
CultBox at the Movies: Autumn-Winter 2013 blockbuster preview
Superhero season may be over, but just because summer’s finished doesn’t mean that Hollywood hasn’t still got some epic movies left for 2013.
Superhero season may be over, but just because summer’s finished doesn’t mean that Hollywood hasn’t still got some epic movies left for 2013.
It’s been 20 years since genre giant The X Files first appeared on our screens. Over the course of nine seasons and 202 episodes the show racked up an impressive number of guest appearances by established actors, as well as a very high hit rate of then-unknowns who would go on to much greater things.
Two crime dramas came to an end last Sunday with Vera continuing to draw in more viewers than What Remains.
Sky has released the first pictures from its new family drama Moonfleet, written by Ashley Pharoah (Life On Mars, Ashes to Ashes).
Sky has announced that the third series of Mount Pleasant will begin next month.
To celebrate the release of Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters on August 7 in 3D, we’ve got sets of official Sea of Monsters merchandise (a t-shirt, beanie hat, headphones, notebook, pen, keyring and the Percy Jackson book) to give away to three of our Twitter followers!
When it comes to theme songs, nobody does it better than James Bond… 5. ‘A View to a Kill’ (1985) WRITTEN BY JOHN BARRY AND DURAN DURAN • PERFORMED BY DURAN DURAN The only Bond theme to top the American Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, ‘A View to a Kill’ is so ridiculously superior … >
You might expect a Mad Men soundtrack to be a collection of martini-smooth but mundane notes – something you can put on and forget about when you run out of Harry Belafonte vinyls but still require a musical backdrop to smoke and romance a dame to in your Manhattan bachelor pad. But Mad Men: On the Rocks turns out to be anything but ’60s make-out noise.
Do you remember Varnax? Or the Doctor’s best friend Gonjii? How about the battle with Scratchman or the time he stopped Mandrake’s audacious plan to gain a new regeneration cycle? What about the genocidal androids of Krikkit or the time that Amelia Earhart travelled in the TARDIS?
If Daniel Radcliffe’s face had not been emblazoned throughout the playhouse, I wouldn’t have recognized him as the eponymous handicap in The Cripple of Inishmaan; his performance was a clear step from out from under the overhanging shadow of Harry Potter.