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Home > Why Horror Films Are So Popular We Have Found 1 Products for your search of Why Horror Films Are So Popular. Displaying Items 1 - 1 and News Search:
- Bringing the Payne (Advance Titan)
 Thu, 16 Oct 2008 03:10:05 GMT Moderator: Hi Mark. How are you today? Mark Wahlberg: Good. How are you? M: I’m good. You are currently talking to 57 entertainment editors from the finest college publications in the country, and they’re all very excited to speak with you. And we’re going to jump right into some questions.
- Prepare to be scared (The Palladium-Times)
 Wed, 15 Oct 2008 23:07:05 GMT This is the story of a Palermo man who turned his haunted house, which is supposedly haunted by real ghosts, into an even more terrifying attraction for the people of central New York.
- Are Web Video Providers on the Wrong Track? (E-Commerce Times)
 Wed, 15 Oct 2008 12:16:03 GMT The market to distribute premium video content -- mainly TV episodes and feature-length movies -- is currently going through one of its most dynamic periods, as experimentation with business models, delivery mechanisms and consumer tastes is in full swing. In the age of online entertainment, consumers get virtually unlimited choice of content and the means to entertain themselves.
- The Thing (DVD Talk)
 Wed, 15 Oct 2008 11:19:45 GMT The Thing (1982) Blu-ray Universal 1982 / Color / 2:35 anamorphic widescreen / 109 min. / Street Date September 30, 2008 / 29.98 Starring Kurt Russell, Wilford Brimley, T.K. Carter, David Clennon, Keith David, Richard Dysart, Charles Hallahan, Peter Maloney, Richard Masur, Donald Moffat, Joel Polis.
- Commentary on the SciFi Channel (BellaOnline)
 Wed, 15 Oct 2008 01:06:17 GMT It's time for the SciFi Channel to step up and earn its name. Let the people have the quality science fiction TV they want!
- The Weekend Warrior: Oct. 17 - 19 (Coming Soon)
 Tue, 14 Oct 2008 15:10:00 GMT ComingSoon.net's The Weekend Warrior offers a preview of the new releases opening the weekend of Friday, October 17, including 20th Century Fox's adaptation of the video game Max Payne starring Mark Wahlberg, Oliver Stone's biopic about our current President W. , the big screen adaptation of the bestselling The Secret Life of Bees and the R-rated road comedy Sex Drive . This week's "Chosen One" ...
- Compelling stories, graphically told (The Charlotte Observer)
 Sun, 12 Oct 2008 10:55:48 GMT This sounds crazy, but it's true: The Charlotte-Mecklenburg library's Michele Gorman teaches other librarians how to read books. Not just any books, but graphic novels – the book form of a format better known as comics. Once regarded as junk literature aimed at teenage boys, a new generation of sophisticated visual stories has transformed that old image. The New York Times reviews graphic ...
- Editor Leslie Klinger discusses his new annotated 'Dracula' (The Columbus Dispatch)
 Sun, 12 Oct 2008 04:15:10 GMT The New Annotated Dracula (W.W. Norton, 613 pages, $39.95) by Bram Stoker, edited by Leslie S. Klinger Editor Leslie S. Klinger would love to know how Count Dracula sucked all that blood without ever making a mess of the bed sheets.
- A forgettable week of movies: One bunny that deserves boiling and a hack horror flick (Daily Mail)
 Thu, 09 Oct 2008 22:05:38 GMT The past seven days have brought movie catastrophes, which had critics discussing whether there had ever been a week of comparable quality. No one could remember a worse one.
- Compelling stories, graphically told (The Charlotte Observer)
 Sun, 12 Oct 2008 04:52:10 GMT (By Pam Kelley) This sounds crazy, but it's true: The Charlotte-Mecklenburg library's Michele Gorman teaches other librarians how to read books. Not just any books, but graphic novels – the book form of a format better known as comics. Once regarded as junk literature aimed at teenage boys, a new generation of sophisticated visual stories has transformed that old image. The New York Times ...
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