Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_S - Speke John Hanning African Explorer

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Speke John Hanning African Explorer:     more detail
  1. Travels and adventures in Africa: A thriling narrative of the perils and hardships experienced by Captains Speke and Grant, the celebrated African explorers ... honey, in short a real eldorado of the earth by John Hanning Speke, 1864
  2. The Sad Story of Burton, Speke, and the Nile; or, Was John Hanning Speke a Cad: Looking at the Evidence by W. B. Carnochan, 2006-02-01
  3. Burton and Speke: A Novel about the Great African Explorers by William Harrison, 1982-09
  4. Gunbearer Part One by Jan Merlin, 2010-06-17

21. Africa In Literature - The Congo Cookbook (African Recipes) Www.congocookbook.co
john hanning speke. 19th century explorer who finally discovered the source of theNile. a small tribe in Uganda The Mountain People The Lonely african is also
http://www.congocookbook.com/c0062.html
The Congo Cookbook Sitemap About Africa / Africa in Literature
Search Amazon.com Chicken Fish Meat ...
About Africa

Africa in Literature
Africa in the Movies

Africa on the Web

African Cookbook Review

African Geography Quiz # 1
...
About African Cooking
Africa in Literature
recommended reading about Africa
"There are as many Africas as there are books about Africa
and as many books about it as you could read in a leisurely lifetime."

Beryl Markham, West with the Night This page contains a list of recommended fiction and non-fiction about Africa. The Congo Cookbook contains many excerpts pertaining to African cooking and food from a variety of published sources; The Excerpts page lists featured excerpts by author, along with a brief description of the excerpt and a link to the page containing it. The African Cookbook Review contains recommended African cookbooks.
Chinua Achebe
One of Nigeria's best known novelists. Arrow of God Things Fall Apart , and No Longer at Ease tell of African traditions clashing with European colonialism. A Man of the People is a story of politics and corruption.

22. Africa In The Movies - The Congo Cookbook (African Recipes) Www.congocookbook.co
filmed in Congo; Adventurer, lost explorer, diamond mine about apartheidera SouthAfrican school teacher of Richard Burton and john hanning speke and their
http://www.congocookbook.com/c0187.html
The Congo Cookbook Sitemap About Africa / Africa in the Movies
Search Amazon.com Chicken Fish Meat ...
Africa in Literature

Africa in the Movies
Africa on the Web

African Cookbook Review

African Geography Quiz # 1

African Geography Quiz # 2
...
About African Cooking
Africa in the Movies
movies about Africa, movies set in Africa, movies filmed in Africa, quiz
In the mood for a cinematic African safari? Here are some movies and videos about Africa, set in Africa, filmed in Africa, or somehow related to Africa. Some you might want to see, and a few you might want to avoid. Some are dramas, some comedies, some are realistic, others present a distorted or romanticized view of Africa. Northern Africa is the setting of many of the older movies; Apartheid South Africa is the setting for many of the newer movies. Take the Africa and the Academy Awards quiz , or see The Congo Cookbook movies-about-Africa recommendations , below. Please note the African-made movies (i.e., movies made by African directors).
- movies that were filmed at least partially in Africa are notated with the name(s) of the African country (countries) in which they were filmed
Africa and the Academy Awards Quiz Here is a list of movies about Africa (or at least set in Africa or filmed in Africa) that have either won an Academy Award or been nominated for an Academy Award. Each movie is identified by a clue. Read the clue, make your guess, then click to see the answer.

23. Reader Reviews
the man is Burton the explorerauthor misadventure in the forbidden East african cityof lover, and later bitter rival, john hanning speke, forcibly circumcised
http://vvv.com/~rowena/srfbr2.html
Reader Reviews Death Rides a Camel
Review by Ron Dingman, June 21, 1999 If any one man can be said to embody within himself all of the variegated, frequently turbulent impulses and philosophical strains that characterized Victorian England, Captain Sir Richard Francis Burton is that man. Poet and ruffian, master linguist and master fencer, scholar and coarse prankster, military officer and rebel, spy for "John Company" (the British East India Company) and proto-anthropologist, explorer and consul, religious skeptic and earnest student of religions, vehement racist and bitter critic of his countrymen's disdain of foreign cultures, irrepressible bawd and sexual conservative, Burton is arguably the most complex, the most thoroughly "Victorian" figure next to Count Dracula. Indeed, in some respects, Dracula is a more believable character than Burton. Allen Edwardes' biography of Burton, Death Rides a Camel , is a good introduction to the complex series of dichotomies that comprise Burton's personality and legacy. Edwardes, who in his preface purports to show "the tragicomic life of Sir Richard Francis Burton in the nude without fig leaf, and without codpiece as well," is a fitting biographer for Burton, given their similarity of interests. Edwardes is also the author of The Jewel in the Lotus: A Historical Survey of the Sexual Culture of the East The Cradle of Erotica: A Study of Afro-Asian Sexual Expression and an Analysis of Erotic Freedom in Sexual Relationships (with Robert E.L. Masters, 1962)

24. Biographies - Soares To Srisunthorn
He was the first african and first black Swedish physician, educator, author, explorer,botanist French speke, john hanning (1827-1864) English explorer - St
http://www.philately.com/philately/biososr.htm
SOARES, Enrique (16th Cent.) Portuguese priest - Brazil 710; 1081 Mozambique 481 SOARES, Jose Carlos de Macedo (1883- ) Brazilian lawyer, author, historian, educator, diplomat - Ecuador 641; C421 SOBERS, Garfield (1936- ) Barbadoan cricket player - Barbados 452 SOBHUZA II of Swaziland (1899-1982) King - Swaziland 126-33; 139-42; 142a; 173-443; 461-4; 464a; 471; 471a; 472; 472a; 473; 473a; 474; 474a; 475; 475a; 481-93; 496; 506-18 SOBIESKI, Jacob ( - ) Polish prince, son of JOHN III SOBIESKI - Poland 278; 286 SOBINOV, Leonid V. (1872-1934) Russian actor - Russia 3966 SOBOLEVSKY, Aleksandr (1905- ) Russian physician, polar explorer - Russia 775 SOBRAL, Jose Maria (1880-1961) Argentine geologist, naval officer, polar explorer - Argentina 1070 SOCHOR, Antonin (1914-1950) Czech general - Czechoslovakia 1868 SOCORRO RODRIGUEZ, Manuel (1758-1818) Cuban poet, author, journalist - Colombia C147 SOCRATES, ( - ) Sportsman, soccer player - Central Africa 812 SOCRATES (469-399 BC) Greek philosopher, sculptor - Ajman (M)124 Dominica 244 SODDY, Frederick (1877-1956) English chemist, educator, author, Nobel prize - Sweden 1389

25. HarperCollins Publishers Australia - Authors
centres on whether an explorer called john hanning speke committed suicide the stepsof Sir Richard F. Burton and john speke into the african interior and
http://www.harpercollins.com.au/authors/author_interview.cfm?ISBN=&Author=ASHER_

26. Works About Sir Richard Burton
C. and JH Plumb West african explorers Oxford Schonfield, Hugh J. Richard Burton,explorer London, 1936. speke, john hanning Journal of the Discovery of the
http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~garsonkw/brodie.html
Works about Sir Richard Burton
This additional bibliography is taken from Fawn Brodie's The Devil Drives: The Life of Sir Richard Burton and cites the literature up to the writing of her excellent book.
(Listed Chronologically)
Amberley Papers
edited by Bertrand Russell, 2 vols.
New York, 1937. Arberry, A.J.
Oriental Essays, portraits of seven scholars
London, 1960. Arberry, A.J.
Sufism, an account of the mystics of Islam
London, 1950. Archer, W.G.
"Reflections on the 'Kama Sutra,'"
The Listener , April 18, 1963, pp.665-7. Archer, W.G., Ed.
The Kama Sutra of Vatsayana translated by Sir Richard Burton and F.F. Arbuthnot London, 1963. Ashbee, Henry S. (Pisanus Fraxi)
Catena Libraorum Tacendorum privately printed London, 1885. Ashbee, Henry S. (Pisanus Fraxi) Index Librorum Prohibitorum privately printed London, 1877. Bacon, Leonard, trans. The Lusiads of Luiz de Camoes translated with introduction and notes by Leonard Bacon New York, 1950.

27. Sir Richard Francis Burton - World's Greatest Classic Books
of others; however his writings on Eastern and african cultures could The followingyear Burton and fellow explorer john hanning speke gained entry to another
http://www.fortunecity.com/tinpan/quickstep/1103/burton_richard.htm
web hosting domain names email addresses related sites World's Greatest Classic Books Feature: Sir Richard Francis Burton Featured works: All Books Written By
Sir Richard Francis Burton
BOOK LINKS
abebooks.co.uk.

All-Ink.com

AlphaCraze.com

Amazon.ca
...
eCampus.com
Amazon.com Search: Books Popular Music Classical Music Video Enter keywords...
MUSIC LINKS
OldGlory.com

PlayCentric

PosterNow
PushPosters ... Tower Records SEARCH THE WEB looksmart.co.uk People-Finder.com Search. Get Paid. Be Smart. Born: March 19, 1821 in Torquay, Devonshire, England Died: October 20, 1890 in Trieste, Austria-Hungary His penchant for exploring, his talent with language and his curiosity for foreign customs, particularly sexual ones, combined to make Sir Richard Francis Burton a fascinating man and writer, but one who often offended the Victorian sensibilities of his contemporaries. Burton, although born in England, was raised in numerous European towns and received an irregular education. He had a reputation as one of the best swordsmen in Europe, and was known for his experience with alcohol and prostitutes. By the time he entered the University of Oxford, he could already speak Italian, Greek and Latin, and continued on to learn Arabic on his own initiative. Although popular with his peers, Burton disliked England and was expelled from Oxford for a breach of conduct in 1842. At this point he joined the eighteenth regiment of the Bombay Native Infantry, where his proficiency with languages facilitated his rise through the ranks, and his acquisition of more than twelve additional languages. Over the years he became fluent in twenty-five languages and fifteen dialects. He worked in Sind, India for seven years, learning many native customs and eventually adopting several Islamic principles. Burton documented his experiences when he returned to England in 1846 after contracting cholera, but the books sold poorly, possibly due to their encyclopedic style. Burton introduced many issues foreign to Victorian England and emphasized that Western culture could learn the practices of others; however his writings on Eastern and African cultures could at times be quite disparaging.

28. BBC NEWS | World | Africa | Country Profiles | Timeline: Uganda
1862 British explorer john hanning speke becomes the first European to visit Buganda. Ugandagiven a legislative council, but its first african member not
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/world/africa/country_profiles/1069181.stm
BBC NEWS / COUNTRY PROFILES
Graphics version
Change to World Edition BBC Sport Home News Front Page ... Have Your Say World Contents: Africa Americas Asia-Pacific Europe ... South Asia Tuesday, 4 March, 2003, 17:58 GMT
Timeline: Uganda
A chronology of key events: - Bito dynasties of Buganda, Bunyoro and Ankole founded by Nilotic-speaking immigrants from present-day southeastern Sudan. - Buganda begins to expand at the expense of Bunyoro. - Buganda controls territory bordering Lake Victoria from the Victoria Nile to the Kagera river. - Muslim traders from the Indian Ocean coast exchange firearms, cloth and beads for the ivory and slaves of Buganda. British influence - British explorer John Hanning Speke becomes the first European to visit Buganda. - Bugandan King Mutesa I allows Christian missionaries to enter his realm. - Members of the British Missionary Society arrive in Buganda. - Members of the French Roman Catholic White Fathers arrive. - Britain and Germany sign treaty giving Britain rights to what was to become Uganda. - British East India Company agent Frederick Lugard extends the company's control to southern Uganda and helps the Protestant missionaries defeat their Catholic counterparts, who had been competing with them, in Buganda.

29. Rwanda Info
not the first country on the african continent having john hanning speke was alreadywelcomed to the court of was in 1892 that the Austrian explorer Dr. Oscar
http://www.footventure.co.uk/rwandainfo.html
Footprint
Adventures Y ears of W ildlife, B irding, T O verland Safaris
[Argentina]
[Bhutan] [Bolivia] [Botswana] ... [Online Hotel Reservation]
Rwanda Land of thousand hills
OVERVIEW
Rwanda is a small landlocked country, it borders on Uganda in the north, on Tanzania in the east, on Burundi in the south and on Congo in the west. Kigali is the capital of Rwanda. The country is dominated by a central plateau made up of steep mountains and deep valleys and has therefore received his subtitle "Land of thousand hills". The average elevation of the plateau is about 1.700 m. On the western side of the plateau you will find Rwanda's principal geographic feature; the famous Virunga chain of volcanoes which extends towards Congo and the Ugandan border. It's in the Virunga that one can find Rwanda's most important tourist attraction: the mountain gorillas!
Rwanda has without doubt more to offer than the mountain gorillas. Here are the most important topics: Nyungwe National Park, is a Albertine rift montane rainforest and has recently received the status of National Park. The rainforest has a unique habitat and it's only there that we have seen troops of more than 300 colobus monkeys moving around in trees! It has 25 % of the African primates. Nyungwe is simply a primate nirvana!
Rwanda has a rich history and culture. It was long time regarded as a mysterious kingdom with a legendary military force which was carefully bypassed by Arab traders and the great Nile Explorers. Rwanda together with Burundi and Tanzania was part of the German East African colony. After the First World War, it became a Belgian protectorate. It's at the National Museum of Butare, on your way to Nyungwe NP that you can find fascinating displays on the history and culture of one of the great pre-colonial kingdoms of East-Africa.

30. The Jungle Theater-"On The Verge" In Depth-History Glimpses
Burton is in Africa in the company of explorer john hanning speke, 28 . his fatherto the paper¹s editorship 2 years ago, mounts an african expedition to
http://www.jungletheater.com/seasons/2000/id_verge_history.html
-"ON THE VERGE" STUDY GUIDE-
GLIMPSING THE HISTORY
Of Exploration And Travel To See Where Mary, Fanny, And Alex Emerge.

Glimpsing The History Of Exploration And Travel To See Where Mary, Fanny, And Alex Emerge.
Prehistory, 75,000 B.C.
Neanderthal man cares for his sick and aged but engages in cannibalism on occasion.
42,000 B.C.
The continent that will be called Australia is populated by the earth¹s first seafaring people. Colonists arrive from the Asian mainland.
38,000 B.C.
His control of fire, his development of new, lightweight bone and horn tools, weapons, and fishhooks, and his superior intelligence permit man to obtain food more easily and to preserve it longer. Hunters provide early tribes with meat from bison and tigers, while other tribespeople fish and collect honey, fruits, and nuts (as shown by cave paintings near Aurignac in southern France).
33,000 B.C. Homo sapiens becomes the dominant species on earth, with no serious rivals to his supremacy. 27,000 B.C. Homo sapiens reaches the islands that will be called Japan and may have arrived in the islands as much as 5,000 years earlier over ice sheets or land bridges. 28,500 B.C.

31. Sukuma Culture And Tanzania
with Usukuma came in 1857 when john hanning speke traveled from followed in the 1870sby the explorer Sir Henry the way for the German East african Company to
http://www.photo.net/sukuma/intro.html
Sign in Search Community Gallery ...
Sukuma Culture and Tanzania
by Mark H.C. Bessire T he Sukuma culture is the largest in Tanzania. In many ways, the Sukuma are experiencing a renewed interest in traditional culture. Some think that the strength of this movement is found in the reconciliation of the modern and traditional. Cultural traditions appear to be spreading through contemporary means and not as a contest between the old and the new. Sukuma traditional arts and culture are thriving as much as the economic growth in the region. T anzania has accelerated its movement toward democracy, increased its communication networks, and opened its economy to the world. This has influenced the traditional culture of the Sukuma. While many Sukuma remain in small villages, others move to cities and assimilate to the urban society which is a combination of many different cultures and international influences. Possibly to renew awareness in Sukuma culture, identity and history, some people provide cultural leadership through a mix of traditional and modern culture. This movement reflects an increased interest in utamuduni or traditional culture, which lies in the dynamic social and political changes that are currently spreading through Usukuma. Today, a revival of Sukuma culture is taking place among traditional doctors, chiefs, artists, and dancers. A s the Tanzanian government has shifted from state controlled socialism to capitalism, it has created a more mobile work force and a diversification of employment opportunities. Many Sukuma are still farmers, merchants, builders and traditional doctors; but, in today's economy, there are also working in the communications, health, shipping, transportation, mining and banking sectors. Mwanza, the city center of Usukuma, is one of the largest and fastest growing urban areas in Tanzania. While most of Usukuma is rural and many live in the countryside, people throughout the country and central Africa are flocking to Mwanza to find work in one of the many emerging economic industries.

32. Attractions
The first african president of the Lutheran world federation Bishop Josia Kibirawas also from Bukoba john hanning speke a European explorer arrived in
http://www.kiroyeratours.com/attractions.htm
There are two groups of people in this world, those who have seen Bukoba Kiroyera and those who are longing to experience the magic of Lake Victoria at the Equator. Welcome to
our
web site.
Enjoy your stay!
Home
Attractions
Itinerary

Evening Activities

Our Cuisine

Price List
...
Contact Us
**NEW**
We now organize tours and holidays to Zanzibar, any of the National parks in Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda. Escape to the African Safari of your dreams. Tour Tips Links Terms About Us ... Tell A Friend Attractions
The magic of Bukoba begins with its geography, its people and their wide variety of cultures intertwined here and there with foreign influences. Top of Page Lake Victoria to the east dominates Bukoba as do the two major rivers of Kagera and Ngono which form swamps further inland from the lake. There are undulating hills and grass savanna often broken by villages which are made of compact banana plantations. This land lay out covers much of the interior ultimately blending into the Karagwe mountains to the north west towards the border with Rwanda. The lake and its abundant rainfall attract a rich variety of fauna and flora and a dense human population. This area has four Game reserves and one National Park namely Rumanyika and Ibanda Game reserves in the north, Biharamulo and Burigi Game reserves to the south and Rubondo Island National Park on the lake quite close to Biharamulo game reserve on the east.

33. Mail Africa International - Uganda
In 1862 British explorer john hanning speke was welcomed to speke continued his journeyand found the responded by introducing greater african participation in
http://mailafrica.net/travel/country.php?country=Uganda

34. The University Of Chicago Magazine: February 2000, College Report
TUESDAY african Cinema Everyone’s Child, Tsitsi Dangarembga, 1996. Africa, focusingon the man and his relationship with fellow explorer john hanning speke.
http://magazine.uchicago.edu/0002/campus-news/0002_report-studies.html
CAMPUS NEWS
Chicago Journal
College Report

Cultural Studies
When not showing recent blockbusters on Friday and Saturday nights, Doc Films caters to more esoteric film buffs, offering a different category of film for each weekday: SUNDAY: The Last War
The Dawn Patrol, Edmund Goulding, 1938. The film depicts young men in a WWI fighter squadron constantly coping with death and killing. The British airmen fly missions on command as is their duty, but they also share a professionalism with the German pilots they battle daily. MONDAY: Surrealist Visions
Landscape Suicide , James Benning, 1986. Benning explores locations that have been scarred by murders, intercutting poetic and quiet landscape shots with haunting portrayals of the murderers based on court transcripts. TUESDAY: African Cinema
Everyone’s Child , Tsitsi Dangarembga, 1996. Dangarembga follows the lives of four children orphaned when their parents die of AIDS-related complications. This 35-mm film shows how a village eventually recognizes its responsibility for the orphans when one of them dies accidentally.

35. Ghost Writer Who Invented Darkest Africa - Smh.com.au - World
London A celebrated book of african exploration was redrafted and drastically changedthe original texts of the explorer john hanning speke's Journal of the
http://old.smh.com.au/news/0108/14/world/world7.html
[an error occurred while processing this directive] Tuesday, August 14, 2001 Home World Article news business technology sport ...
place an ad

WORLD
Ghost writer who invented darkest Africa
London: A celebrated book of African exploration was redrafted and slanted politically by a ghost writer to promote a view of a "dark continent" in need of colonisation, a study of the manuscripts has disclosed. The rewriting drastically changed the original texts of the explorer John Hanning Speke's Journal of the Discovery of the Source of the Nile. Black people were described as urgently needing Christianity and European-style government. The 1863 bestseller helped inspire the colonial "scramble for Africa" of the next 40 years. Dr David Finkelstein, of Queen Margaret University College, Edinburgh, said yesterday that the book was "extremely influential in shaping Victorian attitudes to Africa and its people, as well as in providing political rationales for colonial expansion into the continent". The Edinburgh publisher John Blackwood commissioned the book but found the early chapters "written in such an abominable, childish, unintelligible way" that he brought in the ghost writer, historian John Hill Burton. [an error occurred while processing this directive] He extensively revised Speke's introduction, which had appealed to readers "to see and understand the negroes of Africa in their natural, primitive or native state".

36. The Natural Way
john hanning speke wrote the book The Discovery of the Source of the Nile about Forexample the great african explorer Mungo Park found that africans in the
http://www.tekline.co.uk/natpeace.htm
7. Naturist Articles - The Peaceful Peoples
by Tom Donahue. (USA). (Artist's Impression of the Meeting between the Old World and the New)
(Giancarlo Costa - Sparco di Columbo a San Salvador) Naturist Articles 1. 205 Reasons to support Naturism
The definitive article that highlights 205 reasons why Naturism is a positive way of life, by K. Bacher. 2 . Unravelling the myths of Sun-Bathing
An article by Fred Harding, with the supportive testimonies of Dr. Bernarr Zovluck and Dr Herbert Shelton. (USA). 3. Nudity in Ancient and Modern Cultures
An article by Aileen Goodson. supplements my own researches with respect to "Our Naked Heritage". 4. Air Baths and Sunshine in Sickness
An article by Dr Herbert Shelton who says that "Air baths, accompanied by gymnastic exercise, which are more pleasantly practiced in a state of nudity, will do much to add to the health of everyone." Air baths have certainly contributed to my body fitness and well being. 5. Confronting the Public Nudity Taboo in the USA
An article by Anthony Layng who says that "During the last 50 years, there has been a tremendous liberalization in American attitudes concerning sexual behavior, but public nudity continues to evoke disgust and ridicule...In spite of the fact that it now is quite acceptable to display nearly all of one's body poolside or at the beach, total nudity continues to make Americans very uncomfortable. 6. Is Genocide related to the forbidding of nakedness?

37. Portuguese Investigate Africa' Shelby County Ohio Historical Society
Barth, Sir Richard Francis Burton, john hanning speke, James Augustus the foundingof the african Association in 1788 by the American journalist/explorer Henry M
http://www.shelbycountyhistory.org/schs/blackhistory/portuguese.htm
With the exploits of Prince Henry the Navigator in the 1400s, Portugal was the first European country to go beyond the known limits of northern Africa, exploring the lower west coast and returning to Portugal with captured slaves and other riches. In 1442, the Portuguese began a trade that would not end until the 1800s; producing gold and slaves for the country. However, the Portuguese did not invent slavery. It dates back to the ancient Greeks keeping slaves, and Moses leading the Israelites out of bondage in Egypt. With the founding of the African Association in 1788, many of these white explorers traveled throughout Africa under the auspices of this and other respected associations. The most famous and enduring of these illustrious explorers was the internationally renowned David Livingstone whose activities in the deepest regions of the continent proved invaluable in the mapping of Africa’s interior. His most famous recorded meeting, after the outside world had received no news of his whereabouts and feared for his safety, came when he was found by the American journalist/explorer Henry M. Stanley, whose infamous words on meeting Livingstone, " Dr. Livingstone, I presume?,"

38. Rose George
Dusty streets, flat african buildings, a bustling market, women carrying manioc. Inthe late 19th century, British explorer john hanning speke set out their
http://www.rosegeorge.com/frameworks/generic/public_users/morearticles.asp?Artic

39. Books I Have Bought - June 2000
life of the great african explorer Henry M in the American Civil War, his africanadventures, and explorers, Richard Burton and john hanning speke; driven by an
http://www.miskatonic.org/books/jun00.html
Books I Have Bought - June 2000
30 June
Realware , Rudy Rucker. $11.76, new.
This follows Software Wetware and Freeware . Rucker's great. Back cover: A LEADING MATHEMATICIAN, COMPUTER SCIENTIST, AND CYBERPUNK PIONEER, RUDY RUCKER WRITES NOVELS THAT SURPRISE AND DELIGHT WITH AN EFFERVESCENT MIX OF CUTTING-EDGE SCIENCE, RAUCOUS SOCIAL SATIRE, AND DEEPLY INFORMED SPECULATION INTO THE NATURE AND FATE OF HUMANITY. NOW, HIS LATEST WORK TAKES ITS RIGHTFUL PLACE IN THIS DISTINGUISHED AND HILARIOUS CANON. It's 2054, and Phil Gottner doesn't know where his life is. His girlfriend is hooked on merge, a drug used in "bacteria-style" sex. His father has just been swallowed by a hyperspatial anomaly that materialized from a piece of art designed to project images of four-dimensional objects into three-dimensional space. Then, at the funeral, Phil meets and falls in love with Yoke Starr-Mydol, a young lovely visiting from the Moon. Spurning Phil's advances, Yoke flies to the Polynesian island of Tonga, where she discovers an alien presence at the bottom of the sea. Calling themselves Metamartians, the aliens offer Yoke an alla, a handheld device that gives its owner the power of mind over matterwhich, it turns out, is pretty much like having a magic wand. But as Phil pursues Yoke, and the altruistic Metamartians distribute more allas, he begins to suspect that his father's disappearance and presumed death are linked to the aliens and their miraculous gift. For it seems that the allas are accompanied by a fourth-dimensional entity known as Om, a godlike being who's taken a special interest in humans. Now Phil and Yoke must solve the mystery of the Metamartians and their god, before humanity uses its newfound powers to destroy itself altogether.

40. IFILM - Mountains Of The Moon - Film Info
explorers, Richard Francis Burton and john hanning speke, who searched and fierceanimosity from african tribes along love with the other explorer, the rakish
http://origin.ifilm.com/ifilm/product/film_info/0,3699,2322985,00.html
home submit film help
Your email address (required) Recipients' addresses (required) personalize your message Mountains of the Moon Rating (5=must see) Members Rating
(1 vote) Rate It Processing... Rating: R (MPAA)
Length: 2 hrs 20 min
More like this: Drama Achievers Action/Adventure Adventure ... Wilderness
On Video Available On DVD Available
Starring:
Patrick Bergin
Iain Glen Richard E. Grant Fiona Shaw ...
more credits

Directed by:
Bob Rafelson
Synopsis: MOUNTAIN OF THE MOON, directed by Bob Rafelson, is a portrait of two 19th-century British explorers, Richard Francis Burton and John Hanning Speke, who searched for the source of the Nile, encountering illness, loss of direction, and fierce animosity from African tribes along the way. Distributor: Artisan Entertainment, Image Entertainment, Inc., Movies Unlimited, Pioneer Entertainment. - knowing smirks (by jpilkey - Aug 01, 2002, 10:46 AM) Member rated this film The film opens in Somalia in 1854. "We move inland tomorrow." Hostile tribesmen wipe out the expedition and torture Bergin by stabbing him in the thighs. Back in England a woman who falls in love with the other explorer, the rakish Burton, wears the "liberated" smirk that the late 20th century imposes on Victorian women to prove that they were not all Christians. Terminal misery loves company. Join IFILM Submit Your Film Hollywood Creative Directory Buy Film Books ... Help

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter