Frankenstein’s female creature, also known as “the Bride”, was the first female monster to appear on screen, in the 1935 Frankenstein sequel The Bride of Frankenstein. An unruly and rebellious figure, ...
Discover the most thrilling and captivating Korean dramas to binge-watch, including shows like Kingdom, The Glory, and My ...
Bdelloid rotifers shrug off radiation doses that would obliterate human cells. Here’s how their resilience reveals deep ...
Oscar Pérez-Oliva Fraga, deputy prime minister and great-nephew of Fidel Castro, announced that the island intends to have ‘a ...
The Takeout on MSN
The World's Heaviest Carrot Looked Like An Eldritch Nightmare
This super heavy vegetable doesn't look like any old carrot. Aside from being big enough to hold a world record, it also has ...
Creative Bloq on MSN
The best NBA logos: 10 basketball teams that nailed branding
Bringing joy to b-ball fans across North America, these are the best NBA logos in the league.
Scientists have identified a strange early crocodile relative that may have looked somewhat like a flightless bird ...
Named the "most popular family model in the entire range," the De Luxe 515 UHL brings a refreshed interior and all the ...
The brutal business of oil and gas — plus green tariffs, the wonder of ‘murderous birds’ and bringing wetlands back to life ...
In Phil Lord and Christopher Miller’s adaptation of Andy Weir’s novel, Ryan Gosling’s star power fuels an unlikely tale of far-flung friendship.
After more than a decade out of director's chairs, the duo tell IndieWire about tackling Andy Weir's beloved novel, making audiences fall in love with a talking rock alien, and lessons from Yoda.
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