Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Book of Eli is a 2010 American post-apocalyptic neo-Western [2] [3] action film directed by the Hughes brothers, written by Gary Whitta, and starring Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman, Mila Kunis, Ray Stevenson, and Jennifer Beals. The story revolves around Eli, a nomad in a post-apocalyptic world who seeks to deliver his copy of a mysterious ...
Eli, originally known as Elias (male) in the book, is the name of the centuries-old child vampire in both the novel and original film Let the Right One In, renamed Abby for the 2010 film Let Me In. When Eli/Abby moves into the apartment nextdoor to Oskar/Owen, the two characters become very close friends.
Oskar and Eli develop a relationship, and she helps him fight back against his tormentors. Their relationship becomes closer, and they reveal more of themselves, including fragments of Eli's life. Among the details revealed is that Eli is a boy named Elias who was castrated when he was turned into a vampire over 200 years ago. She dresses in ...
The novel focuses on three generations of the McCullough family: Eli McCullough, the vicious patriarch who was the first male child born in the newly formed Texas, his son Peter McCullough, a learned man who disagrees with his father's brutality but is powerless to stop it, and Eli's great-granddaughter and Peter's granddaughter, Jeanne Anne "J ...
Eli (Hebrew: עֵלִי , ... Heli, fl. c. 11th century BC) was, according to the Book of Samuel, a priest and a judge of the Israelites in the city of Shiloh ...
Eli Valley is an American cartoonist and author. He is best known for his political cartoons, which often feature prominent politicians, businesspeople, and media personalities. He is best known for his political cartoons, which often feature prominent politicians, businesspeople, and media personalities.
6 Eli blind? 51 comments. 7 Rapture?! 11 comments. 8 Category:Christian films? 8 comments. 9 Claudia. 3 comments. 10 ...
No. Eli is a wanderer, but the film does not "center on his life". He's just going from Point A to Point B, and plowing through obstacles. The director is acutely aware that Gary Oldman's character is much more interesting than Eli, and the focus of the film substantially shifts --for the better-- to what he wants the