Actor Rosamund Pike has called 2005's video game movie Doom that she appeared in alongside Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson one of the worst films ever made and a project that could have ended her career.
A lot of video game movies haven't been good, but to Pike, 'Doom' was bad enough to jeopardize her entire acting future. Reading time 2 minutes Do you remember the Doom movie from 2005, based on id ...
The airport, I should add, is called Doomsport. I didn’t make that up. The name greets you immediately on a large steel sign as the plane taxis toward the terminal, which is decorated almost entirely ...
Rosamund Pike appeared on a recent episode of the “How to Fail with Elizabeth Day” podcast and opened up about the “catastrophe” of staring in 2005’s “Doom” video game adaptation. The sci-fi action ...
TL;DR: NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang highlighted id Software's 1993 Doom as the most influential game for transforming PCs into gaming devices and shaping the first-person shooter genre. He also praised ...
The "fragile peace" between two of the Zone's biggest factions may finally be over.
Marc Santos is a Guides Staff Writer from the Philippines with a BA in Communication Arts and over six years of experience in writing gaming news and guides. He plays just about everything, from ...
The 'Gone Girl’ star survived the 2005 video game adaptation, as did co-star Dwayne Johnson. But it got weird on set. By Etan Vlessing Canada Bureau Chief “So suddenly I’m in this film with the Rock, ...
Scientists have trained a computer made from living human neurons to play the classic video game Doom, marking a strange but important step forward in biological computing. A clump of roughly 200,000 ...
The kingdom has fallen to the invasion of a malevolent deity, and a blessed knight awakens in the castle’s corrupted bowels ...
What just happened? Following news that its human brain cell-powered computer can run Doom, Australian biotech startup Cortical Labs has announced it is working on two small data centers running on ...