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Episode 20 of the science fiction anime Ergo Proxy, titled "Sacred Eye of the Void/Goodbye, Vincent", is based on Eye in the Sky.In this episode the protagonist awakens to find himself stuck inside someone's subconscious, presumably one of the main characters, and he must wade through realities within realities while figuring out how to escape—and alongside confirm that he is more than just ...
Eye in the Sky received positive reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 95%, based on 175 critics, with a weighted average score of 7.5/10. The site's consensus reads, "As taut as it is timely, Eye in the Sky offers a powerfully acted – and unusually cerebral – spin on the modern wartime political thriller."
That Eye, the Sky is a 1986 novel by Australian author Tim Winton. It follows the young protagonist Morton 'Ort' Flack, as he struggles to cope with life in a small country town after his father is paralysed in a serious car accident. After his father's accident, Ort is forced to step up and become the 'Man' of an increasingly complicated ...
Up until American readers had struggled to understand his African settings and he was also tainted by being a nominal South African and thus associated with apartheid. However despite the success of Eagle in the Sky he was not to achieve similar sales with any of his subsequent novels until Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1991. [2]
Eye in the Sky, an album by The Alan Parsons Project "Eye in the Sky" (song) on this album; Eye in the sky (camera), a closed-circuit camera in casino jargon; Eye in the Sky, a 1957 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick "Eye in the Sky", a song by Reks from his album The Greatest X
Eye in the Sky was the last platinum record in the United States from the band. [7] Eye in the Sky contains the title track, the Alan Parsons Project's biggest hit, [8] with lead vocals by Eric Woolfson. The album itself was a major success, reaching the top 10 (and sometimes the number one slot) in numerous countries. [9]
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The Eye (Russian: Соглядатай, Sogliadatai, literally 'voyeur' or 'peeper'), written in 1930, is Vladimir Nabokov's fourth novel. It was translated into English by the author's son Dmitri Nabokov in 1965. At around 80 pages, The Eye is Nabokov's shortest novel. Nabokov himself referred to it as a 'little novel' and it is a work that ...