Did that Alien just give me the finger?

Is it possible for an alien to give you the bird? The classic alien in Science Fiction (or around some trailer parks, Science Fact) has a big head, big eyes, skinny body and hands. Although having some distinguishing features that set them aside, they are certainly humanoid with a tubular body, arms, legs and a head. But what are the odds that intelligent life, at least capable of traveling the stars, communicating across long distances, and playing music in the Mos Eisley Cantina, would evolve with a Humanoid body plan? Does Science Fiction have it right, or is it just easier to put makeup and prosthetics on human actors?

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Halloween Smackdown!

Frankenstein; or The Modern Prometheus is one of the earliest examples of Science Fiction. Mary Shelley began the novel when she was only 19 years old, and it was first published (anonymously) when she was 21, in 1818. The idea came to Mary in the form of a dream after her, her husband Percy Shelley, Lord Byron and John Poidori decided to have a competition to see who could write the best horror story. The novel takes place in Geneva, an area Mary had travelled through where occult ideas such as galvanism (the contraction of a muscle that is stimulated by an electric current) had become favorite topics of conversation. The novel tells the story of Doctor Victor Frankenstein, who has become obsessed with theories of science that focus on achieving natural wonders. He witnesses an oak tree split in half by lightning and is inspired to capture its power while developing secret techniques to infuse life back into inanimate bodies. Victor is forced to construct a larger creature because he finds it difficult to replicate small parts of the human anatomy. His creature therefore becomes hideous compared to the ideal beauty he was striving for. After bringing the creature to life, Victor is repulsed by what he has done and flees the laboratory leaving the creature behind, abandoned and hopelessly sad and full of Daddy issues. The two lives, Victor’s and the creature’s, are now intertwined until they are ultimately their own undoing, dragging everyone connected to them into the horror, including Victor’s fiancé Elizabeth. Since the novel’s publication it has spawned incredible popularity and a whole new genre of horror, not to mention its contribution to Science Fiction.

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