END TIME NEWS, A CALL FOR REPENTANCE, YESHUA THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN


Join the forum, it's quick and easy

END TIME NEWS, A CALL FOR REPENTANCE, YESHUA THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN
END TIME NEWS, A CALL FOR REPENTANCE, YESHUA THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
TODAY IS
Latest topics
» PLEASE ACCESS THE LINK TO ALL INFORMATION
ALIENS! THEY'RE HERE AND THEY JUST KEEP COMING! EmptySun 29 Aug 2021, 22:15 by Jude

THE OLIVE BRANCH | GOD IS MY SALVATION
LIVE TRAFFIC FEED

WEATHER FORECAST
ScreenSaver Forecast by NWS
WEATHER FORECAST
ScreenSaver Forecast by yr.no

ALIENS! THEY'RE HERE AND THEY JUST KEEP COMING!

Go down

The author of this message was banned from the forum - See the message

ALIENS! THEY'RE HERE AND THEY JUST KEEP COMING! Empty ALIENS! THEY'RE HERE AND THEY JUST KEEP COMING!

Post  Guest Fri 11 Mar 2011, 08:49


Aliens! They’re here and they just keep coming!

* Robert W. Butler
* Thu Mar 10 2011

We haven't seen a run on alien movies since the 1950s when Gort visited us in The Day the Earth Stood Still.
Robot We haven't seen a run on alien movies since the 1950s when Gort visited us in The Day the Earth Stood Still.
20th Century Fox

Watch the skies. They’re coming to get us all.

“They,” of course, are aliens.

From outer space.

Hollywood is in the midst of an alien invasion unequalled since the paranoid Cold War fantasies of the early 1950s.

At theatres today you can take in Battle: Los Angeles and the animated comedy Mars Needs Moms.

At least eight more alien-themed films will open this year, with several more planned for 2012.

These come on the coattails of Cloverfield and Skyline, in which creatures from other worlds have their nasty ways with us. In the Oscar-nominated District 9, alien refugees become third-class citizens on Earth.

And it’s not just at the megaplex. Alien invasion is hot on the TV screen, too. Witness the ongoing series V and The Event.

Why now?

The 1950s was the heyday of the alien invasion movie. The concept goes all the way back to H.G. Wells’ 1897 novel The War of the Worlds, but it was in the uncertainties of the Cold War that little green men from beyond became rooted in our consciousness.

Encouraged by a rash of postwar UFO sightings, scores of films about aliens landing on Earth with evil designs were produced between 1948 and 1962.

Some were quickie exploitation efforts memorable for their cheesiness. Others—like 1951’s The Day the Earth Stood Still (a Christ-like visitor arrives to save humanity from nuclear self-destruction) or 1956’s The Invasion of the Body Snatchers (alien seed pods replace humans with emotionless clones) — are genuine works of art.

Their popularity was born in the fears of communism and atomic annihilation. Aliens became a potent metaphor for all the scary outside elements that could undermine Eisenhower’s America.

Perhaps the new surge of alien movies — which got the green light from studios a couple of years ago at the worst point in the economic downturn — also reflect our anxiety about the unknown.

These are fearful times. Many of us feel threatened by a scary financial future, terrorism and illegal immigration.

“I recall from my own childhood in the ’80s, when nuclear war was still seen as a real possibility, that these movies gave me a kind of release,” said Jenna Busch, who writes about geek culture for the Huffington Post and other websites.

“It was a way for me to focus my panic on a different threat, to cope with something that was more manageable because it was fiction. It was actually kind of comforting.”

Alien movies are therapeutic in another way, Busch said.

“It’s very dangerous to focus your anger on a group of fellow humans, but it’s OK to direct it at aliens. They’re like bank robbers wearing masks, or storm troopers in Star Wars. You can’t see their faces, so it’s OK to hate them.”

Some argue that alien invasion movies satisfy because they show human beings putting aside their differences to combat an external foe.

“That strikes me as a bit of an easy explanation,” said Heather Urbanski, the author of Plagues, Apocalypses and Bug-Eyed Monsters: How Speculative Fiction Shows Us Our Nightmares and an assistant professor at Central Connecticut State University.

“But one thing that has persisted in this genre is the idea that you can go to bed and when you wake up the next morning, the world has changed.”

Not everyone thinks the new alien movies represent our deepest anxieties: “I honestly don’t think it’s a reflection of our fear of another mortgage meltdown,” said industry observer Paul Degarabedian of Hollywood.com. “I think there are more obvious reasons.

“Really, it’s hard to determine the sociological or anthropological cause of a certain film genre surging. But you can be sure that the studios are all banking on certain genres heating up and becoming the next big thing. We saw that over the last couple of years with vampires. Now aliens seem to be the next big deal.”

Hollywood, he noted, is always on the lookout for films that are “action-based, conducive to big special effects and able to bring in younger audiences and play well overseas.”

Alien invasion movies fit the bill perfectly.

“Plus, today’s audiences, when they pay their money, want to see it up there on the screen. Alien invasion movies allow for a very obvious use of big budgets.”

McClatchy Newspapers

They’re here! All year!

It’s going to be hard to avoid aliens at the movies. After Battle: Los Angeles and Mars Needs Moms comes:

Paul (March 18): A couple of vacationing geeks (Simon Pegg, Nick Frost) pick up an E.T.-type while scoping out the notorious Area 51 (allegedly the nexus of America’s research into alien visitations). Seth Rogen provides the voice of Paul.

Apollo 18 (April 22): Astronauts on the final moon landing are infected by an alien parasite.

Super 8 (June 10): This effort from J.J. Abrams and Steven Spielberg finds kids in the ’70s encountering a creature that has escaped from Area 51.

Transformers: Dark of the Moon (July 1): Hey, they’re not just robots that look like cars and trucks. They’re aliens from another world.

Cowboys & Aliens (July 29): In the old West, six-gun-toting cattle punchers (Harrison Ford, Daniel Craig) and laser-wielding space men square off for a showdown. Jon Favreau (the Iron Man franchise) directs.

The Darkest Hour (Aug. 5): Teen tourists (among them Emile Hirsch and Olivia Thirlby) are stranded in Moscow after an alien attack.

The Thing (Oct. 14): It’s a prequel to John Carpenter’s 1982 The Thing (which was a remake of the 1951 classic The Thing From Another World).

Area 51 (later this year): Director Oren Peli (Paranormal Activity) uses hand-held cameras to tell the tale of teens who infiltrate the top-secret government stronghold in search of proof that aliens exist

http://www.thespec.com/sports/article/499101--aliens-they-re-here-and-they-just-keep-coming

Guest
Guest


Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum