The movie "Battle: Los Angles" has hit the theaters addressing an age-old question: Are we alone? More specifically, it asks another not-so age-old question: Are aliens going to land in Los Angeles, trash the Hollywood sign and mess up Malibu? So, in this special Wide Angle, Discovery News investigates the motivation behind the movie and uncovers the real risk of mankind becoming alien fodder.

In the new movie Battle: Los Angeles, mankind fights off an alien invasion. But could a race of intergalactic beings really attack us? Jorge Ribas gets some answers.

Once again it's up to the military to stop the invading hoards of aliens. But what could life out there really be like? Jorge Ribas talks to SETI astronomer Seth Shostak to find out.

It's having a hard time generating any positive reviews, but on watching the movie Battle: Los Angeles, I was pleasantly surprised. In fact, better than that, I enjoyed it.

As the movie "Battle: Los Angeles" hits theaters, there's one question that remains unanswered: Why would aliens bother attacking us?

We're an inquisitive lot, we humans. But could our inquisitiveness ultimately kill us?

The esteemed astrophysicist Stephen Hawking has assured us that even the biggest and baddest black holes will just evaporate away. But he’s not so optimistic about the mood of any advanced civilizations in the Milky Way galaxy that we might encounter someday.

Just how ridiculous can 2012 doomsday theories get? Well, according to the Examiner.com, 2012 could be filled with an alien invasion fleet after "3 very large, very fast moving objects" were spotted in some astronomical images.

Probably one of the highest risk/reward activity in modern science is being conducted by a very small group of astronomers: the search for signals from extraterrestrial civilizations (SETI).

Just because we haven't found life, doesn't mean we don't have our theories for where life might be hiding.

Glowing red orbs dripping molten metal, giant cigar-shaped objects, and fully illuminated discs are among the descriptions of the unidentified flying objects that have been seen hovering over nuclear weapon sites for the last 65 years.
our sites
video
shop
stay connected
corporate