What does ATOR mean in Research?

This page is about the meanings of the acronym/abbreviation/shorthand ATOR in the Academic & Science field in general and in the Research terminology in particular.

Arc Team Open Research

Academic & Science » Research

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Submitted by S4Bot on March 4, 2016

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Definition

What does ATOR mean?

Ator
Ator is a film series of four European movies made in the 1980s created by Italian director Joe D'Amato, under the pseudonym David Hills. D'Amato wrote and directed the first, second, and fourth films in the series, himself disregarding the existence of the third. Ator was played in the first three films by Miles O'Keeffe and Eric Allan Kramer played the son of Ator in the fourth. Swordsman, alchemist, scientist, magician, scholar, and engineer, with the ability to sometimes produce objects out of thin air. Unintentionally comic moments sometimes arise when writer/director Joe d'Amato has Ator use modern-day technology in the film's medieval setting. For example, in the second film of the series, Ator storms a castle using a 1980s style hang glider, and later destroys the "Geometric Nucleus" with what appears to be a nuclear bomb, complete with mushroom cloud, at the end of the film. The series seems to be a parody of the main character in the popular Conan the Barbarian movies. Both Conan and Ator are heavily muscled, scantily clad Western European men who do battle against bizarre monsters and fantasy villains in unspecified time periods based on the Middle Ages. Controversy has existed for some time that D'Amato—who was repeatedly blacklisted in Europe—created Ator as an attempt to make money from the success of the Conan films.

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"ATOR." Abbreviations.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 25 Apr. 2024. <https://www.abbreviations.com/term/1764633>.

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    A National Aeronautics and Space Administration
    B Navy And Space Administration
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