#ALICE BROOKES NUDE FORUM VIDEO MOVIE#
The movie borrows some elements from Dr Asimov's robot stories, but is not an adaptation of any Asimov story. Since 2004, the cover for I, Robot features a shot of Will Smith from I, Robot, along with the Tagline "One Man Saw it Coming".
#ALICE BROOKES NUDE FORUM VIDEO SERIES#
The Landry Series books are among the worst offenders for portraying the redheaded Ruby as having dark hair on the stepbacks, with only All That Glitters actually giving her red hair. If There Be Thorns' stepback cover ◊ has Jory being a blonde when he actually has black hair. Germany has a few more of these instances for newer released Vampire Chronicles editions, but this one really sticks out. Not only has the title, which roughly translates to "The Scent of Immortality" almost nothing to do with the story as such (while earlier editions just had a directly translated title), the only woman that the female face on the cover could allude to, Bianca, has a rather minor role in the book, which tells about Armand, obviously a male. One particular instance is this cover ◊ for what is supposed to be The Vampire Armand. This also includes certain German rereleases of The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice. Possibly in the wake of the Twilight craze, a lot of books with slightly similar themes have been reprinted and released with covers that try to arise the image of the story being a similar supernatural romance thing, featuring close-ups of beautiful girl faces, pseudo-poetic titles written in elaborate letters and so on.The cover of the 1975 reprint of Rex Stout's Prisoners Base promises that the client "only has a fifty-fifty chance" unless Wolfe intervenes in the novel, however, the client dies on page ten. This happened due to the popularity of thrillers and spy novels, which made plain old mysteries seem fit only for pathetic spinsters. It was common in the Sixties and Seventies for the cover blurbs of mystery novels to completely misrepresent the story within.To its credit, it does have very good stories that are very well written.
The biggest offender is this cover for BIG ADVENTURE Issue 1, Volume 1 (September 1960), which has no story to go with the cover (the cover was reused by Battle Cry in its October 1962 issue, which likewise did not have a matching story). Happened occasionally on men's adventure magazines, usually in the "sweat mag" subgenre, where the cover did not match any of the stories inside.If they actually did show you pictures from the crime scene they would be censored, and therefore not be particularly shocking, either. The actual photo section of the book however was often anything but shocking though, showing things like the killer's high school yearbook picture ('70s hair! Shocking!), or a picture of the victims on an unrelated camping trip (they liked camping! Shocking!). A common note on the cover of a pre-Internet 1970's-80's " Airport Novel" variety True Crime book was "10 pages of shocking photographs!".