Few films can truly be called a masterpiece, but Ridley Scott’s Alien (1979) is deserving of the moniker. The film chronicles the doomed crew of the Weyland Yutani corporation’s USCSS Nostromo who ...
Set between the original Alien and its more bombastic sequel, Aliens, Fede Alvarez's Alien: Romulus echoes the the greatest elements of those films, while also delivering his own spin on the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Upon arriving on the station—with its two halves, Romulus and Remus—the group finds evidence of something nasty and very quickly ...
Are we alone in the universe? Indeed, it could not be a question that has captured the human imagination more than this one, perhaps as long as human beings have walked on this earth. While scenes of ...
I know Alien: Prometheus and Covenant have their defenders, and from a visual and design standpoint, they are unmatched. But often, it felt like the xenomorphs themselves got in the way of a heady ...
As a spacecraft hurtles toward its doom in “Alien: Romulus,” a dispassionate female voice begins a familiar refrain: “T minus 40 seconds and counting.” Ah, what a comforting sound! It means that the ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about TV shows, movies, video games, entertainment & culture. First of all, no, Alien: Earth is not a nature documentary.