We now know when Fox is planning to bring FBI Special Agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully back to the small screen, as the network revealed that part one of The X-Files six-episode event series premiere will air on Sunday, January 24th.
In their 2015 - 2016 fall TV schedule announcement (which also includes information on Ryan Murphy's Scream Queens, slated to begin airing on Tuesdays this fall), Fox revealed that the return of The X-Files will take place on Sunday, January 24th, between 10:00pm - 11:00pm Est after the Nfc Championship game.
The second half of the two-part premiere will air at 8:00pm Est the following night on Monday, January 25th, with subsequent episodes also airing on Monday nights. Filming on the event series begins this June. For more information, see the official press release below (The X-Files details are highlighted in bold text). Also included in...
In their 2015 - 2016 fall TV schedule announcement (which also includes information on Ryan Murphy's Scream Queens, slated to begin airing on Tuesdays this fall), Fox revealed that the return of The X-Files will take place on Sunday, January 24th, between 10:00pm - 11:00pm Est after the Nfc Championship game.
The second half of the two-part premiere will air at 8:00pm Est the following night on Monday, January 25th, with subsequent episodes also airing on Monday nights. Filming on the event series begins this June. For more information, see the official press release below (The X-Files details are highlighted in bold text). Also included in...
- 5/11/2015
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Who needs new books? In this week’s issue of the magazine, our critics show us what’s in their personal collections of old culture, much of it you might’ve missed. All of it is available online, somewhere. Herewith, Kathryn Schulz’s list of the 11 lesser-known literary classics you can download for free. 1. The Last Man by Mary Shelley, 1826 An apocalyptic novel by Ms. Frankenstein herself, in which a 21st-century civilization—oh, yes—self-destructs in the face of an outbreak of plague. 2. The Girl With the Golden Eyes by Honoré de Balzac, 1833 A beautiful girl, her lover (male), her other lover (female), intimations of incest, attempted murder, actual murder: Let’s just say this is the kind of French novel that gave French novels their name. 3. Behind a Mask, or a Woman’s Power by Louisa May Alcott, 1866 Close readers of Little Women will recall that Jo March is...
- 11/11/2013
- by Kathryn Schulz
- Vulture
Reviewed by Amy R. Handler
(February 2011)
Directed by: Brad Anderson
Written by: Anthony Jaswinski
Starring: Hayden Christensen, John Leguizamo, Thandie Newton, Jacob Latimore and Taylor Groothuis
Brad Anderson’s “Vanishing on 7th Street” is a chilly little film that slowly creeps under your skin and scares you to death the very moment you begin to think. The director of such thrillers as “Session 9” and “The Machinist,” Anderson is no stranger to speculation — especially when it comes to the disturbed mind, our place in time and whether human beings really can create their own existence and the world(s) they inhabit. Not the post-apocalyptic saga most critics claim, “Vanishing” is an apocalypse-in-the-now, and what’s most frightening is its realism and total possibility.
The plot of “Vanishing” appears simple: A somewhat awkward projectionist sits in his booth at a movie theater and steals seconds between films to munch on an...
(February 2011)
Directed by: Brad Anderson
Written by: Anthony Jaswinski
Starring: Hayden Christensen, John Leguizamo, Thandie Newton, Jacob Latimore and Taylor Groothuis
Brad Anderson’s “Vanishing on 7th Street” is a chilly little film that slowly creeps under your skin and scares you to death the very moment you begin to think. The director of such thrillers as “Session 9” and “The Machinist,” Anderson is no stranger to speculation — especially when it comes to the disturbed mind, our place in time and whether human beings really can create their own existence and the world(s) they inhabit. Not the post-apocalyptic saga most critics claim, “Vanishing” is an apocalypse-in-the-now, and what’s most frightening is its realism and total possibility.
The plot of “Vanishing” appears simple: A somewhat awkward projectionist sits in his booth at a movie theater and steals seconds between films to munch on an...
- 2/17/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
Reviewed by Amy R. Handler
(February 2011)
Directed by: Brad Anderson
Written by: Anthony Jaswinski
Starring: Hayden Christensen, John Leguizamo, Thandie Newton, Jacob Latimore and Taylor Groothuis
Brad Anderson’s “Vanishing on 7th Street” is a chilly little film that slowly creeps under your skin and scares you to death the very moment you begin to think. The director of such thrillers as “Session 9” and “The Machinist,” Anderson is no stranger to speculation — especially when it comes to the disturbed mind, our place in time and whether human beings really can create their own existence and the world(s) they inhabit. Not the post-apocalyptic saga most critics claim, “Vanishing” is an apocalypse-in-the-now, and what’s most frightening is its realism and total possibility.
The plot of “Vanishing” appears simple: A somewhat awkward projectionist sits in his booth at a movie theater and steals seconds between films to munch on an...
(February 2011)
Directed by: Brad Anderson
Written by: Anthony Jaswinski
Starring: Hayden Christensen, John Leguizamo, Thandie Newton, Jacob Latimore and Taylor Groothuis
Brad Anderson’s “Vanishing on 7th Street” is a chilly little film that slowly creeps under your skin and scares you to death the very moment you begin to think. The director of such thrillers as “Session 9” and “The Machinist,” Anderson is no stranger to speculation — especially when it comes to the disturbed mind, our place in time and whether human beings really can create their own existence and the world(s) they inhabit. Not the post-apocalyptic saga most critics claim, “Vanishing” is an apocalypse-in-the-now, and what’s most frightening is its realism and total possibility.
The plot of “Vanishing” appears simple: A somewhat awkward projectionist sits in his booth at a movie theater and steals seconds between films to munch on an...
- 2/17/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Have a question about something fantasy-related? Please send an email to thetorchonlineoracle@gmail.com and be sure and include your city and state and/or country. Q: I know it's all the rage these days -- Carriers, I Am Legend, Zombieland, World War Z -- for zombies to be animated by viruses, not black magic (as they were originally conceived). But when exactly did the magic-to-virus zombie switch-over occur? -- Zac, Tuscon, Az The Oracle Speaks: When did "realistic," non-magical zombies first arise? It's a great question, but there's not quite a simple answer. In 1826, Mary Shelley -- yes, that Mary Shelley -- wrote a novel, The Last Man, that posited a world-wide "plague" -- an important element in most of the modern "zombie-virus" genre.
- 9/29/2010
- thetorchonline
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