One of these days, a meteorite will rocket from the heavens to the earth and kill us all, and Werner Herzog is here to remind us of that via Fireball: Visitors from Darker Worlds, now on Apple TV+.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Werner Herzog has always thirsted for the uncanny. It’s there in the primal awe he imparted to a grizzly bear in “Grizzly Man,” ...
'The AI Doc' producer Daniel Kwan on the future and threat of artificial intelligence 31:49 'The AI Doc' trailer: Sam Altman, Dario Amodei, and more discuss the precarious future of AI The artificial ...
NPR's Rachel Martin talks to director Werner Herzog about his new documentary — Fireball: Visitors from Darker Worlds — which explores our cosmic visitors from deep space: meteorites. When's the last ...
Apple TV+ is set to gain a new documentary narrated bay Warner Herzog that explores how meteorites and shooting stars have inspired humankind to look heavenward. Apple describes "Fireball" as a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A scene from the documentary "Fireball: Visitors From Darker Worlds." (Apple TV+) When the most exciting bits of a globetrotting ...
Can’t wait to check out 'Fireball: Visitors from Darker Worlds' without the hassle? Below, you’ll find streaming and cable services with rental, purchase, and subscription options, so you can choose ...
"Each one of these stones from darker worlds has its own story. And the bigger ones have changed entire landscapes." Apple has unveiled the first official trailer for Fireball: Visitors From Darker ...
Apocalyptic comets, complicated math, ancient rituals, eccentric scientists: Werner Herzog and Clive Oppenheimer’s new documentary has it all. By Glenn Kenny When you purchase a ticket for an ...
Werner Herzog has always thirsted for the uncanny. It’s there in the primal awe he imparted to a grizzly bear in “Grizzly Man,” the cracked rapture of Klaus Kinski’s glowering megalomaniacal ...
When the most exciting bits of a globetrotting documentary about asteroids and meteors are clips from the melodramatic, 1998 disaster flick “Deep Impact,” you know that a beat has been missed. Such is ...