A recent study conducted by consultancy group IHS has suggested that by the end of 2012 American film lovers will have paid for 3.4 billion films online, a
When I say RPG, in this age of advanced video gaming many peoples’ thoughts immediately turn to massively multiplayer online games such as World of Warcraft and Star
Best know for presenting the shows Atom, Science and Islam and Shock and Awe: The History of Electricity, Professor Jim Al-Khalili, OBE, has been awarded the Royal Society Michael Faraday Prize
Launched at Eastercon 2012, Rocket Science is not a traditional science fiction anthology. None of the featured writers are well known, but all are previously published and many
Director Tarsem Singh has a history of reinterpreting the work of others, from the great works of art that inspired the music video of Losing My Religion and
On Saturday 31st March, the Cameo Cinema in Edinburgh played host to Robin Hardy, best known for his landmark 1973 film The Wicker Man, as he attended a
It began with “the little blonde girl who goes into a dark alley and gets killed in every horror movie.” That was the stereotype that writer Joss Whedon
Without worship, the gods fade away, so we are told. By that token, if audiences refuse to watch bad movies, will studios stop making them? Universally panned upon
In 1973, director Robin Hardy, with minimal support from studio or distributor, created a film that would become a cult classic of British horror cinema, The Wicker Man.