These were some of the screen performances that left us laughing, weeping, gasping, and in several cases, breaking into ...
Wicked: For Good” has found itself at the center of a national conversation about weight loss, eating disorders and the endless pursuit of thinness.
A slew of high-profile TV and film projects in the erotic thriller genre are in the works as part of a trend that is ...
When you’re next at the movies, if there’s a particularly gnarly scene where a character gets hurt, take a quick glance at ...
There’s a scientific explanation for why we flinch when watching painful events, even though we know it’s not real, ...
The Griffin Museum of Science and Industry and other science centers are integrating projectors, touch screens and other ...
A CNN journalist take his appreciation of nature’s restorative benefits a step further and tries out grounding, or walking ...
Discover how scientists have finally found an answer for why we flinch when watching someone get hurt in a movie.
If watching Robert De Niro ordering hammer-based retribution on a cheat's hand in Casino instinctively made you wince, you are not alone.
Watching someone experience pain on screen activates your own brain’s touch-processing system in a highly organized, body-specific way.
Whether it's the arm cutting incident in 127 hours or the fingernail scene in Black Swan, there are plenty of movie moments ...