Tony Williams, a pastor at Aphesis Apostolic Ministry in Fresno, believes the rapture is at hand and people need to prepare by accepting God. Although end-of-times prophecies have bubbled up from the Bible to Nostradamus, the...
Or How To Outrun An Earthquake In A Limousine - The Review The disaster movie to end all disaster movies! Roland Emmerich raises the bar, then batters it to pieces, blows it up and sends it crashing into the ocean. And the...
I love a good death scene. Ronald Lacey’s Arnold Toht in Raiders of the Lost Ark. Samuel L. Jackson’s Russell Franklin in Deep Blue Sea. Sean Bean’s Boromir in Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. (“My brother…my...
Sam Worthington is set to star in an interesting sounding science fiction film... Brad Pitt's Plan B has picked up the video game Dark Void before it's even released... American Gladiators really is happening... So is The...
This past week I gathered a group of gays and we huddled into the illustrious Chelsea Cinemas on 23rd st. to see 2012. While it is always a pleasure to see John Cusack reprise his role as everyman Tom Hanks the real treat was...
For a society so worried about the state of the planet, we seem to get a perverse thrill out of seeing it destroyed for fun. That, at least, is the theory those in the entertainment business seem to be working off at the moment.
Premise going in: world is ending. Ergo, biggest disaster movie ever. It does start off with most of the disaster movie tropes, in the form of meeting the large and geographically scattered cast, but it also quickly introduces...
I took Thursday as an escape from normalcy day and went to Great Escape Movies Theater in Moline to watch the new movie 2012! I was not disappointed. I really like the Moline theater for the most part. The Davenport Showcase...
John Cusack, left, and Woody Harrelson star in Columbia Pictures' ?012.' The action film was released on Nov. 13. As moviegoers across the nation watched the end of the world with the opening of "2012" last week, news of...
Planet 51 (PG, 90 minutes). This computer-animated feature about an American astronaut landing on a distant planet doesn't seem to know who its audience should be. Most of the jokes are geared to adults and are a little...