Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As Coraline heads toward the backyard well to dispose of it, the Beldam's severed hand sneaks into the real world and attempts to drag her back to the Other World. Wybie, having realized Coraline was right, comes to the rescue and destroys the hand, and they both throw the key and the hand's remains into the well.
In the Other World, his copy cannot speak but is an ally to Coraline, and gets punished by the Other Mother when he helps Coraline escape the Other World. At the end of the film, Coraline reaches out to help Wybie tell his grandmother what is behind the little door. The sister of Wybie's grandmother was one of the ghost children lost to the Beldam.
The stop-motion masterpiece "Coraline" is back in theaters − and turning heads.. The 2009 animated film about an adventurous girl and the Other World she stumbles upon is celebrating its 15th ...
The Plot Summary mentions the "Other" of a character named Wybie, whom I had never heard of before. Apparently, he was an added character in the movie, so as Coraline would have someone to talk to. However, this page is about Coraline the book, and should have a plot summary reflecting this.
Animation wizard Henry Selick has seen the remastered “Coraline.” And he loves it. “It’s gorgeous. I saw it about a week and a half ago and it very much represents the original dream of ...
Coraline, also known as Coraline: The Game, or Coraline: An Adventure Too Weird for Words, is a 2009 adventure game based on the film of the same name. In North America, it was released on January 27, 2009, a few weeks prior to the film's theatrical release. [1] It was released on the PlayStation 2, Wii and Nintendo DS.
Of all the mythical monsters, Frankenstein is probably the most famous. Brought to life by author Mary Shelley in the 1818 novel by the same name, the mythical monster was said to have been ...
The original 1957 publication of Manual de zoología fantástica contained eighty-two entries. Thirty-four additional entries were added to the retitled second edition. While collaborating on the 1969 English translation, Borges revised many of the original entries and added another four, bringing the total count to