Rescue workers sift through the wreckage of the World Trade Center September 13, 2001 in New York City, two days after two hijacked airplanes slammed into the twin towers, levelling them in an...
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From Blade Runner to GTA V, part of what makes blockbuster movies and video games so immersive is the incredible visuals. Even though it's made up, the scenery looks so real, so palpable, it's as if you're almost there. Sometimes, however, you are. If only for a moment.
From Blade Runner to GTA V, part of what makes blockbuster movies and video games so immersive is the incredible visuals. Even though it's made up, the scenery looks so real, so palpable, it's as if you're almost there. Sometimes, however, you are. If only for a moment.
From Blade Runner to GTA V, part of what makes blockbuster movies and video games so immersive is the incredible visuals. Even though it's made up, the scenery looks so real, so palpable, it's as if you're almost there. Sometimes, however, you are. If only for a moment.
From Blade Runner to GTA V, part of what makes blockbuster movies and video games so immersive is the incredible visuals. Even though it's made up, the scenery looks so real, so palpable, it's as if you're almost there. Sometimes, however, you are. If only for a moment.
Gordon Cheung
First fruits of my church visiting in Norfolk was the village of Warham, near Wells Next The Sea, and its two surviving churches - St.Mary Magdalen [pictured] and All Saints. www.flickr.com/photos/barryslemmings/sets/72157594317162350/ to see the full set. The village once had three churches and there are references to a further chapel and cemetery prior to the dissolution of the monasteries. St. Mary Magdalen is thought to be Norman in origin and still has some Norman foundations and one Norman arch in the north wall. Much of the later work is 15th century or Georgian. At the rear of the chancel is a large brick 18th century mortuary chapel belonging to the Turner family. One of the Turners married Rev Edmund Nelson and they had a son - Horatio Nelson. The church was stripped inside in June 1800 and by September 1801 a fine Georgian interior had been fitted including a vaulted plaster ceiling, box pews and a splendid three-decker pulpit which it still retains. At some stage some Continental glass was brought in but the are also scraps of medieval glass which may have been recovered from this site [or another] after it was smashed out during the English Civil War and the Puritan reaction to images in churches. While the fragments are a curious mish-mash they do give a hint at how richly decorated our churches were prior to the Puritan backlash.