Warning: This article contains spoilers for The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim. Gandalf exists in the universe of ...
Narratively, structurally, and creatively, there’s no reason “Somebody Somewhere” has to end. So long as Sam is palling around with Joel (Jeff Hiller), helping her entrepreneurial sister ...
The end has finally come: Rocksteady has announced that Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League's fourth season will be its last. The good news for those who want to keep playing is that online ...
We may say we're fine, but it's not true. The end of the Eras Tour is upon us. "Vancouver I love you so very much,” Swift said introducing her final tune. “This has been the greatest last ...
Well, the beloved Wizard Gandalf doesn’t exactly show up in The War of the Rohirrim but don’t count him out just yet. The movie helmed by anime maestro Kenji Kamiyama, dives deep into Tolkien ...
It feels like every time I read the news, someone has Google in their crosshairs. The US Department of Justice is considering breaking up the company, potentially splitting its search engine ...
Saruman returns in Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim, but don’t expect to see Gandalf – he’s name-dropped towards the end of the movie, and there’s a good reason why he doesn’t appear.
A work of profound optimism, an ambitious mishegas staring into the abyss, an experimental theater piece trapped on film, the most bizarre musical of the year in an annum filled with strong ...
Boy, this feels like Gandalf.’ It sure does feel like Gandalf, and that became especially apparent toward the end of Season 2 too. When he was faced with the idea of helping his friends or ...
Matthew Stafford is one of the best quarterbacks in the league. However, the Los Angeles Rams feel they are more than prepared at the quarterback position behind Stafford on the depth chart.
The War of the Rohirrim is a major experiment with Professor Tolkien's legenderium, as it brings to life elements of Middle-Earth's history that were rarely ...
They’re disturbing films, chilling the viewer to the bone. So, too, is “The End,” which when I first heard about it sounded like a particularly unlikely Oppenheimer project. The film ...