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We've got easy and hard movie trivia questions with answers from famous films like Star Wars, Harry Potter, Avatar and other classics. Test your knowledge. 181 movie trivia questions to test your ...
RELATED: 50 of the Most Famous Movie Quotes of All Time. What was the top-grossing movie of 2014? A. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1. B. The Lego Movie. C. Captain America: The Winter Soldier . D.
Attack of the 50 Foot Woman: Nathan H. Juran: Allison Hayes, William Hudson, Yvette Vickers: United States: Horror Attack of the Puppet People: Bert I. Gordon: John Agar, Michael Mark, Jack Kosslyn: United States: Horror Ballad of the Ming Tombs Reservoir (a.k.a Shi san ling shui ku chang xiang qu) Jin Shan: Jin Shan, Yu Daiqin, Zhang Yisheng ...
Adventure [50] The X from Outer Space (a.k.a. Uchû daikaijû Girara) Kazui Nihonmatsu: Eiji Okada, Toshiya Wazaki: Japan: Horror Kaiju Yongary, Monster from the Deep (a.k.a. Taekoesu Yonggary) Kim Ki-duk: Moon Kang, Kwang Ho Lee, Soonjai Lee: South Korea Japan: Adventure Drama Fantasy Horror Kaiju 1968: Title Director Cast Country Subgenre ...
This is a list of horror films released in the 1950s.At the beginning of the 1950s, horror films were described by Kim Newman as being "out of fashion". [1] Among the most influential horror films of the 1950s was The Thing From Another World, with Newman stating that countless science fiction horror films of the 1950s would follow in its style, while a film made just the year before, The Man ...
The Thing from Another World, sometimes referred to as just The Thing, is a 1951 American black-and-white science fiction-horror film directed by Christian Nyby, produced by Edward Lasker for Howard Hawks' Winchester Pictures Corporation, and released by RKO Radio Pictures.
BSc meteorologist Janice Davila tells Bored Panda that one of the most unknown facts from her field of expertise is that weather radars are slightly tilted upward in a half-degree (1/2°) angle.
In the history of science fiction, the Golden Age follows the "pulp era" of the 1920s and '30s, and precedes New Wave science fiction of the '60s and '70s. The 1950s are, in this scheme, a transitional period. Robert Silverberg, who came of age then, saw the '50s as the true Golden Age. [2]