Got a scoop request? An anonymous tip you’re dying to share? Send any/all of the above to askausiello@tvline.com
Question: I’m already having Walking Dead withdrawal. Got anything on Season 8 yet? — Bud
Ausiello: As a matter of fact, yes. Remember in the finale, when Sasha said she wasn’t giving up on Eugene, even though he’d reverted to his most spineless self? That was “a hint to what the story is,” showrunner Scott Gimple recently told TVLine. “It certainly looked like he was still a Savior. But is that going to haunt him… change him?...
Question: I’m already having Walking Dead withdrawal. Got anything on Season 8 yet? — Bud
Ausiello: As a matter of fact, yes. Remember in the finale, when Sasha said she wasn’t giving up on Eugene, even though he’d reverted to his most spineless self? That was “a hint to what the story is,” showrunner Scott Gimple recently told TVLine. “It certainly looked like he was still a Savior. But is that going to haunt him… change him?...
- 4/6/2017
- TVLine.com
Readers rise to the challenge of putting the 'science' into 'science fiction' for film festival's 48-hour challenge
The lights will dim and flicker in Piccadilly Circus on Tuesday as Sci-Fi London – the "international festival of science fiction and fantastic film" – comes to life with a jolt at the Apollo cinema.
Highlights this year include Death, starring the inimitable Leslie Philips as an inventor who has found a way to communicate from beyond the grave, Osombie, about a zombie Osama bin Laden, and a Boris Karloff all-nighter. Of course there will be more cerebral films, too, such as Clone, which explores the possible psychological fallout from human cloning.
Every year, the festival organisers set aspiring filmmakers the challenge of creating a five-minute movie from scratch over a single weekend, with the title, a prop and a line of dialogue set for them at random. The best shorts are shown at the festival.
The lights will dim and flicker in Piccadilly Circus on Tuesday as Sci-Fi London – the "international festival of science fiction and fantastic film" – comes to life with a jolt at the Apollo cinema.
Highlights this year include Death, starring the inimitable Leslie Philips as an inventor who has found a way to communicate from beyond the grave, Osombie, about a zombie Osama bin Laden, and a Boris Karloff all-nighter. Of course there will be more cerebral films, too, such as Clone, which explores the possible psychological fallout from human cloning.
Every year, the festival organisers set aspiring filmmakers the challenge of creating a five-minute movie from scratch over a single weekend, with the title, a prop and a line of dialogue set for them at random. The best shorts are shown at the festival.
- 4/30/2012
- by James Kingsland
- The Guardian - Film News
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