One of the five sci-fi's I remember every single detail of from my earliest days as a fan. For the genre, I think it's considerably above average. The moor is nicely atmospheric. There's one of every character in the book the good guy, the bad guy, the local sheriff, the lovely damsel, her father the old professor, etc. The scene where we're looking for the first time through the window of the ship and the visitor peeks out from the other side is easily as good as the three-fingered-hand-on-the-shoulder in War of the Worlds. Nice character to the visitor, for whom, like Karloff's Frankenstein, we end up feeling some empathy .
a high-strung teen who finds herself trapped on vacation with her free-spirited mom’s (Bush) corny boyfriend, Glenn (O’Connell), who is also her vice principal. The teen sets out to salvage the trip by secretly plotting to break the couple up.
When Great White Sharks storm a Cape Cod water park, a washed-up football star-turned-lifeguard and his ex-girlfriend police chief must uncover the shocking secret drawing in the ocean's biggest predators before it's too
A powerful politician and his criminal network hunt a young girl for death. An unlikely dog groomer steps up as her protector while her life hangs in the balance.
An American private military contractor must balance tending to civilian lives while rescuing his adoptive daughter who was taken hostage by Russian forces in Ukraine.
Set in the distant future, ‘I’m Gonna Kill You,’ takes place inside an ‘all gay colony’ following the journey of Cal (Cusati-Moyer) and Spector (Graceffa), two paired lovers, fighting an internal battle – where remaining colony members ultimately pay the
Four interconnected stories reveal the beginnings and evolution of a zombie apocalypse in Buenos Aires. Through the perspectives of various characters, we experience the initial confusion, the chaotic descent, and the fight for survival in a collapsing wo