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Overall, scientists in movies have been given a bad rap and they are invariably depicted as insane and power hungry. The audience has often laughed at the science used in the plots but some of these ideas predicted future scientific developments. Truth is always stranger than fiction. Many films tap into our fears and our [...]
Posted by Anne Iredale on Wednesday, December 1, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies, People, Science · Tagged Andre Delambre, Austin Powers, Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, Australian National University, B movies, Basil Rathbone, Brett Halsey, Burt Lancaster, California Institute of Technology, Caligari, Captain, car trouble, Cedric Hardwicke, Central Intelligence Agency, Cesare, Charles Laughton, Christopher Lloyd, Cloning, Colin Clive, crazy scientists, David Hedison, denmark, Dr. Caligari, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, Energy, Eric Stolz, Evil, film, Film genres, Frank N. Furter, Frankenstein, Frederick March, Gene Roddenbury, Gene Wilder, George Baker, George Langelaan, h g wells, Horror film, Hyde, Jeff Goldblum, Jekyll, John Barrymore, mad scientist, mad scientists, manufacturing, Marlon Brando, Martin Brundle, Martin Delambre, Marty McFly, Mary Shelley, Mass media, metropolis, michael j fox, Mike Myers, Moreau, Movies, New York World, Niels Bohr Institute, Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, Peter Cushing, Peter Sellers, Philippe Delambre, president, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rotwang, Rudolf Klein-Rogge, science, scientist, Seth Brundle, sleepwalking assistant, Spencer Tracy, Star Trek, stephen hawking, Strangelove, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The Fly, The Fly II, The Island of Dr. Moreau, The Men Who Stare at Goats, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Tim Curry, time travel, top 10 list, top 10 mad scientists, TopTenz.net, U.S. military, United States, wacky scientist, Washington DC, Washington,United States, Werner Krauss
Of loved movie characters, a few have stolen our hearts with the kind of admiration and unrivaled awe that other movie characters are not so easily able to achieve. The greatest of these movie characters are ones that most of us have met over the years (or at least should try to get to know if [...]
Posted by Natalie Jaro on Monday, October 11, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Anthony Hopkins, Batman, beauty and the beast, Benjamin Button, Brad Pit, Byron, Cate Blanchett, Charles Laughton, chorus singer, Christine falls, Christy Brown, Chunk, Conrad Veidy, Daniel Day-Lewis, David Lynch, Dea, Dea falls, Edward Scissorhands, Emmy Rossum, Entertainment, Entertainment_Culture, Eric Roth, Esmeralda, f. scott fitzgerald, film, France, Frederick Treves, Gerald Butler, Gwynplaine falls, Hamlet, Human Interest, Joel Schumacher, Johnny Depp, Joseph Merrick, Kendal, King, Mary Philbin, Mask, Mass media, metal scissors, Monster movies, Musical films, My Left Foot, Opera Populaire, Oscar, oscars, paint, Paris, Paris,France, Phantom of the Opera, policeman, Princess, Rocky, Rocky Dennis, Romantic drama films, scientist, Seth Brundle, stand by me, Steven Spielberg, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Elephant Man, The Fly, The Goonies, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Man Who Laughs, The Opera, The Phantom of the Opera, The Princess and the Frog, tim burton, Victor Hugo, Winona Ryder