This one just so happens to do so
because of an alien invasion as opposed to a drunken argument.
Not exact matches
Imagine multiple disasters occurring at once (earthquake, fire, terrorist attack, volcano,
alien invasion, whatever floats your boat weirdo), and you must save yourself and your significant other
because all forms
of rescue have been overwhelmed.
by Bill Chambers The partnership
of Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin yielded a giant box office hit last time out with their
alien invasion picture Independence Day, a film critically dissed in large part
because it was populated with stereotypes: we knew who the smart guy was
because he wore glasses and a pocket - protector; who the gay guy was
because Harvey Fierstein's dialogue was set to flaming; who the hero was
because he promised to «whoop E.T.'s ass.»
I'm not as big on
alien invasion films as I am on time travel films, but that's okay,
because this is far from your typical
alien invasion film, focusing on a quartet
of characters left behind the evacuation when an
alien ship appears.
The reason why the «Fifties The Day the Earth Stood Still is so fondly remembered nowadays is
because it was probably one
of two science fiction movies from that entire decade that didn't have an
alien invasion (read: Red Scare paranoia) as its main theme.