Cast Siskel & Ebert Unforgiven/Mistress/Death Becomes Her/Enchanted April/London Kills Me(Season 6, Episode 44) TV-PG TV Episode|Talk-Show Edit pageAdd to list Editor Paul Andrews See all filmmakers & crew (2) Status EditReleased Updated1992-8-8...
“hide” beneath a veneer of civility. After he drinks the concoction, the doctor’s evil impulses are unleashed as he is transformed into the monstrousMr. Hyde. As Hyde, he rapes and later kills a prostitute named Ivy (played by Miriam Hopkins), whom Jekyll had earlier rescued from an ...
It is, however, a benefit performance in aid of Mrs Wilkinson, one of the actors and, I assume, John’s wife. The comic opera is followed by a song by Thomas Arne, performed by Mrs Wilkinson with another of the cast on the trumpet. The soldier tir’d of war’s alarms for swears ...
We can only speculate who these criminals really are, given the sheer amount of obscurity and red tape which afflicted our investigations in the Greater London area. Thanks to those who shall not be named, the investigation got royally f*cked and the findings became the subject of a D-Notic...
But she gets her vengeance in a way nobody expected—she kills him through the psychic link between pilots and emerges from the cockpit unscathed. She is labeled an Iron Widow, a much-feared and much-silenced kind of female pilot who can sacrifice boys to power up Chrysalises instead....
In turn, Bennett's original screenplay took inspiration from a 2007 book,The Road to Balcombe Street: The IRA Reign of Terror in Londonby Steven P. Moysey. The film stars Aml Ameen as a British Sergeant in the Special Air Service (SAS) named Tempest who accidentally shoots and kills...
Cancelling ‘the rest of HS2’ kills the HS East Midlands spur, which offered a fast route between Birmingham and Nottingham. Will anything be offered in its place? We doubt it. Phase 2 of HS2 was expected to create railway capacity to take half a million lorries a year off the road ...
From Universal classics like Frankenstein, The Raven, and Phantom of the Opera to nostalgic favorites like Child’s Play, The Craft, and Candyman to frightening franchises like Saw, The Purge, and Leprechaun, and the best of Blumhouse like Get Out, Halloween Kills, and Happy Death Day, ...