Adam Nimoy had already been working in collaboration with his father on a documentary celebrating his life and his relationship with his most famous role, Spock, when his
Originally published in March 2008 with illustrations by Brett Helquist as part of the celebrations of World Book Day, Neil Gaiman’s story of twelve year old Norseman Odd
There is much to be admired about Morgan. “She’s smart, smarter than any of us, but that’s not what makes her special,” says Doctor Kathy Grieff through the
Superheroes are ubiquitous. Where in the seventies it was cop shows, the eighties action shows, the nineties police and legal procedurals, since the success of Bryan Singer’s X-Men
Theatre changes, theatre evolves, new media penetrate the auditorium in order to keep pace with developments elsewhere in popular culture, but sometimes the best way to incorporate the
If horror reflects the fears of the time it is made, then the three films which comprise The Purge are a terrible indictment of modern America, the first
In the concluding essay of his collection of sinister and macabre short stories Night Music: Nocturnes 2, John Connolly proposed that the brevity of that form was the
The Edinburgh Film School was fortunate indeed in 1963, when the legendary Hollywood foley artist Dusty Horne, a professional who practiced her craft alongside the great Jack Foley
It’s almost a hundred and twenty years since H G Wells‘ The Invisible Man was first published in serialised form, and as with many of the works of “the