Fight like Hell
The first season of Daredevil was a welcome change from Marvel Studiosâ typical slate of chaotic CGI phantasmagoria, thanks to its neo-noir plot and searing fight choreography.
The first season of Daredevil was a welcome change from Marvel Studiosâ typical slate of chaotic CGI phantasmagoria, thanks to its neo-noir plot and searing fight choreography.
If youâre looking for a long-running webcomic about a tight-knit group of friends of all shapes, sizes, and sexualities, look no further than ChloĂ© C.âs Go Get A Roomie!, now in its sixth year of production.
When people talk about bodybuilding, they usually mention larger-than-life figures like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Lou Ferrigno. Although these men were huge stars in their prime, almost solely responsible for the gym craze of the 1980s, their charismatic public personas did little to dispel the popular idea that bodybuilders are brainless beauties obsessed with âthe pump.â But there is more to muscle than meets the eye.
After producing two successful comic collections and a remarkable crowdfunding campaign, the Toronto Comics Anthology team are back on Kickstarter to raise funds for Toronto Comics: Volume 3.
You may have seen them advertised at Best Buy or London Drugs: giant TVs now in â4K digital resolution!â
In 2008, Paramount Pictures released Cloverfield, a big-budget found-footage monster movie that was developed under much secrecy. Rumours circulated for months leading up to release that producer J.J. Abramâs studio was making a new Voltron or even Godzilla movie, creating a feverish anticipation among audiences eager to find out just what the hell Cloverfield was.
Space… there is a lot of it. And weâre going to sail this convoy right across it!
Is cliché fantasy that is done well still cliché? This is the question I asked myself as I examined The Dead God by Erik Bear. Yes, I enjoyed it. Yes, I felt it was immersive. But the entire experience left me with an itch in the back of my mind, a little tingling that said this was all too familiar.
On October 6, 1998, Matthew Shepardâa student at the University of Wyomingâwas found severely beaten and tied to a fence, presumably victimized for being homosexual.
Following her work on several previous Douglas College Theatre Department projects, director and teacher Deborah Neville returns to direct MoisĂ©s Kaufmanâs The Laramie Project, a play constructed from real life testimonies gathered from the residents of Laramie, Wyoming in response to the killing of Matthew Shepard, a local college student who was the victim of a hate killing at the hands of two Laramie residents.