Real clowns lose gigs due to movie adaptation of Stephen King’s ‘It’
Working clowns are not too happy with the scary evil clown Pennywise in Stephen King’s “It” movie.
Working clowns are not too happy with the scary evil clown Pennywise in Stephen King’s “It” movie.
“The Grownup” Gillian Flynn There’s no denying how gifted Gillian Flynn is, especially when you read “The Grownup.” This short story manages to cram so much tension and suspense in
It took a shaved head and Netflix’s “Stranger Things” to turn Millie Bobby Brown into a household name and Hollywood’s latest darling. But the 12-year-old actress wasn’t just good at portraying her character, Eleven. She’s good. Period.
IF THERE’S anything better —and more terrifying—than a little Stephen King, it’s a lot of Stephen King. The master horror writer has scared generations of readers through his novels through
UNUSUALLY for one of the most successful writers in the modern age, Stephen King is flipping the script. Instead of sticking to what he’s done in the past, King has
PALO, Leyte—When American best-selling author Mitch Albom visited the Philippines in February 2014 on the invitation of National Book Store, he made sure this sojourn included a
It takes a master of horror like Stephen King to take an ordinary, innocuous sentence like “something happened” and turn it into an intricate, effective device of enduring fear. After reading “Revival: A Novel” (Scribner, New York, 2014, 403 pages), you’ll never think the same way about that sentence.
Stephen King knows a thing or two about terrifying automobiles. Most frightening is the possessed titular Plymouth Fury in 1983’s “Christine,” later memorably adapted for the scary screen by John Carpenter. In 2002, King’s novel “From a Buick 8” featured a classic car that served as a doorway to another dimension.
I plucked it from the shelf and went straight to the cashier. No book has provoked in me such an instant, compulsive proprietary interest. Its title alone, revealed to the browser by its spine, did it, igniting a powerful sense of self-validation: “Everything is Eventual.”
The latest in global fashion, beauty, and culture through a contemporary Filipino perspective.
COPYRIGHT © LIFESTYLE INQUIRER 2022