Sentences with phrase «something from an alien»

The sulfur mountains are bizarre, like something from an alien civilization.

Not exact matches

Icould make huge comments about why you need you need to respect Aliens from Mars and how they have been here before and are coming back... but that does not make it true, nor would I expect anyone to be «converted to my way of thinking by something I wrote on news web site.
And your «unless you're open to the slightest possibility that you are indeed a space alien born a millisecond ago from another universe, then you are claiming something to be an absolute truth» I think the point was the likelihood — why do you not believe the space alien without proof yet believe in gods and angels without proof?
@ Moby unless you're open to the slightest possibility that you are indeed a space alien born a millisecond ago from another universe, then you are claiming something to be an absolute truth.
Im getting older now and had a religious catholic upbringing in a convent so you cant take the catholic out of the girl, but I have a brain and know that there may be something else, an energy, aliens coming first and mating early, metiors bringing the things necessary for life from other planets, anything.
Something that is alien to us thus completely removed from us.
It is not enough to escape from bondage to a hated, alien foe -LRB-» a law in my members which wars against the law of my mind and brings me into captivity to the law of sin in my members»); something must be done about my own ghastly guilt.
The PN of God, though an absolute, is not seen as a «beyond» — something utterly transcendent and alien from our experience.
Even a prominent atheistic (I believe it was Frncis Crick, but it may be a different one; but it is true nonetheless) concluded that aliens seeded the planet becuase he realized that something can't come from nothing.
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].
Cloaking the Earth from the view of aliens would require firing a 30 - megawatt monochromatic laser once per year towards the targeted star system for the duration of our planet's transit across the sun — something not nearly as difficult as it may sound.
Perhaps something like «Alien» went down, or «Predator» — elite commandos, isolated from the outside world, failing to understand what they're up against before reflexively fighting back.
The aliens who created this environment are not shown as the film ends on this very mysterious note, which has been a source of much commentary and has inspired meanings ranging from: it's all rubbish to something divine has happened.
Horrendous dialogue aside, the setup and energy cloud aliens are serviceable, but Jon Spaihts» script doesn't give any of the characters depth or something to do aside from scurry from locale to locale for the rest of the film.
Glazer surely took something, again, from Kubrick, especially in the scene in which his alien is born in some dimensionless otherworld.
It's of the «ignorant scientists foolishly unleash something that they don't understand» school and takes its cues most obviously from Alien, but also the «disaster movie in space» formula of Gravity and even a hint of Predator in its handling of the hostile alien life Alien, but also the «disaster movie in space» formula of Gravity and even a hint of Predator in its handling of the hostile alien life alien life form.
Under the Skin is not only genuinely experimental but feels authentically alien — almost something that a documentarist from another world might have shot here on a field mission.
One looks for sample credits in the end titles, the way you might scan the liner notes of a hip - hop album, and expects to see something like, «Features interpolations from «Alien,» «Aliens,» «2001: A Space Odyssey,» «Silent Running,» «Gravity» and did we mention «Alien?
The result is something slightly uncanny, as initially shocking as the notably CGI aliens (a far cry from the hulking suit of the original film), but thrilling and hard - hitting all the same.
From the first, it seems, Eva's son had a malevolent, alien quality — and the movie gradually attains something of the overt, if realist cuckoo - in - the - nest scariness of the likes of Rosemary's Baby, The Village of the Damned or even The Hand That Rocks the Cradle.
Zombi U was suppose to be this alien game, Killer Freaks From Outer Space or something along those lines and then they changed it to Zombi U. Borrowed some ideas from the original Zombi that came out in likeFrom Outer Space or something along those lines and then they changed it to Zombi U. Borrowed some ideas from the original Zombi that came out in likefrom the original Zombi that came out in like 86.
The juxtaposition of the terrifying aliens as cute plush toys is entertaining enough, but I wish they had gone with the Xenomorph or something instead of the facehugger; it's not immediately clear what this thing is from if you aren't very familiar with the films.
Right from the beginning of Alien: Isolation you could tell you were walking into something special.
The lack of story takes nothing away from the game, but it maybe could have had at least a one liner we could laugh at to set the scene; something along the lines of «We made some aliens from another galaxy mad, now they're coming to devour our souls and you are our last hope».
Before the killing and destruction of Twisted Metal or the Need for Speed franchise, RRR took a common game genre, blended it with heavy metal music, and weird aliens to create something that was just a leg up from the others.
It's a super silly conceit, for sure, but there's something endearing about seeing Space Invader aliens, the fireballs from Super Mario Bros., and the bird from Flappy Bird make random appearances.
If, after that, you still blindly bought Aliens on day one without waiting for the reviews to come in, you either weren't paying attention, or you're a very, very «something - something,» and even this lawsuit isn't going to prevent your myopic drivel - brain from making the same mistake time and time again.
Clay, made from the earth's soil, becomes something that appears literally alien, highlighting the presence of the supernatural and cosmic within the everyday.
«It's the first sequenced genome from something like an alien,» says neurobiologist Clifton Ragsdale of the University of Chicago in Illinois, who co-led the genetic analysis, along with researchers from the University of Chicago, the University of California, Berkeley, the University of Heidelberg in Germany and the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology in Japan.
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