The commercial vessel Nostromo
receives a distress call from an unexplored planet. After searching for
survivors, the crew heads home only to realize that a deadly bioform has joined
them.
Director: Ridley Scott
Writers: Dan O'Bannon (story), Ronald Shusett
(story).
Stars: Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, John Hurt
Storyline:
A commercial crew aboard the deep
space towing vessel, Nostromo is on its way home when they pick an SOS warning
from a distant planet. What they don't know is that the SOS warning is not like
any other ordinary warning call. Picking up the signal, the crew realize that
they are not alone on the spaceship when an alien stowaway is on the cargo
ship.
Alien Movie Reviews:
Director Ridley Scott's well-honed
talents of pacing and editing create a tense atmosphere that superbly conveys
dread and fear of an unknown, unseen evil entity. In 1979, the technology
didn't exist to generate a computer image of a Being from another world, and
thank God, because this film would have sucked just like all these post-Alien
creature features do. Everyone who loves this movie knows what I'm talking
about.
Ridley Scott had to be extremely careful not to show a full shot of the Alien, except in very brief scenes, and not to reveal exactly how it moves, because then we would see that it is just some tall, skinny guy in a rubber suit. Nowadays, some computer guy would whip up a really scary-looking, but nevertheless FAKE-looking (yes, computer guys, we can tell) Alien, and the director would not have to even think about trying to breathe life into H.R. Giger's hallucinations to make a successful picture.
The dark, cold beauty of this film will never be equaled.
Ridley Scott had to be extremely careful not to show a full shot of the Alien, except in very brief scenes, and not to reveal exactly how it moves, because then we would see that it is just some tall, skinny guy in a rubber suit. Nowadays, some computer guy would whip up a really scary-looking, but nevertheless FAKE-looking (yes, computer guys, we can tell) Alien, and the director would not have to even think about trying to breathe life into H.R. Giger's hallucinations to make a successful picture.
The dark, cold beauty of this film will never be equaled.

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