As May is for celebrating mothers and as Prometheus will open June 8th, I thought a discussion of Alien (the first movie) is in order. You didn’t know Prometheus is a prequel to the original Alien movie? That’s because they give a handful of clues yet never directly say that in any of the marketing. Two hints – directed by Ridley Scott and a 2-second shot in the trailer (a creature in a chair is seen which resembles the dead creature found by Nostromo crew). Dum, dum, duuuuum.
Ok, why mother’s day? Well, the alien queen has often been referred to as the mother of all mothers (I know, bad joke). So, here is my (hopefully brief) review of the first Alien movie. First disclaimer – I don’t even consider the 2 Alien vs. Predator so-called prequels (they have nothing really to do with the series although the first one was surprisingly penned by the original writer. Second disclaimer – I really like the first two and kinda iffy on the last two.
Alien was released in 1979, during the rebirth of Sci-Fi. Thanks to the success of Star Wars, fantasy movies moved out of the b-movie graveyard and into first class hits. The story came from the brain of Dan O’Bannon, a writer, director, and so much more. He worked on the special effects for Star Wars, wrote Dark Star, adapted Total Recall, and directed Return of the Living Dead (just to name a few credits). His vision was then shaped by meeting H.R. Giger. Today most people know the name, even if only for his design work on Alien. It was coming together…
Ridley Scott (now Sir Ridley Scott) was still a relatively new director. He wasn’t even the first choice for director. Nearly a dozen names were tossed into the ring until he finally got the job. Now he is famous, but he hadn’t yet directed Blade Runner, Gladiator, Thelma & Louise, Legend or Black Hawk Down. It was his idea to move the story more towards the horror side of sci-fi. He made bod choices, including selecting a woman to be the central character.
The characters as sketched out by O’Bannon were never assigned a gender (he was busy fleshing out the alien character and the story). Thanks to that quirk of fate, we have Sigourney Weaver as Ripley, the Warrant Officer and central character. She was primarily a theatre actress before Alien so she was unknown to most movie goers. She is joined by Veronica Cartwright as navigator Lambert. English actor John Hurt (known to today’s audiences as Mr. Ollivander in the Harry Potter series) plays Executive Officer Kane. Another English actor, Ian Holm (Bilbo Baggins in the Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy) plays science officer Ash (who has a secret). Yaphet Kotto – fresh off a villainous role in James Bond’s Live and Let Die – joins as Chief Engineer Parker. The cast is rounded out with Tom Skerritt as Captain Dallas and Harry Dean Stanton as engineer Brett.
Our story begins when the crew of the Nostromo is awakened by the ship (Mother) to investigate a ship nearby. It begins deceptively slow – banter among the crew, nothing exciting. Now I don’t want to give away too many spoilers – it doesn’t help that many bits have made their way into popular culture. I will say that if you are squeamish, don’t watch this movie. It you dislike being scared or having creepy aliens stalk you, avoid this movie. However, compared to today’s horror films, this is so tame. But the one scene I must talk about…THE scene. The crew is enjoying a meal when suddenly Kane goes into convulsions. Now Kane had just been released from sick bay…but no one realized he been impregnated by the alien. The forced cesarean delivery (eruption?) is a shock – and not just to the audience. I’ve heard a story where Ridley Scott gives the cast a basic run down of what is going to happen…but leaves out a lot of details. So when you see Veronica splashed with blood and screaming her head off, that is more real than you might think. On one hand – wow he really captured one hell of a performance; on the other hand, what a cruel trick. However, from that point on the roller coaster has begun. It is a very freaky ride. I personally don’t think I could ever watch it at night again (and I know what to expect).
So, if you haven’t seen the original Alien movie yet, consider this…do you like sci-fi? Do you like other Ridley Scott films? Do you like a good scare? Then you just might like this ride.