends partying in clubs, then finds all of them very drunk and silly in an apartment. One character smokes and vows to quit.
Parents need to know that, despite its "R" rating, there's very little offensive or upsetting material in this British comedy. With the exception of one profanity-filled, angry outburst near the end of the movie, the salty language is mostly a means of colorful, humorous expression. The young professional female characters do drink socially -- and get very drunk once -- but they don't engage in irresponsible behavior. Sexuality is limited to some playful teasing among the young women and one scene between adults who kiss, begin to undress, and sink onto a bed. A chance encounter between the heroine and a mentally ill homeless man is scary for a few moments but resolves without violence. She also has to deal with the explosive jealousy of an unstable admirer. To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails.
Poppy (Sally Hawkins) is a primary school teacher in North London. She's funny, almost blindly optimistic, and, of course, "happy go lucky." She has a busy life, surrounded by adoring (though slightly disbelieving) family and friends. When her bike is stolen, Poppy takes driving lessons. She also enrolls in a Flamenco dance class, notices that one of the young boys in her class has had some disturbing changes in behavior, encounters a mentally ill homeless man, and meets an appealing social worker. That's it. Those vignettes provide the structure that tells Poppy's story in HAPPY-GO-LUCKY.
This is a movie with serious undercurrents and a dazzling performance by Hawkins. Director Mike Leigh -- who's well-known for constructing his movies from an idea, a sharp eye for extraordinary actors, and six months of improvisation and "rehearsal" -- has moved away from the serious subjects of his recent past (Vera Drake) to make what appears at first glance to be a frothy comedy. But there's much more to Happy-Go-Lucky.
Just beneath the surface of what seems to be Poppy's unwavering good spirit lies a wise, sensitive, and courageous young woman. She works hard, parties hard, yearns for a fulfilling relationship, and encounters evidence of the anger and pathology of strangers that could be around any corner. She's one of those people who's not afraid to look -- or to help. Nothing less than the profound question of how happiness is possible in today's world is at the heart of this film. Poppy's answer? It's a choice.
Families can talk about what the movie means by "happy go lucky." Do you have to be nave and unaware of the world's problems in order to be "happy"? How did the movie show that always trying to see life's bright side didn't mean that Poppy wasn't responsible and intelligent as well? What kind of choices did she make when facing angry or unhappy people? Were they good choices? Why or why not? Can you understand why some people were annoyed by Poppy's sunny personality?
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