Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Swerve is a 2018 American horror-drama film written and directed by Dean Kapsalis. It delves into the complexities of mental illness through the life of Holly, played by Azura Skye . As a high school teacher in a quiet town, Holly grapples with personal challenges, including a strained marriage and haunting memories.
PlayCanvas is an open-source [1] 3D game engine/interactive 3D application engine alongside a proprietary cloud-hosted creation platform that allows for simultaneous editing from multiple computers via a browser-based interface. [2] It runs in modern browsers that support WebGL, including Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome. The engine is capable ...
[1] Courtney Wynter of GRM Daily noted that "Swerve" has "an infectious beat" that "[prompts Jay1 and KSI] to inject the production with their playful lyrics". [2] The staff of Notion acclaimed that "this [song] was always going to be a catchy one with KSI and Jay1 on the bill" and "the pair bounce off each other in this playful, fast-paced ...
The Swerve, a 2018 American horror-drama film directed by Dean Kapsalis; Swerve (drink), a dairy drink produced by the Coca-Cola Company; Swerve (Transformers), a character from the Transformers toyline; Swerve (Friday Night Lights), an episode of the TV series Friday Night Lights
The title and the subtitle of the book are explained in the author's preface. "The Swerve" refers to a key conception in the ancient atomistic theories according to which atoms moving through the void are subject to clinamen: while falling straight through the void, they are sometimes subject to a slight, unpredictable swerve. Greenblatt uses ...
Swerve is a 2011 Australian thriller film written and directed by Craig Lahiff and starring Emma Booth, Jason Clarke and David Lyons.Lyons plays an honest man who, after coming upon a car accident, retrieves a suitcase full of cash from a wrecked car.
Clinamen (/ k l aɪ ˈ n eɪ m ən /; plural clinamina, derived from clīnāre, to incline) is the Latin name Lucretius gave to the unpredictable swerve of atoms, in order to defend the atomistic doctrine of Epicurus. In modern English it has come more generally to mean an inclination or a bias.
Swerve is an album by Tucson, Arizona-based rock band Giant Sand. It was first released in 1990 on the Amazing Black Sand label, and was re-released in 1993 by both Amazing Black Sand and Restless Records. It features performances by guest artists such as Chris Cacavas of Green on Red, Juliana Hatfield, and Steve Wynn. [1]