I can't speak 100% to which cultures you'll get out of those beers because I've never had them, but...
If Brett Tyranny and Bretticent are simply clean fermented beers with Brettanomyces added (which they appear to be), your beer will not be sour. It may get funky, fruity, etc, but it will not get sour. Slight tartness is possible, but don't expect a "sour" beer. If this is what you're going for, then, yes, just pitch the brett bottle dregs or make a starter of the bottle dregs and add it to the secondary fermenter of a clean beer.
The Marina, according to their website, appears to be a mixed culture fermented sour...in which case it will typically have lactic acid producing bacteria (most likely lactobacillus and pediococcus) in addition to Sacchromyces and Brettanomyces. The general recommendation for using these is to pitch the bottle dregs in to a starter, give it a few weeks (or months), decant off some of the starter, feed it more fresh wort, and continue this process until you're happy with how the starter wort is coming off as you build up the strength of the mixed culture, then pitch this starter culture into a beer (either as a primary strain or into secondary). If Pediococcus *IS* present, you're talking more than a "few" months to let this beer complete. Many strains of Pediococcus go through multiple phases that produce tons of off flavors (and off-textures...google image search "ropy beer") that the Brettanomyces will symbiotically clean up and convert into more pleasant characters. There's no set-in-stone timeline, but most folks let mixed culture fermentations run for a year or more to ensure the Pedio isn't going to continue working after the beer has been packaged.
As for the Hiver Joe...beats me

. If it tastes sour, pitch the dregs into a starter along with the Marina.