Leigh Whannell's Wolf Man features a different origin for the werewolf condition at the center of the movie, a disease known ...
“The death of an infant from SIDS or SUID [Sudden Unexpected Infant Death] is unbelievably horrific. And we as a public ...
Chief among his passions is soccer. And, like his whole family, he’s a devoted superfan of the English Premier League club, ...
Since this manuscript was submitted, a comprehensive study of precordial, thoracic and esophageal leads in the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome has been reported by Rosenbaum et al. 6 They suggest ...
But in North America, especially in Yellowstone National Park where a large amount of wolf research is conducted, black wolves are relatively common, making up as much as half of wolf populations.
When a close friend succumbed to motor neuron disease, Australian filmmaker Leigh Whannell channelled his grief into his latest movie.
Banff elk’s population has declined about 54 per cent in the last six years, with a healthy wolf pack on the hunt and a ...
The new film “Wolfman” is another of those contemporary movies that manages to tell a story without meaning anything.
It was an allegory for disease.” Like “The Fly,” “Wolf Man” finds its power in a depiction of a monster who is also the victim, which gives it the kind of emotional charge Whannell is al ...
Patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome have an “accessory pathway” or a “bypass tract” that connects the electrical system of the atria directly to the ventricles, thereby allowing ...