Have you ever wondered how amazing it would be to play badminton in the star wars world? Using light sabers instead of rackets….. it would be awesome! Well then here’s a video of a Jedi match that i came across in the youtube.. check it out!
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Take a look at this very interesting comparison chart of some of our all-time famous robots from popular science fiction movies and cartoons. Read the rest of this entry
Celebrities are frequently called upon to change their appearance for movies, but sometimes they go well beyond the call of duty. This is a list of the 10 most amazing celebrity transformations for film in hollywood. Read the rest of this entry
Inception has been released in theatres last week and by now you’ve probably heard that it’s good, really good. Yet having seen it, as a Sci-Fi fan, I think I’m ready to take that one step even further. It’s good enough that I’m ready to start considering it for a place among some of the all-time greats.
Inception gets what great science fiction movies are supposed to be about. It’s a story full of big ideas, ideas so big that science fiction was really the only way to convey them and they play out perfectly.
Here’s 5, simply distilled reasons you may be ready to declare it one of the greatest science fiction movies ever filmed, after you see the movie. Make sure you buy a ticket. Read the rest of this entry
Have you been wondering how you can watch full-length movies on YouTube? Do you look forward to seeing more content on YouTube which has been carefully planned, acted and produced? Well, you can. Plus, it’s easy and free.
Luckily the folks at YouTube have tried to make it easy for us to find all the full-length movies available – and then they did their best to hide the fact that they’d done this. So, it’s now time to fix this problem and let you all know where YouTube have hidden the movies. Read the rest of this entry
How to Train Your Dragon, the new 3-D digital fable from DreamWorks Animation (it opens March 26), has a kinetically dreamy, soaring-through-the-air effervescence. On some level, though, it’s just the sweetly simple tale of a boy and his dog. The boy, Hiccup (Jay Baruchel), is the son of a toweringly gruff, red-bearded Viking named Stoick (Gerard Butler, in his teeth-gnashing element).
The ”dog” that Hiccup befriends is a fearsome dragon — a Night Fury, who in the film’s fire-breather cosmology (there are a dozen breeds, each with its own funky look) bears the distinction of being so fast that it can be glimpsed only as a purplish streak against the night sky. No wonder the Vikings live in mortal fear of them. Read the rest of this entry
A new research has analyzed what are the things in the movie Avatar that comply with science and can exist in reality and what are the things that are implausible.According to a report in Discovery News, one of the plausible stuff shown in the movie is the concept of moons that can host life.
Inhabitable moons are probably the most common place to find life in the Milky Way galaxy, simply because large moons outnumber planets by at least a factor of 10.For example, Saturn’s giant moon Titan could be the archetype of inhabitable moons. It is as geologically and meteorologically diverse as Earth. Read the rest of this entry
Futuristic 3D animation movie “Avatar” shot past a worldwide total of more than one billion dollars in less than three weeks, making James Cameron’s latest blockbuster the fastest-ever to reach the $1 billion mark. Hollywood blockbuster “Avatar” surged to a box office haul of more than one billion dollars globally on Sunday, faster than any other movie in history, an industry tracker reported.
“It has made 670 million dollars international, for a total of more than one billion dollars,” box office analyst Chad Hartigan of Exhibitor Relations told AFP. Read the rest of this entry
It’s that time of year again when we’re about to be inundated with the Holiday spirit. Bah-Humbug! Our first film attempting to spread the Christmas joy (all the way in early November) is Robert Zemeckis’ latest live-action-animation, IMAX 3-D film A Christmas Carol starring Jim Carey multiple times over. This isn’t the original 1908 version, the 1938 film, 1951 adaptation titled Scrooge, or the 1949, 1971, 1982 (parts 1 and 2), 1984, 1989, 1994 (Flinstones version), 1997, 1999, 2000 or 2004 TV versions, or the straight to video versions by “Sesame Street,” “The Muppets,” or “Barbie”… but it sure feels a whole like all of them. The only difference is that this one is done in Zemeckis’ favorite half animation style and is in IMAX 3-D. Is it worth it? Let’s discuss. Read the rest of this entry







