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Alien
(1979)
In director Ridley Scott's and 20th Century Fox's atmospheric
sci-fi thriller - it was an extremely suspenseful, space horror film
about a menacing, unstoppable, carnivorous, stowaway, hermaphroditic
Demon beast. The struggle to survive in the vacuum of space (basically
similar to haunted house tales) against the uninvited, primal and
deadly creature intensified for the crew members of a grimy, commercial
space freighter as they were eliminated one-by-one through corporate
machinations. Its memorable tagline was: "In
space, no one can hear you scream."
As a darker and less pristine version of
George Lucas' immensely popular Star Wars
(1977) from only two years earlier, and similar to Spielberg's
blockbuster Jaws (1975) about an
unseen terror lurking underwater (although set in space), Scott's
film reinvented the sci-fi horror genre, and set the tone and plots
for a slew of similar, imitative low-budget films during the decade
of the 1980s (and into the 1990s and beyond as well).
The screenplay for director Ridley Scott's film (only
his second feature film following The Duellists (1977)) was
written by Dan O'Bannon, who based the script upon a story (originally
titled Star Beast) that he had written with partner Ronald
Shusett. Nominated for two Academy Awards, Best Visual Effects and
Best Art Direction/Set Decoration, it won a single Oscar for Best
Visual Effects (awarded to H. R. Giger and four others). It spawned
three sequels - Aliens (1986),
Alien 3 (1992), and
Alien Resurrection
(1997) and other prequels and crossover films.
It was similar to the cycle
of cheap and campy 1950s B-type 'alien monster' films but possessed
superior production values, directorial talent and casting. This
box-office hit, budgeted at about $11 million, brought in almost
$80 million in revenues (in the US) and $105 million (worldwide).
At the film's center was a resourceful, self-reliant, hard-assed,
feminist action heroine (unknown stage actress Sigourney Weaver in
her first major film role).
Freudian and sexually-charged symbolism and images
abound - the beastly adult creature had bi-sexual features, and
one of the male crew members, 'impregnated' by the insidious creature
as a surrogate mother, gave 'birth' to the baby alien from his chest.
And the name for the starship's computer interface (2037) that awakened
(gave life to) the crew members was simply called "Mother" (or
MU-TH-R 182).
- in the opening scene - a 'birthing' scene -
seven hypersleeping crew members on the commercial space towing-freighter
Nostromo (with its computer interface known as "Mother")
in the year 2122 AD emerged from separate egg-shaped, coffin-like
cribs
- a non-human distress transmission-signal "of
unknown origin" had alerted them - and soon led them to an unsurveyed,
uncharted moon LV-426; there, the crew discovered a huge, derelict
alien spaceship that had crash landed on an uncharted planet, with
its two hind 'legs' visible and extending upwards; the crew explored
and entered the ship through vaginal openings leading
to the inside of the 'body' of the spacecraft; there, they found
a gigantic, fossilized, reptilian, alien creature - described as
leathery and skeletal with a ribbed surface; it was seated, with
its ribs bent outwards
- Lt. Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) suspected the
signal wasn't an SOS but a warning signal; the crew viewed
a pod field composed of rows of thousands of eggs (semi-translucent)
resting below a bluish, reactive mist; as he
explored the alien ship and the rows of egg sacs, the helmet and face
of Nostromo crew
member Kane (John Hurt) was attacked by a 'face-hugging' alien; the
insidious Face-hugger creature had a bilateral hand of eight fingers
that grasped and covered Kane's head - literally 'impregnating' him
[Note: later, its underside revealed dark, fleshy and moist-appearing
labial folds, and there was also a phallic-shaped proboscis that had
forcibly inserted itself into the victim's mouth]
- acting senior officer Ripley wanted to refuse entry
to the crew's ship for Kane and follow strict quarantine procedures,
but she was overruled when fellow crew member Ash (Ian Holm) allowed
them in; once
back onboard the Nostromo, Kane's
face was covered by the alien face-hugger as it choked his neck,
but fed him oxygen through a throat tube; there
was a failed attempt to surgically remove the parasitic Alien from
Kane's face, spilling an acid-like, yellow-bile liquid substance
that ate through metal layers in the ship; when the face-hugger
came off naturally and shed its dead carcass-skin (and died?),
Kane appeared to recover
- in the film's most startling and gory scene, as
the crew sat at a mess table for their last meal before a 10-month
journey back to Earth, Kane moaned, jerked violently, and
quivered as a phallic-shaped newborn baby
Alien burst from a bloody spot on his chest (a "Chestburster")
- the hissing, razor sharp-toothed monster/lizard (a "chromium-toothed
xenosprog") was literally "born" from the innards-guts
of the first infected crewman
Kane's (John Hurt) Gory Death From Alien Birth
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- the young beast opened its steel, teeth-rimmed jaws
and cried out - its birth howl - and then scurried off the table
to hide somewhere in the Nostromo; Kane's body
was ejected out of an airlock; the entire crew
now faced a homicidal Alien creature that had infested the ship and
would stalk them for nourishment; one by one as the crew members searched
for the creature, they were eliminated
- the life-and-death struggle with the relentless
Alien continued as it committed murders, now that it had grown to
full size as a Xenomorph; it was momentarily viewed as a slimy,
penis-headed beast about 7 feet tall, with dripping secretions
from its open vaginal-shaped mouth; inside the Xenomorph's mouth
was a second set of pharyngeal jaws
- crew member Brett (Harry Dean Stanton) went searching
for the crew's pet stowaway cat named Jones; Brett discovered the
shed skin of the creature on the floor - a sign that it was evolving
further and growing rapidly; he finally located the cat hiding
in a doorway and coaxed it toward him, but it hissed and recoiled
at him; unbeknownst to Brett, something behind him had caused the
cat to react - the movement of a long, coiled tail, and a side-view
of the grown monster's head with dripping saliva; in a shocking
moment, Brett was helplessly and brutally murdered by the hungry,
malevolent, giant killing machine with a direct piercing shot to
his brain
- in an air shaft of the Nostromo where the
creature was found to be using the ship's airshafts or cooling
ducts to move around, Captain Dallas (Tom Skerritt) with a flame-thrower
was guided with the help of a tracker to try and locate the alien
- when suddenly the tracker screen showed a second dot moving ominously
straight toward him: (Lambert: "Oh God, it's moving right
towards you. Move! Get out of there!"); the Alien ambushed
Dallas and attacked with two hands upraised when Dallas turned
and shone his light onto it - the monitor screen ended its transmission
with static and a very high-pitched whine
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Dallas' (Tom Skerritt) Death in an Air Shaft - Coming
Face-to-Face with the Alien
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- Ripley - now in command - announced a new aggressive
strategy to flush out the Alien: "We'll
go step-by-step and cut off every bulkhead and every vent until we
have it cornered, and then we'll blow it the f--k out into space";
to find answers, Ripley questioned "Mother" (the ship's
computer) and learned the harsh, corporate machinations behind the
alien - the Company employing them had deliberately rerouted them
to pick up the alien, and that the crew was expendable: ("Nostromo rerouted
to new co-ordinates. Investigate life form. Gather specimen. Priority
One. Insure return of organism for analysis. All other considerations
secondary. Crew expendable")
- after heroine Ripley discovered the mission of the Nostromo had
been sabotaged, she suspected crew-member Ash; Ripley now
understood that their true mission all along was to recover this
new, apparently indestructible life form; Ash's secret corporate mission
was to bring back the predatory Alien life-form from outer space
for The Company, an evil organization that wanted the Alien for
the nefarious Weapons Division
- black mechanic Parker (Yaphet Kotto) and navigator
Lambert (Veronica Cartwright) came to Ripley's rescue when she was
attacked by Ash after she confronted him; Parker struck a blow to
Ash's head with a silver fire extinguisher, sending him smashing
into the bulkhead and reeling into an uncontrollable spin while spurting
white plastic foam and liquid from his head. His out-of-control body
suffered severe spasms. Parker struck him again, separating Ash's
head almost completely from the neck - then he couldn't believe what
he saw: "It's
a robot! Ash is a goddamn robot!"
- after the bludgeoning, it was clear that Ash
was an android/robot; Ripley and Parker re-assembled and connected
enough of the wiring to Ash's severed head so that could maybe find
out how to kill the Alien; when Ash's severed head was reactivated,
he confirming their suspicions with a dire warning: "You still
don't understand what you're dealing with, do you? A perfect organism.
Its structural perfection is matched only by its hostility"; Ash
made it diabolically clear that the ship's human crew were expendable
and faced extraordinary odds in their coming battle against the uncaring
and hostile machinations of Mother, the Company, and the Alien itself
- after his last words, Ash was destructively unplugged;
Parker blasted the remains of Ash's head and body with the incinerator
gun, and the flames melted it down to a plastic skull
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Ash (Ian Holm): "You still don't understand what
you're dealing with, do you?"
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- Ripley decided upon a new strategy - to self-destruct
the Nostromo, and try to escape in the shuttlecraft Narcissus: "We're
gonna blow up the ship. We'll take our chances in the shuttle. Blow up the ship"
- the next two gruesome casualties were Parker and
Lambert; Parker suffered a painful,
bloody death when the creature turned first toward him, held him
in the air, and bared its ugly mouth and teeth; Lambert
was then lethally attacked when the creature's phallic tail slid up between
her legs and she made pseudo-orgasmic grunts and howls of pain over an
intercom as she was killed (offscreen), implying that she was literally
raped
- left alone as the sole remaining crew member, Ripley
heroically activated the emergency destruct system to blow up the
ship, but then realized the Alien had blocked her way to the shuttlecraft;
unable to stop the self-destruct detonation sequence, Ripley was
able to successfully abandon ship in the shuttlecraft Narcissus with
Jones (she told herself: "I got you! You son-of-a-bitch"),
just before the Nostromo exploded
- while preparing to enter stasis inside
the Narcissus shuttle (with a throbbing blue strobe light), Ripley
was starkly revealed in a braless, sleeveless white tank top and skimpy,
low-cut mini-panties; she suddenly realized to her horror that
the alien had stowed away and was hidden onboard nearby
- in the tense ending sequence, she protected her
fragile flesh from penetration by dressing herself
in an astronaut suit; then, she confronted the
threatening, phallic alien beast; she fought the
creature to the death - when she opened the airlock hatch to expel and
jettison the Xenomorph into outer space, it held on until Ripley shot
a grappling-hook harpoon at the creature to completely eject or expel
it, but it still persisted by grasping a rope (its umbilical cord) until
she blasted and incinerated it with white-heat exhaust from the ship's engines
- then, Ripley entered hypersleep with Jones for the
long journey home in the Narcissus after recording and entering
her final log: ("This is Ripley, last survivor of the Nostromo, signing off")
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The "Birth" of the Hypersleeping Crew on
the Spaceship Freighter the Nostromo
The Discovery of a Crashed Alien Spacecraft With Two Extended Legs
A Giant Fossilized Alien Creature
Alien Egg Pods
A Giant Alien Egg Sac
Face-Hugging Alien Attached to Kane's (John Hurt) Face
The Underside of the Face-Hugger
With Parker (Yaphet Kotto), Sickened Kane Having a Seizure at the Crew's
Mess Table
The Xenomorph's Double-Set of Jaws (Phallic and/or Vaginal)
Brett's (Harry Dean Stanton) Murder by Alien
Sole Survivor Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) in the Shuttlecraft Narcissus
The Alien Partially-Expelled From Airlock
The Alien Hanging On by an 'Umbilical Cord'
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