New Scientist on MSN
Read an extract from Kim Stanley Robinson's sci-fi classic Red Mars
This is the opening of Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars, the New Scientist Book Club read for April, as humans come to the ...
The Forward on MSNOpinion
Israel is gleefully copying Nazi imagery in the propaganda war with Iran
The octopus — with tentacles splayed, gripping the globe — was a staple of European antisemitic caricature in the lead-up to ...
It's rare that a film adaptation outshines its source material but science fiction has given us several remarkable examples ...
Raduga was facing the same challenge, only instead of clipping his hair with scissors, he was drilling into his skull, and ...
Venezuelan sues Trump administration for $1.3M over ‘government-sanctioned torture’ at notorious El Salvador prison - ...
As of March 19, neither Alien.gov or Aliens.gov directs online users to a completed website.
Religion News Service on MSN
What are starseeds? The alien subculture offering a conspiratorial spiritual escape
(RNS) — Starseeds say they’re not from this planet. Online, they’re sharing mythologies and rituals that, for some, are ...
Sound designers Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van der Ryn tell IndieWire about reverse-engineering and performing a non-human ...
Joe Scott on MSN
This alien has no face, no eyes, and talks in chords - then science made it make sense
Rocky may be one of the strangest aliens ever imagined: a five-legged creature made of rock, living on a crushing ...
Whether it's horrors like Suspiria or thrillers like Drive, these movies are triumphs of blocking that prioritize mood, vibes, and looks over story.
In Hollywood, success doesn’t always look the way anyone expects. Case in point: the Stargate movie. Released in 1994, the ...
Gearbox Software releases a massive new update for Borderlands 4 filled with bug fixes, quality of life improvements, and the ...
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