Alien
Movie Review:
This
is the product of another of my (in)famous DVD swaping missions.
I drew up a DVD wish list yesterday and my brother recommended
Aliens, so you could imagine my joy when I went to Woolworths
and got £40 for the Playstation2 game that I won on Tuesday
and then saw that all four of the Alien films were on a
special 3for2 offer. So, I got Alien, Aliens and The Thin
Red Line and even got £6 change so that made my Saturday
afternoon.
Anyhoo,
for some reason I never used to watch these sort of films
as a wee lad, I must have thought that they were just mindless
horror films and consequently I hadn't seen the whole movie
before. The last time I partially watched it was in about
1992 or something like that at Walpole's birthday, so naturally
I was looking forward to renewing my acquantance with this
"Sci-fi/Horror classic" as CRushton reliably informed me.
And
a Sci-Fi classic it is. First of all what was most striking
about the film for me was that it looks absolutley perfect,
it's dark and metallic and the environments in which the
action takes place (ie.on the planet and in the ships) could
not have been bettered, and when you consider that it was
made in 1979 it looks all the more impressive. The Alien
itelf is just good. The same approach is used in Alien that
was used to such good effect by Steven Speilberg in Jaws
- don't show to much of the monster because if it ends up
starring in its own film it doesn't just work.
And
so having said this I must mention Ridley Scott. I think
that the success of many of his films, again have a lot
to do with how good they look. Alien for one as I have already
mentioned, then you've got Blade Runner which although I'm
not a big fan of is similar, in that the future Los Angeles
that he created sets the basis for the whole mood of the
film as it did in Alien, and we all know about the effort
that went into making Gladiator. All three are extremely
detailed and created until they look perfect for the movie.
I particularly liked all the stuff he did with the T.V screens
and the sound when the crew go down to check out the planet
and they are in communication with the ship. It was pretty
cool. All the technical points of the film are first class.
Another
point about Ridley Scott as the director is that there is
an overwhelming feeling of suspense and anticipation during
the majority of the film, everytime someone walked round
the corner or opened a door you felt that the Alien would
be there waiting to rip their head off (but it never was!)
There are so many memorable bits in Alien and at least four
points that genuinely make you jump. For example - The Alien
has got to be one of, if not the most easily recognisable
image in all of the Sci-Fi genre and you could even argue
the fact for movies in general. Then there is the bit where
it jumps out of the egg onto John Hurt's face, then the
bit where it explodes out of his stomach, then the first
time you see it fully grown. The damn thing's got ultra-corrosive
blood for Pete's sake, how good is that.
I
was trying to find something to criticise this film for
so that I could give it 9 instead of 9.5 because I've been
told that Aliens is better, but I couldn't because it's
more or less perfect.
BBM
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