Sentences with phrase «knew about aliens»

So we created a dating site where people could search for others who knew about aliens.
That neatly sums up how little we really know about those alien creatures.
What do we know about these alien worlds?
But the Seeders need to know about the alien race, in case they are a threat.
Alien Breed: Tower Assault AGA 1994 Everyone in the world of Amiga games knows about Alien Breed.
This is where you'll know about aliens & UFO and meditation techniques.
This is where you'll know about aliens & UFO and meditation techniques.

Not exact matches

In an interview in the April 2017 issue of Vanity Fair, Musk shared that Douglas Adams's The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy — a book about aliens destroying earth, creating supersonic highways and building a supercomputer that knows all of life's mysteries — was a «turning point» for him.
Hopefully they will find and understand the beauty and interconnectedness of the universe, how little we know about it, and just how much we have yet to learn as a young alien species stuck on a rock that's drifting through the void.
(There's also some reference to an alien Batboy on the same cover, but I don't know what thats about..)
Well, if we take your statment, «All we know so far about life in the universe is here on Earth so it's safe to at least theorize that alien life forms have a very good chance of being bipedal and humanoid.»
No it has not been proven where did you see that on an alien special on a & e, Read up on it those other religions did not have Jesus as a Savior and did not have men writing 1000s of years apart talking about the same events, and phrophecizing about things that happened in later chapters written hundreds of years later... and in no bok any where was there a man like Jesus, who spoke the words that Jesus spoke and died for people who hated Him like Jesus did, and spoke the parabales and life lessons like Jesus did... look at what Jesus spoke... read it nowhere has there been a better teacher of life then in His words.
Yet, given what we know about the formation of solar systems and the biology of life, combined with the fact that there are billions of galaxies each containing billions of stars, I find it perfectly plausible that alien life could exist.
While the religious or the ecclesiastical Christian has increasingly become incapable of speaking about damnation, the radical Christian, who has been willing to confront the totally alien form of God which has been manifest in our time, has known the horror of Satan and Hell, and can all too readily speak the language of guilt and damnation.
I swore that there would be a small alien tearing its way out of my stomach in about 8 to 12 hours, only after it had taken over my thoughts and found my human body was no longer needed.
Shostak also brought up a less frightening but perhaps more existentially dreadful possibility about some future first contact: what if we finally hear from aliens broadcasting their presence as sentient beings, and the big announcement is their understanding of well - known mathematical phenomena such as the Fibonacci sequence.
People who believe they have been, say, abducted by aliens, will often know if a set of beliefs is internally consistent but can seldom judge about whether the set is plausible.
If an alien civilization is looking at us from far away, and it knows something about chemistry, it will know that we have millions to billions of times more oxygen than we should [if there were no life on Earth].
Whether you're sure about political affiliations or alien abduction, that feeling of knowing derives not from rational thought, he argues, but from the brain's primitive limbic system; the gut feeling is more likely to emerge from careful electric stimulation than from careful consideration.
Tread softly: Early independent reviews of beta versions of the Omni put the noise factor at about the same level as a treadmill, meaning your neighbors likely will never know you're saving the world from an alien invasion.
If there are any alien civilizations out there, they would only know about us if their planet is within that 200 - light - year bubble, or if they happened to be passing through our tiny portion of the Milky Way on a transgalactic journey.
One of the few things we know about Proxima b, besides that it is a rocky planet with a mass 1.3 times that of Earth, is that its orbit is in the so - called «Goldilocks zone» of its sun: not too hot nor too cold for liquid water, making it a potential host for life — alien, human or both.
And I'm not talking about a friendly alien that wants to know what this planet is all aboutno, I am talking about someone who wants to launch a full - scale assault, but only in public places.
My cat Lily is a beautiful long haired cat, but she leaves «aliens» on the floor, as I have come to call them, and I haven't been able to find her usual hairball control treat, I researched it and found a whole bunch of not so pleasant things about that particular treat that I never knew about!
Right now, all I know is I just wrote almost 2,000 words about living like a possible alien with a somehow perfect middle part.
If you'd like to know more about me (you know, normal stuff, like how I scared my grandma off by looking like an alien when I was born, etc), check out my About Me about me (you know, normal stuff, like how I scared my grandma off by looking like an alien when I was born, etc), check out my About Me About Me page!
One of them is an entomologist, FFS; he knows about insects, not about aliens.
The early part of the movie, when Wikus gets exposed to the fluid, you'd think that the MNU or gov» t officials would have some kind of quarantine system in place, in case alien bio-matter intermingles with human... and indeed later on you hear about there being other cases of mutation — possibly induced by the illegal experiments — so they knew this kind of thing could happen... it seemed to me very reckless to have Wikus stumble about, puking his guts, bleeding from his nose, and not have his co-workers immediately call the medvac people in.
You know: Enlightened humans have culture clashes with alien humanoids amid much yammering about prime directives and warp drives.
Stewart plays out the film as if it were a traditional «haunted house» film, but because we already know it is about alien life, we merely watch the characters go through predictable motions until the story catches up with what we already surmise, and the only things keeping viewers reeled in are basic questions such as, «why are they doing this?»
Who knows, maybe they're planning a pre-emptive strike on the Children of Thanos aka the Black Order, or apprehending previous alien scouts sent to Earth, or maybe they were tipped off about Thanos» invasion and are helping Rogers assemble the tools needed to properly defend the planet.
As you likely know from the trailers, the scifi movie Edge of Tomorrow is about Tom Cruise reliving a single day until he can somehow change the course of a battle against alien invaders.
Little is known about how Captain Marvel will adapt this storyline, outside of the fact that it takes place in the 90s, but it's interesting that the movie will draw more attention to two alien races that are vitally important to Annihilation.
I especially liked the joke about Andy Warhol being an alien — except didn't we know that already?
Not only that, but Professor Levinson (Jeff Goldblum's) former girlfriend, Dr. Marceux (Charlotte Gainsbourg) knows because of those circles on her history site in Africa where tribal leader Dikembe (Deobia Oparei) knows more about the aliens than anyone.
Since her Metropolis EP landed in 2007, the unconventional pop entity and visionary «alien from outer space, cybergirl without a face» known as Janelle Monáe, has been trying to tell us about the world of tomorrow.
The London - born actor will star alongside Charlie Hunnam, Rinko Kikuchi, Charlie Day and Ron Perlman in the film about a battle between giant alien monsters who ravage Earth and giant man - made robots known as Jaegers.
So when you buy a ticket for a movie about a square, suburban neighborhood - watch team defending their small town from aliens, you know what you're getting from a glance at the poster: Stiller will be in furrowed - brow funnyman mode; Vince Vaughn is on board to provide warp - speed patter and full - frontal dudity; and Jonah Hill will do some variation of his peeved, passive - aggressive nerd thing.
After all, we know that Fassbender is pulling double duty this time around, playing the malicious android David (who was introduced in 2012's Prometheus) and a new android named Walter, who supposedly isn't all about infecting human beings with alien weirdness to see what happens.
Like characters in one of those zombie movies where no one says «zombie,» the crew of the Cloverfield space station — a big metal psilocybin mushroom orbiting near - future Earth — doesn't know what it's in for, having left our planet without ever having seen a single sci - fi horror movie: not Alien, not Event Horizon, and definitely nothing about science gone wrong.
She's Ella Swenson (Olivia Wilde), who knows something about Jake before he does and hides a secret of her own, which only ultimately furthers exposition about the alien invaders (The aliens themselves have a few anatomical curiosities, mainly a chest cavity that splits to reveal a second set of arms, but amount to little more than big, green men).
Monsters vs. Aliens — from DreamWorks Animation vets Rob Letterman (Shark Tale) and Conrad Vernon (Shrek 2)-- isn't trying to be deep: that's just an unintended side effect (and one the audience can safely ignore, if it wants to) when you riff on just about every monster movie ever made and do it this cleverly, in ways that know you know way too much about the subject of cinematic apocalypse already.
Mother Nature six things you probably didn't know about It's a Wonderful Life Super Punch Robot Chicken makes an Alien funny: the dangers of acid blood.
Details about his potential role have yet to emerge, but Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige did reveal over the summer that the film will bring the destructive alien race known as the Skrulls to the big screen.
Life - long fans of science fiction know only too well that their beloved genre can sometimes get a very bad rap from those who feel it's solely about aliens, ray guns and flying saucers.
Starring Craig Robinson (The Office, This Is the End) and Adam Scott (Parks and Recreation, Big Little Lies), Ghosted is a comedy about the partnership between two polar opposites — a cynical skeptic and a genius «true believer» in the paranormal — who are recruited by a secret government agency, known as The Bureau Underground, to save the human race from aliens.
The game uses actual physics and aerodynamics to prove that you know nothing about building spacecraft, but then throws in cute aliens to make it all a bit less devastating.
I know it's alien for writers to think about helping out readers, but the more you do, the more fans you get and the more readers over time.
A story involving alien visitors from outer space, an epileptic kid who doesn't really know where he came from, knackeries and dead horses falling a hundred sideways miles, abandoned prisons, a shadow play, moons and stars, and jumping from a bridge into a flood should probably begin with a big explosion in the sky about fourteen billion years ago.
According to a press release from Barnes and Noble, «Fans of widely popular titles from Alloy Entertainment can now enjoy Iva - Marie Palmer's The End of the World As We Know It, a novel about a group of misfit teens facing an alien invasion, and Elena Perez's The Art of Disappearing, a heartbreaking and mysterious novel about a popular girl who starts to lose it all when she learns she may be psychic.
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