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Roger Ebert gave the film two stars out of four and wrote, "Two different kinds of movies have been coming out of the Walt Disney organization in the last few years: Inventive, entertaining fantasies like Escape to Witch Mountain and The Island at the Top of the World, and dreary retreads of tired old Disney formulas. 'Gus,' alas, is in the ...
Barney is given a chance to redeem himself as the game again comes down to a last-second field goal. The holder fumbles the snap, and Barney grabs it and scores the game-winning touchdown. At the end-of-season press conference, Barney remembers his roots as a garbageman and points out that garbagemen are deserving of respect, too, as they work ...
Clover is the production name given to the giant monster in the 2008 film Cloverfield. [1] The creature was originally conceived by producer J. J. Abrams and was designed by artist Neville Page . In the film, the monster's name is never mentioned; the name "Cloverfield" is only given to the US Department of Defense case file of the incidents ...
It may have felt unlikely at the time, but Necessary Roughness proved prescient. In 1997, Willamette University’s Liz Heaston became the first woman to kick in a collegiate game in the NAIA. In ...
Baltimore Ravens kicker Justin Tucker is the all-time career record holder for field goal percentage, but he has struggled mightily converting on his kicks in 2024.. Tucker entered Week 11's ...
Clover is a 1997 American made-for-television drama film that first aired on USA Network starring Elizabeth McGovern, Ernie Hudson, Zelda Harris and Beatrice Winde based on Dori Sanders' bestselling 1990 novel Clover.
In one of the most astonishing sequences in “EO,” a rapturous hymn to the natural world from the 84-year-old Polish director Jerzy Skolimowski, a wandering donkey gets lost in a forest primeval.
Cloverfield is an American science fiction anthology film series [1] and media franchise created and produced by J. J. Abrams consisting of three films, viral marketing websites linking the films together, and a tie-in manga to the first film titled Cloverfield/Kishin (2008), all set in a shared fictional universe referred to as the "Cloververse".