Marvel Comics is gearing up to introduce one of the darkest Alien comics ever published. Dubbed Alien: King Killer, this new ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. With the popularity of the TV show Alien: Earth, you might wonder where the heck you are supposed to begin with the Alien ...
A megacorporation's research ship returns from a 65-year mission into deep space loaded with gooey alien specimens. But—and stop me if you've heard this one before—something goes wrong. The ship ...
There are many things to love about the Alien series besides the drooling "perfect organism" at its center — the tenacious female heroines, the fascinating relationship between humans and the robots ...
Around a decade after Ridley Scott’s original Alien premiered, and less than two years after James Cameron’s sequel Aliens, Dark Horse Comics debuted its Aliens comic book series by Mark Verheiden and ...
The Xenomorph from the Alien franchise is having quite the comeback lately. First, in last year’s surprisingly good Alien: Romulus, then in this year’s Alien: Earth. So it’s no surprise that one-man ...
But, as can be expected, the Maginot and her crew are doomed after a containment breach, and the ship crashes right in the middle of New Siam, a densely populated city right in the middle of Prodigy ...
After visiting a galaxy far, far away, WEBTOON is now taking on the greatest threat in the universe. The episodic comic hub's next release under its recent megadeal with Disney will bring the universe ...
The breakout star of Alien: Earth on FX was not actually the Xenomorph, or even any of the synthetics or hybrids. And as cool as he was, it was not even the cyborg Mr. Morrow. No, it was the tentacled ...
I’ll say it. Xenomorphs are the coolest, most terrifying monsters in all of cinema. Their biomechanical exoskeletons, spindly, intimidating stature, and rapid, cockroach-like movements make for a ...
How big would a telescope need to be to see Earth’s dinosaurs from 66 million light-years away? Think big—and then think ...