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Casablanca is a novella written by Edgar Brau in Nevada, United States, in November–December 2002.In the story, set in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina, a rich Argentine ranch owner builds a replica of Rick's Café Américain on his estate, with the idea of reproducing in it, by means of doubles, the most important scenes of the movie Casablanca.
The central character, Snake, is a healer who uses genetically modified serpents to cure sickness—one snake is an alien "dreamsnake", whose venom gives dying people pleasant dreams. The novel follows Snake as she seeks to replace her dreamsnake after its death. The book is considered an example of second-wave feminism in science
Casablanca is a 1942 American romantic drama film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, and Paul Henreid.Filmed and set during World War II, it focuses on an American expatriate (Bogart) who must choose between his love for a woman (Bergman) and helping her husband (Henreid), a Czechoslovak resistance leader, escape from the Vichy-controlled city of ...
In February 1991, Everybody Comes to Rick's was produced by David Kelsey at the Churchill Theatre in Bromley, Kent - advertised as both Rick's Bar in Casablanca and Everybody Comes to Rick's Bar in Casablanca. In April it transferred to the West End, running at the Whitehall Theatre for six weeks under the simplified title Rick's Bar Casablanca.
As Time Goes By is a novel written by American author Michael Walsh, intended as a prequel/sequel to the film Casablanca. [1] It was published in 1998. The book alternates between the early life of Rick Blaine (played by Humphrey Bogart in the film) in America and the period immediately after the plane leaves Casablanca at the end of the 1942 film.
[2] [3] [4] It was written by Peter Yeldham from a story by Harry Alan Towers (as Peter Welbeck) and produced by Towers. In the film, a courier transports the bribe money intended to pay for a fixed vote in the United Nations. The courier's identity is unknown, but they are thought to be one of the six persons traveling from Casablanca to ...
The antagonists of the story are ghostly twins who were killed by the titular rattlesnakes. In 1980, advertising executive Vic Trenton's four-year-old son Tad died from dehydration after he and his mother Donna were trapped in a broken-down car in Castle Rock, Maine, by Cujo, a rabid St. Bernard dog.
"Snake-Eyes" by Tom Maddox "Rock On" by Pat Cadigan "Tales of Houdini" by Rudy Rucker "400 Boys" by Marc Laidlaw "Solstice" by James Patrick Kelly "Petra" by Greg Bear "Till Human Voices Wake Us" by Lewis Shiner "Freezone" by John Shirley "Stone Lives" by Paul Di Filippo "Red Star, Winter Orbit" by Bruce Sterling and William Gibson