British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.
Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.
Unbreakable functions as a detective story: David and the audience follow clues—physical anomalies, forensic oddities, a pattern of disasters—to a mythic truth. This procedural scaffolding legitimizes supernatural explanation within realist parameters. Shyamalan deliberately withholds omniscience; revelation is piecemeal, epistemology rooted in observation, testimony, and inference. The film’s investigative axis reframes belief as a method: trust the evidence, not the spectacle.
"Unbreakable" tells the story of David Dunn (played by Bruce Willis), a security guard who discovers that he has superhuman strength after being the sole survivor of a train crash. As he tries to make sense of his newfound abilities, he meets Elijah Price (played by Samuel L. Jackson), a comic book enthusiast with a rare bone disorder. Elijah, who is confined to a wheelchair, believes that David is the real-life version of a comic book superhero and coins the term "unbreakable" to describe his abilities.