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That's especially true if it's a spooky abandoned Weyland-Yutani space station called the Renaissance where secret xenomorph experiments are conducted, as seen in "Alien: Romulus."Avid fans adept ...
It’s hard to see how the agency can safely and accurately fulfill its current responsibilities—let alone develop advanced ...
Predator: Badlands is breaking the mold for this franchise in several ways — the protagonist is a Predator, there are no ...
NASA launched two 12-inch gold-plated copper disks filled with the sounds of children's laughter, heartbeats, and bird calls.
Pixar’s Elio created its alien beings not by gazing into telescopes, but by peering into microscopes.
As with all other NIAC-recognized ideas, there is no guarantee the one-legged jumping robot will actually be made – for that matter, not even the Orbilander mission is not fully confirmed yet.
“Alien” is also about capitalism. The ambiguous company, Weyland-Yutani Corporation, which isn’t named out loud until the sequel movie, “Aliens,” replaced a human science officer with a robot that ...
Introduced in director Ridley Scott's "Alien" from 1979, Ash was a Hyperdyne Systems model 120-A/2 android designed by the Weyland-Yutani conglomerate and portrayed onscreen by actor Ian Holm.