
The Red Right Hand of the mercurial Serial Killer Karkas in Galaxy of Fear is that he has one "crushed" eye. He never really loses his cool at any point in the book, and he is never depicted as any crazier than the rest of the Ozians, so it might be considered Subverted. The Scarecrow from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is described as having one eye larger than the other (accompanied by mismatched ears) due to poor artistry on his creator's part. However, the eye drives the old man's roommate to insanity (whether this roommate is their servant, their apprentice, a caretaker or even their spouse is never mentioned). One eye, due to some deformity, is described as a "vulture eye" with a film over it. The unnamed old man in The Tell-Tale Heart. It's also virtually never looking in the same direction as his other eye. It's bright blue, the size of a golf-ball, has 360 rotation and can see through just about anything. The aptly named Alastor "Mad-Eye" Moody from Harry Potter has a magical replacement eye. That same eye later gets this treatment in the real world after Kirito stabs him through it with the Pain Absorber set to zero it's permanently bloodshot, with visible veins/scarring extending in all directions from it ◊. Sword Art Online: Sugou Nobuyuki/Oberon's right eye bugs out ◊ while he's gloating to Asuna in episode 18. Kureo Mado, a sadist CCG Investigator obsessed with killing Ghouls to produce new anti-Ghoul weapons, has one lazy eye and one that is almost always bulging. (It turns out to be a tell-tale sign of any Half-Human Hybrid, known as One-Eyed Ghouls.) He frequently wears an eye-patch to conceal it. His right eye remains normal, but his left is prone to giving away his Ghoul nature. Protagonist Kaneki Ken has one, as a result of being a Half-Human Hybrid. Tokyo Ghoul has two variations of this. Chuck from Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt has one large white eye and a smaller black one. And when 86 gets serious somehow his eyes get even crazier looking! Vassalord: 86 has this as his default expression. It succeeds in making him appear quite off his rocker (and he is). Ryuga does this quite often in Metal Fight Beyblade. It fits since most of them are clinically insane to some degree. The entire cast of Deadman Wonderland exhibits this, sometimes as their default expression.
He's not quite right in the head, in case you couldn't tell. In Yu-Gi-Oh! R, Yako Tenma has this going on at least once in just about every one of his appearances after his Start of Darkness.Marik of Yu-Gi-Oh! did this from time to time, though he was crazy all the time, and this was because it was his dark side.Kurt Godel from Negima! Magister Negi Magi.Rika busting this out in the second season is truly a sight to behold. Higurashi: When They Cry has a lot of "emo-distortion" expressions, Mad Eye being just one of the effects.A favorite shot of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS' resident Mad Scientist, Jail Scaglietti, when he's taunting the Time-Space Administration Bureau via broadcast.Kimblee in a late chapter of Fullmetal Alchemist when he's telling Pride about how screams are soothing to him. Just about everyone in the Hellsing manga.Whenever someone is emotionally broken in Elfen Lied(which is often) they get these, along with a Kubrick Stare.
When she gets angry, Revy in Black Lagoon has clear white irises, to accentuate her inner turmoil.20, but did not issue a public health alert on the matter until Feb. The agency first reported potential problems with the eyedrops on Jan. One person has died and five other people have been blinded, at least in one eye, the CDC said. The company has since recalled its products, also sold under the brand name Delsam Pharma. Cases so far have been reported in 12 states: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Nevada, Texas, Utah, Washington and Wisconsin. Most were purchased online, but at least one person reported buying the drops at Costco, the CDC told NBC News this week.Īs of Wednesday, the artificial tears, manufactured in India by Global Pharma Healthcare, have been linked to at least 55 cases of antibiotic-resistant Pseudomonas infections nationwide.
Bottles of the recalled EzriCare Artificial tears used by Judy Gregory. The agency urged people to stop using the eyedrops immediately. Among cases nationwide, the CDC says the common thread appears to be a particular brand of eyedrops: EzriCare Artificial Tears.