David Duchovny (The X-Files), Orlando Jones (The Replacements), Seann William Scott (American Pie) and Academy Award ® - nominee Julianne Moore (Hannibal) make a discovery
of alien lifeforms that could change the world.
Starring: Paul Reubens, Jane Lynch, Bruce McGill, Matthew Lillard What you missed out on: You don't have to be a rocket scientist to guess the premise of this sitcom: it was intended to show all the shenanigans that go on inside the top - secret government base reputed to be the home
of alien lifeforms.
Why wouldn't you want to work for a company that deems the aquisition
of an ALIEN lifeform more valuable than a multi-billion dollar Space Mining facility and it's hypersleepy crew.
Not exact matches
If
alien lifeforms were to develop on planets orbiting these stars, they would have views
of a portion, or all,
of the galactic disk.
Once this data is beamed back to Earth (no small task, given the resolution
of the images), NASA scientists are able to work out whether any
of these extrasolar planets are habitable — by humans,
of course, but potentially
alien lifeforms as well.
It almost works out for Life, which borrows the fundamentals
of its premise from
Alien — hostile, shape - changing
lifeform let loose in the confines
of a spacecraft grows larger and more powerful as it eats its way through the crew — and rides that pony for a good forty - five nerve - jangling minutes before running out
of oxygen.
Without noomis character, c - sectioning the
alien lifeform out
of her.
The imagining
of humankind's first contact with
alien lifeforms is territory well - mined in popular fiction and probably best executed in Robert Zemeckis's wonderful 1997 film Contact.
Welcome to Planet SR388, a world
of subterraneous labyrinths, vicious
alien lifeforms, mysterious secrets... and a deadly Metroid infestation.
However, the probe is shot by an unknown
alien lifeform, which in turn creates a huge influx
of energy to return back to Earth where it begins to create an uncontrollable black hole.
This nightmarish realm is a surreal meld
of disturbing, corrupted
lifeforms and towering technological structures, left behind by an incredibly advanced
alien race long ago.
Warmind though, just isn't fun, and the joy
of pummeling
alien lifeforms with your mates can't save it.
On foot in giant mech robots referred to as Skells (the latter unlocked much later on) you will cover a ton
of alien ground as you clear dangerous native
lifeforms (referred to as indigens and tyrants), set up data probes to expand BLADE's information systems and complete quests
of varying designs — menial requests from NLA citizens, military orders from BLADE, and unmarked encounters in the wild during your travels.
You find yourself aboard Talos I, a state -
of - the - art R&D facility orbiting the moon, and you're immediately thrown into a world
of danger after an
alien lifeform (known as Typhon) breaks containment.
However, that doesn't mean that RunGunJumpGun isn't full
of colorful
alien lifeforms and unique worlds.
Automata tells the tale
of humanity's last ditch effort
of retaliation after Earth is invaded by
alien lifeforms.
Clamber up walls & glide through the air on the back
of a camouflaging chameleon - like «Rock Drake», keep the dark at bay with one
of four friendly «Lantern Pets», or grab and toss multiple creatures simultaneously with a massive «Cave Crustacean», or — if you are brave enough — allow the horrific «Reaper Queen» to impregnate you, and spawn a vicious male Reaper
alien lifeform you can tame and control.
However, the pièce de résistance, the absolute exemplar
of sci - fi horror, is an installation
of tech - enabled baby rockers (the brand is 4moms), which seem to be cradling and rocking
alien lifeforms in unsettling colors — blobs and tentacles in radioactive pink and plasmic orange - yellow.