Sentences with phrase «like alien body»

Like an alien body, like an activating ferment injected into the mass, it gives the world no peace, it bars slumber, it teaches the world to be discontented and restless as long as the world has not God, it stimulates the movement of history.

Not exact matches

Arnold Toynbee once warned that the Western technology will be corrosive of the non-Western civilizations, creating effects like ultra voilet or red lights or alien virus in the body.
As a physics teacher, I teach the therapeutic effects of gamma radiation in radiotherapy, along with the associated dangers (radiation can cause cells to become cancerous as well as kill cells that are already cancerous), but a common misconception among students is that cancer cells are rather like viruses or bacteria, a sort of alien cell that has entered the body, growing out of control with little relation to the surrounding cells.
Our strategy is to anger Hispanics by freaking out about the illegal aliens, to anger women by reducing their control over their own bodies and lessening their health care choices, to anger Blacks by calling the NAACP and MLK racist, to alienate moderates with our extremist ideologies like Tea Party and Limbaugh and the Religious Right.
They are the ones that started the process towards intelligent life on many of the planets in the Star Trek universe (though I think this wa a cheesy way to explain why all the «aliens» looked like guys with green body paint).
Now Wenger has told him to change his game, gone are the runs and the fight, now he is being forced to play like Giroud, back to goal in a completely new and alien role that is not suited to his body size or physique.
Your body seems like it's been taken over by alien beings.
«It was like this weird alien overtook my body and every appropriate response was answered with the antithesis of what you would assume.»
We have all heard of the concept used in horror films of aliens invading our bodies and minds, such as in movies like Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
If you're a brittle star, the answer turns out to be quite well (for an echinoderm)-- although it's a little complicated.The blunt - spined brittle star (Ophiocoma echinata) looks like a claymation creature from an alien horror movie as it moves its disk - like body along the sea floor with unexpected agility.
The screenplay for this 1985 feature is so riddled with character inconsistencies and unmotivated behavior that it plays like science fiction: the unsuspected presence of body - snatching aliens is the only conceivable explanation for the bizarre twists of psychology the film proposes.
The first spin - off movie in Sony's proposed Marvel universe, Venom stars Tom Hardy as antihero Eddie Brock, whose body is possessed by the titular alien symbiote, giving him Spider - Man - like powers.
The wasps themselves feel like Xenomorphs in their growth (infecting a human body and exploding out of them) and there's a sequence towards the end that mirrors Ripley's classic silent showdown with the Alien Queen.
Viewed all together, in the movie's central set - piece, they offer perhaps the most diverse collection of bizarre body shapes and alien - like protuberances since your last visit to the Mos Eisley Cantina, though not necessarily the most diverting.
Depicting a much more subtle alien invasion than the city - destroying carnage seen in the likes of Independence Day, it sees the aptly named Body Snatchers drop plant pods all across the fictional small town of Mill Valley, California.
But the whole «everything's like this, except when it isn't» thing is an excellent characterization of the general awfulness of the entire movie: the aliens, walking around in their Eddie Murphy robot spaceship body, either understand humans and Earth culture, or they don't, depending on which would be «funniest» (none of it is actually funny, natch).
These aliens are more like the invaders in Heinlein's The Puppet Masters (made into a movie in 1994) and Invaders from Mars (1958, and remade in 1986 by Tobe Hooper) than they are like the ones in the various Invasion of the Body Snatchers movies.
Stories feature Crop circles and alien visitors Plasticized museum bodies A dead baby and a guest appearance from the protagonist of Mail Insect hunting with a ridiculous American exchange student who dresses like a stripper A ghost village A mummification service Working as professional mourners A -LSB-...]
Captured by the enemy, he discovers that they look and sound like humans, while he is stuck inside the body of an alien clone.
As Captain Mitch yanked it aboard, I was intrigued by its alien - like bulbous eyes situated unevenly on its head — apparently there's not much to look at on the seafloor — and its scaly, green body, nothing like I imagined it would look like having eaten plenty of the delectable white fillets at respectable restaurants throughout my life.
Set in a world where an oppressive government regime has outlawed clothing, it follows a group of martial artists fighting to bring down The Man before their improbable breasts cause their spines to give out and erupt from their bodies like the chestburster in Alien.
Two ways I would love to see this go down: a more reserved, isolated space - horror title similar to Alien: Isolation, or a more intense body - horror like Dead Space.
Classical sculptures on steroids emitting an angelic glow, Finland's bodies have the same sci - fi sexiness as H. R. Giger's aliens, complete with nuclear - missile dicks and flesh that looks like latex.
A rich subject in itself, the alien body, while given presence enough by the strange sandbox - like terrain akin to Apocalypse Postponed (2014), is allegorically enacted by a performer resembling a pastiche of anime characters and appearing sporadically much to the mystery of viewers.
Hardest to miss was Kevin Berlin's spectacle «Alien Invasion,» which found the PT Barnum - like Berlin herding a glam squad of 6 - foot - tall girls wearing little more than thongs, green body paint, antennae and brandishing light - up ray guns around the pavilion.
Hancock's «Torpedo Boy,» an African - American superhero in tightie - whitie underwear looks uncomfortable in his own body, with his squid - like arms stealing mounds of tofu away from the evil, alien - like vegans.
Her works probe into a very physical abstraction, something body - like that feels simultaneously intimate and alien, particular and uncertain.
Your body just went through some major trauma and you're holding this little creature on your chest and you may just be in total bliss or you may be like, «Uh, you look like a little alien and I don't feel like I know you.»
What most of us don't do, however, is consider insuring particular parts of our bodies, or using insurance as a hedge against seemingly impossible things occurring, like an alien abduction.
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