Urban Legend
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | USA |
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Directors | Jamie Blanks |
Box office | 72. 5 million USD |
Screenplay | Silvio Horta |
Producers | Neal H. Moritz |
Michael McDonnell | |
Gina Matthews | |
Very good movie!. Suspenseful and has a great murder mystery. U will be shocked by the killers identity. Creates a . . . | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 776334 |
About Urban Legend
A university is beset by a rash of gruesome murders that resemble old urban legends. When her friend Michelle (Natasha Gregson Wagner) is killed by someone hiding in her car, Natalie (Alicia Witt) begins to notice the pattern. Her suspicions grow stronger when her own roommate is strangled to death. Soon the quiet college campus is transformed into hunting grounds for a maniac, and Natalie struggles to find the killer and stop the bloodshed before she becomes the next victim.
Do people really swallow spiders in their sleep?
... " It is unclear where the spider-swallowing story originated, but the myth is so embedded it has morphed into the stuff of Urban Legend, Dr Wilkinson says...
Why is it so rare to hear about Western cyber-attacks?
... " Everyone s heard about powerful cyber tools which can turn mobile phones into spying devices but I thought of this as a kind of Urban Legend that happens to someone else, somewhere else...
Jimmy Hoffa: Deathbed confession sparks long missing US union boss body hunt
... And in New Jersey, an Urban Legend has long claimed that Hoffa s remains were buried under the old New York Giants football stadium...
Ugly Betty Creator Silvio Horta dies at the age of 45 years
... The American dream Cuban-American Horta, born in Miami and studied film at New York University, before he got his big break in 1998 with the screenplay for the horror thriller Urban Legend...
Has excuse of the boy who swore it Five stars, really? An unnecessarily long investigation
... What was going on on the earth? Eliot is to this Urban Legend, suggested Doris...
Why is Friday the 13 bad luck?
... To further connection, brought the possibility of the danger of an Urban Legend in circulation, sometime in the 1690s, that it was bad luck to have explained 13 people around a table or in a group, he...
Do people really swallow spiders in their sleep?
By Helen BurchellBBC News, Hertfordshire
" There was an Old Lady who swallowed a Spider that wriggled, and jiggled and tickled inside Her . . "
According to The rhyme and song, The unfortunate woman swallowed The arachnid to catch a fly she had previously eaten - followed by A Number of other creatures in an attempt to solve The original issue.
But . . let's concentrate on The Spider .
Assuming you don't gulp one down On Purpose , is it likely you can swallow a Spider unintentionally in your sleep?
Chris Cowsley, a Hertfordshire postal worker, believes.
He was taken to hospital last month after Waking Up recently choking in The Early Hours .
Unable to Breathe - and after calling 999 - He Said an ambulance paramedic told him it seemed likely his uvula - The fleshy hanging ball at The back of The throat - had been.
His throat swelled up and his breathing was seriously impaired.
Mr Cowsley says he thought he " was going to die".
The Hospital said it was not sure what had caused Mr Cowsley's breathing problems - though a specialist, Mr Cowsley says, did suggest The Paramedic 's Spider bite theory might have merit.
In defence of those with eight legsThe British Arachnological Society says as natural pest controllers, spiders are " second to none".
" They are predators and their main prey are insects, many of which eat our crops and pester our livestock, " its website suggests.
A in Switzerland in 2017 found spiders have an enormous ecological impact as Natural Enemies of insects.
The Report states: " With More Than 45,000 species and a population density of up to 1,000 individuals per Square Metre , spiders are one of The World 's most species-rich and widespread groups of predators. "
They calculated that " The global Spider population (with a weight of around 25 million tons) wipes out an estimated 400-800 million tons of prey every year".
Spider experts, however, are less convinced that a Spider was The Culprit for Mr Cowsley's breathing problem.
Dr Matt Wilkinson , from Cambridge University's department of zoology, says: " There 's a Myth that you swallow about eight spiders a year in your sleep.
" It is a Myth - though one that many people accept as reality. "
It is unclear where The Spider -swallowing story originated, But The Myth is so embedded it has morphed into The Stuff of Urban Legend , Dr Wilkinson says.
" It's really curious that This Was The gut instinct reaction [of those treating Mr Cowsley, " he says.
Dr Wilkinson and others are highly dubious that a Spider bite led to Mr Cowsley's unfortunate incident.
" Very few spiders in Britain can bite you and The only possible one is The false widow - it's pretty big and you'd wake up if that was in your throat, " Dr Wilkinson says.
" It's not going to crawl in There - There 's air going in and out and it's just not going in There . "
Experts agree that Most People would wake up if a Spider was on their face.
" You'd know about it long before it bit you, " Dr Wilkinson said.
He was aware that medical staff had suggested a Spider bite may have caused Mr Cowsley's breathing difficulties, But said: " I'd need some pretty hefty Evidence .
" Show Me The Evidence - The Remains of The Spider - Show Me The bite.
" I just cannot imagine a Spider did this. "
Dr Geoff Oxford, honorary secretary of The British Arachnological Society, agreed that The Story of swallowing eight spiders a year while sleeping was " a Myth ".
" If someone's sleeping, they're breathing Hot Air in and out, " He Said .
" Why on earth would a Spider go in? They just don't do that. "
The NHS says although Spider bites in The UK are uncommon, some can leave people feeling sick, sweating or dizzy.
They can also become infected and, in rare cases, causes a severe allergic reaction. if people suffer " any severe or worrying symptoms after a Spider bite".
As for Mr Cowsley, his apparent run-in with his accidental arachnid meal has left him none-The -worse health-wise.
Nor has he become an overnight arachnophobe.
However, one of The First things he did after his hospital visit was to buy a set of insect repellents, because, he says, " I'm not having that anymore".
Source of news: bbc.com