Stanley Kubrick’s scorching 1957 court martial drama Paths of Glory, his third bona fide feature following the cult success of Killer’s Kiss and The Killing, makes its way
In January 1896, Auguste and Louis Lumière presented their fifty second long Train Pulling into a Station, and if urban legend is to be believed the monochrome illusion
A decade and a half into his career as a novelist of epic tomes of hard science fiction, the latest adventure from the pen of former astronomer Alastair
Horror is the genre which is always looked down upon by the establishment, derided as being base, lowbrow, sensationalist and consciously unpleasant, yet as with the disguised social
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