CLEVELAND — A rare -- and smelly -- moment is happening at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo as a corpse flower is blooming for the first time in years. The corpse flower, which the U.S. Botanical Garden ...
A rare corpse flower, a plant that produces a scent that has been likened to the smell of rotting flesh, is in bloom at Temple University's Ambler campus. Corpse flowers are a rainforest species that ...
Cole Geissler, a tropical horticulturist at the UConn Botanical Conservatory on Thursday. He stands next to an over 4-foot tall corpse flower that is about to bud. Photo by Kevin Guinan/Staff Writer ...
UPDATE: See the blooming flower in the photo gallery below, photographed April 14, 2026. In 2023, when Tom Clark walked into the botanic garden at Mount Holyoke College, he could smell titan arum, ...
For fans of Tim Burton’s iconic gothic romance, the Corpse Bride Skullector is a must‑have addition to any collection. Inspired by the beloved stop‑motion film Corpse Bride, this limited‑style ...
Discover What’s Streaming On: Jessie Buckley just won an Oscar for Hamnet, and now you can watch her in a very different type of role in The Bride!—a new gothic romance loosely based on the 1935 film ...
Titular punctuation is the bane of a movie critic’s existence. Is it 28 Days Later or 28 Days Later … ? Do we really have to put quotation marks around “Wuthering Heights,” no matter how often Emerald ...
Instead, her creation is an amalgam of disparate concepts, brought together in defiance of storytelling logic (and the opinions of test-screen audiences). Jessie Buckley stars as Ida, a gangster’s ...
Bursting at your neck staples to see Maggie Gyllenhaal’s reimagining of The Bride of Frankenstein starring Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale as the undead lovers? The new movie The Bride! is already ...
Because you can never have too many Frankenstein movies, director Maggie Gyllenhaal is throwing her hat into the ring with The Bride!, a new gothic romance loosely based on the 1935 film Bride of ...
Here comes "The Bride!", Maggie Gyllenhaal's extremely messy, extremely inventive film that dares you to try to neatly fit it into one genre. It's a sort-of-musical, meta-sequel-reboot, comedy, love ...
Jessie Buckley's anguished scream of a performance can't sustain an ambitious feminist opera that feels unintentionally, conspicuously tailor-made to align with Warner Bros.' neighboring DC properties ...