
- Morons from Outer Space
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Amazon
From $1.65 (3rd Party New)
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Best Buy
From $3.99 (New)

From $1.65 (3rd Party New)
From $3.99 (New)

| Latest | $1.65 Apr 22, '16 |
| Highest | $3.44 Jul 16, '15 |
| Lowest | $0.75 Feb 16, '15 |
| Average | $1.65 (30d avg) $1.64 (90d avg) $1.63 (180d avg) $1.45 (365d avg) $1.22 (Lifetime average) |
| Added | Oct 9, 2014 |
| Latest | $0.54 Apr 22, '16 |
| Highest | $0.63 Jan 12, '15 |
| Lowest | $0.01 Oct 9, '14 |
| Average | $0.54 (30d avg) $0.57 (90d avg) $0.56 (180d avg) $0.55 (365d avg) $0.47 (Lifetime average) |
| Added | Oct 9, 2014 |
30 day average: 113,796
90 day average: 114,445
Sci-fi meets hilarity in this wildly adventurous comedy that goes where no manor moronhas gone before. We can now safely conclude that there is no intelligent life in space. Four holiday travelers from the planet Blob have somehow lost control of their rented spaceship and crash-landed on Earth. At first, the military and scientific teams assume they are higher life forms. But not for long. Idiocy is hard to hide. The stranded wayfarers are complete morons, content to drink their green beer, sing ear-splitting pop songs and talk to trash cans, which they assume are the planet's leaders. But not until an enterprising journalist decides to market their dazed innocence and turn them into glitzy superstars do they find their true mission to Earth. With amusing parodies of famous film classics like and warp-speed laughs, this is one screwball comedy that's out of this world.

| Last Seen | |
| Highest | $3.99 Apr 19, '14 |
| Lowest | $3.99 Apr 19, '14 |
| Average | NA |
| Added | Apr 19, 2014 |
In this partially successful Brit sci-fi comedy, four invading aliens cannot really think their way out of a paper bag, much less conquer Earth with their superior knowledge (apparently also non-existent). Of the aliens, Desmond (Jimmy Nail) is particularly thick-headed and leaves Bernard (Mel Smith) dangling out in space, Sandra (Joanne Pearce) attracts the romantic interest of British Commander Matteson (Dinsdale Landen), and Julian (Paul Brown) is along for the ride. After this trio causes a traffic snarl when they land on a British expressway, they are first interrogated and then given jobs in showbiz so they can support themselves. This leads to a great rock singing career, which in turn, leads to a U.S. tour -- though this does not equate rock singers and aliens. Meanwhile, Bernard has been saved from his abandonment in space by an unlikely space-wanderer who drops him off in the U.S., where he is put in an insane asylum. Sure enough, when his three companions start their U.S. tour, Bernard escapes and tries to rejoin them. The saga continues on until some sort of very unlikely rescue seems in store. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi