tokage
LizardJeff
tokage

Maybe it's ghost-Yoda.

First off, this might just be one particular stage of the Lizard transformation. Perhaps this form leads up to a final form that looks more lizardlike in the shape of the head. It would make sense that a movie version of the Lizard would transform more gradually, a la Jeff Goldblum in 'The Fly', as opposed to the

No sweater in the universe is ugly enough to make the adorable Karen Gillan look bad.

Looks like these aliens might be a bit harder to kill than the fuzzy lightstick-mouthed aliens in "Attack the Block".

I wish Cookie Monster had kept his threateningly sharp teeth for Sesame Street.

"Spydor's new, from the Masters of the U!"

Here's another really good one — but it might be a bit of a stretch as a health benefit given its bourbon content - heh.

Or how Rick and company managed to avoid detecting several dozen zombies locked up in the barn when they have apparently been given freedom to wander around the farm for several days.

Yes, there are indeed examples of Lovecraft himself explaining too much and removing some of the mystery from his own scenarios. A good example of this is "At the Mountains of Madness", which has a great set-up, but then gets bogged down in explaining too much detailed history about the "Elder Things", their various

It mostly has to do with the concept of people slowly discovering hidden horrors that are too vast and alien for the human mind to fully grasp, all wrapped up in Lovecraft's incredibly florid, but engagingly descriptive prose.

That's a pretty fair summation of why I've learned to avoid Von Trier's films. Although it sounds like the misogyny level in this one might not be cranked all the way up to 11 like it usually is in his other works, he's exhausted my patience at this point.

Another one vaguely similar in concept to the Troma movie, but much better quality is Who Can Kill a Child? (AKA: Island of the Damned) from 1976.

Looks more like it's punting a chicken to me. No 'raptor there, I say!

I predict we'll be seeing these critters in mug shots before too long.

"The chimpanzees in the film are played by actors in chimp costumes"

I'm trying to figure out if Georgia's greatest fear being "The Devil" is a reference to the song "The Devil Went Down to Georgia", or merely yet another smug implication that everyone in the south is a Christian living in fear of that mean ol' Satan.

It was one of my all-time favorite toys as well. I wasn't even allowed to see "Alien" in the theater when the few toys based on the movie came out in '79, but I liked the monstrous design so much, I got everything I could find (which as I recall was only the Kenner figure, two shooting target sets, and a board game).

Especially since loony, Xenu-fearing Tom Cruise isn't quite the guaranteed audience draw he used to be.

One doesn't need to look too hard to find reoccurring phallic and vaginal imagery in Giger's artwork. Hell, the Alien's head is basically an inverted erect schlong.

If you had a choice, you'd probably want to wait until at least several hundred years after the big meteor, if not longer, due to the catastrophic environmental damage that followed the impact.