Stop-motion aliens, desert revenge, and a guy with a laser cannon arm make this baffling 70s sci-fi oddity a B-movie worth streaming.
When a mysterious crescent appeared over Moscow in 1967, alien enthusiasts were unaware they were actually tracking a 3-megaton weapon designed to bypass American radar.
When I read Project Hail Mary back in 2021, no one knew anything about it. There was no Wikipedia plot summary. No YouTube breakdowns. No spoilers at all. It was just me, the book, and my imagination.
Gray Zone Warfare update 0.4.0 wants you to stop using the Wiki and actually play the game instead.
Some people now have an A.I. bestie. Some have a husband. Some have three. Adrianne Brookins is, by her own account, an “old ...
Explore the wit and cultural impact of Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, the sci-fi comedy that changed ...

The Language Of Murder

"If we soften the language of atrocity and hide the harsh truth, we become desensitized to it." ...
From the outset of the bit, Fleming notes that he feels a certain kinship with women, by dint of his theatrical background, which includes training in acting and modern dance, and because of his ...
A tour of the unsung vehicles that keep a United States Navy ship running: spotting dollies, tow tractors, “Tilly” cranes, forklifts, P-25 fire trucks, RHIBs, LCAC hovercraft, AAVs, and SEAL Delivery ...
A deep dive into Mazda’s race-chassis rotary concept: carbon bodywork, E100 ethanol, 450 hp claims, and the infamous 2008 ...
The developers of cult classic horror shooter Clive Barker's Undying tell us how Steven Spielberg, Clive Barker, and Robert ...
Minutes later, O’Brien is still attempting to describe Fleming, and he eventually lands on the image of “the goop that’s inside a lava lamp.” Fleming’s work is a hyperspecific, manic, digressive ...