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Punch it, Bishop! ALIENS 25th Anniversary Appreciation Thread

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Buckethead said:
I do not know the movie of which you speak but if I did I would tell you that whenever an artist's vision is corrupted, the artist hates that thing with hate of a thousand suns.

Then a lot of directors in Hollywood must hate a lot of their product then, since a lot of stuff gets corrupted.

I do think Fincher's issue is with the experience of making it. It was just an awful first time directing experience, I am shocked Fincher made a movie after that. But I am glad he did.
 
Every director gets a project squashed/interfered with.

Orson Wells had The Magnificent Ambersons, Paul Thomas Anderson had Sydney, and Ridley Scott had every movie he's ever made.
 
Buckethead said:
Every director gets a project squashed/interfered with.

Orson Wells had The Magnificent Ambersons, Paul Thomas Anderson had Sydney, and Ridley Scott had every movie he's ever made.

So you're saying Ridley Scott hates every movie he's ever made.
 
icarus-daedelus said:
this is such a strange thing to say about Aliens of all films. Intensity, sure, but unease, disquiet, and anxiety? Maybe I'm too desensitized but I haven't felt any of those things about this movie (past the age of 10 or so.) Not entertainment? Uhhh.
Yet, it is a very positive review. That is one of my favorite reviews of his because of that. He goes through all the things about the film that made him uneasy, then praises it for being expertly made and suspenseful.
 
Buckethead said:
Yep. Initially.

Unlike most others, he makes Director's Cuts after the bad versions come out.

I don't think you're correct on this. He actually gets flack for not standing up for his vision enough. The DC of Kingdom of Heaven is his original cut of the film, but the studio asked him to cut it down to closer to 2 hours and he obliged. I think experienced directors realize that there is a give and take with the studios and accept that. I really don't think they hate their own films just because they had to change a thing or two. Fincher's experience with Alien 3 is a bit different as it was his first film, they started shooting without a finished script, they never let him have full power, spied on him and undermined him and eventually kicked him off the movie.
 
Scullibundo said:
Here's some B-roll footage of Cameron directing the actors at Pinewood.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQ2hykbsjTc

And what everybody should have already seen:

THE MAKING OF ALIENS

Still gotta laugh at all the shit Cameron had to put up with from the British crews in trying to make Aliens.
Thanks for the latter link, watching tonight and tomorrow.

Aliens still stands as one of the best action movies ever, and one of the scariest. I love that Cameron decided to make a terrifying film that was not a retread of Alien, but held structural parallels.

We're on an express elevator to hell, goin' down.
PhoncipleBone said:
Yet, it is a very positive review. That is one of my favorite reviews of his because of that. He goes through all the things about the film that made him uneasy, then praises it for being expertly made and suspenseful.
Yeah. I'm a bit desensitized at my age as well, but Aliens did to me what it did to Ebert back then. Much of what makes it so effective is the long build ups before action releases. The sound of that motion tracker gradually rising in pitch....good lord. It haunted my dreams for years.
 
Wow... 25 years old?

I must watch this movie at least four times a year.

What would be the best blue ray set to buy? Tempted to grab one now...
 
icarus-daedelus said:
this is such a strange thing to say about Aliens of all films. Intensity, sure, but unease, disquiet, and anxiety? Maybe I'm too desensitized but I haven't felt any of those things about this movie (past the age of 10 or so.) Not entertainment? Uhhh.
Every generation has a threshold. Look at the reactions to Psycho when it released, or even more famously, people running from the theater screaming during showings of King Kong in 1933.
 
My favorite interview from that making-of documentary is with James Horner. Sounds like James and Gale treated him like shit and he ended up delivering, arguably, the best score he's ever written. I am surprised that he and Cameron were able to reconnect many years later on Titanic after that experience.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6aeMK-S5Pyw
 
JB1981 said:
My favorite interview from that making-of documentary is with James Horner. Sounds like James and Gale treated him like shit and he ended up delivering, arguably, the best score he's ever written. I am surprised that he and Cameron were able to reconnect many years later on Titanic after that experience.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6aeMK-S5Pyw

Its not even close to being the best score he's written.
 
I need to buy the Blu-Ray collection, that's for sure.

Though I'm one probably alone in this; I've gotten the most enjoyment out of Ressurection. It's my favorite Alien-movie. Aliens is in second place and I don't care much for Alien or Alien3. Really looking forward to Prometheus.
 
kinoki said:
I need to buy the Blu-Ray collection, that's for sure.

Though I'm one probably alone in this; I've gotten the most enjoyment out of Ressurection. It's my favorite Alien-movie. Aliens is in second place and I don't care much for Alien or Alien3. Really looking forward to Prometheus.
You are alone on that.
 
JB1981 said:
My favorite interview from that making-of documentary is with James Horner. Sounds like James and Gale treated him like shit and he ended up delivering, arguably, the best score he's ever written. I am surprised that he and Cameron were able to reconnect many years later on Titanic after that experience.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6aeMK-S5Pyw

No one in the history of the multiverse has ever argued that it's his best score.

Especially not if they've already seen the Star Trek film he ripped most of it out of.
 
kinoki said:
I need to buy the Blu-Ray collection, that's for sure.

Though I'm one probably alone in this; I've gotten the most enjoyment out of Ressurection. It's my favorite Alien-movie. Aliens is in second place and I don't care much for Alien or Alien3. Really looking forward to Prometheus.


Considering your tastes, I couldn't possibly imagine why you'd be looking forward to Prometheus.
 
Just watched the Aliens Blu-ray a few days ago. It should really be THE blueprint on how to make an action film. Spend 40 min to build the story, 20 min to insert cast into terrible situation, next 50 in and out of suspense / action sequences and last 27 min in full out non-stop action with an epic boss battle.

One thing in common with Alien and Aliens is that Ripley is surrounded by memorable, non-annoying characters. Capt. Dallas, Lambert, Kane, Parker, Hudson, Vasquez, Newt, Bishop, and Hicks. Alien 3 and Alien Resurrection she's surrounded by fools that nobody remembers.

But the major thing that makes Ripley amazing in Alien and Aliens is her writing. You can see in each film when she has dialogue where she stands up for herself, leads with assured direction and takes action into her own hands. In Alien 3 she's written to be overthrown by loudmouth prisoners and in Resurrection she's introspective, passive and doesn't even want to kill the Alien.

After Prometheus I hope Ridley or James Cameron look into one definitive Alien sequel to end it all. Ripley deserves it.
 
If you want more Aliens read the Dark Horse comics. There's some fine storytelling to expand on that whole mythos.
 
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wzLmL.jpg
 
Scullibundo said:
Still gotta laugh at all the shit Cameron had to put up with from the British crews in trying to make Aliens.


If the guy doesnt understand the importance of tea breaks then he is a cretin. Powered by tea the british crews made some of the best and long lasting effects, visuals and atmosphere ever put to tape.

cupoftea2.jpg


FUEL OF THE GODS.
 
dalin80 said:
If the guy doesnt understand the importance of tea breaks then he is a cretin. Powered by tea the british crews made some of the best and long lasting effects, visuals and atmosphere ever put to tape.

cupoftea2.jpg


FUEL OF THE GODS.

That looks like coffee to me.

In Cameron's America, tea's a translucent brown with a lemon wedge!

And thank god we don't need to see those shoes for another century.
 
How About No said:
That looks like coffee to me.

In Cameron's America, tea's a translucent brown with a lemon wedge!

And thank god we don't need to see those shoes for another century.


COFFEE?? COFFEE??????!!!???!

out.
get out.
 
kinoki said:
I need to buy the Blu-Ray collection, that's for sure.

Though I'm one probably alone in this; I've gotten the most enjoyment out of Ressurection. It's my favorite Alien-movie. Aliens is in second place and I don't care much for Alien or Alien3. Really looking forward to Prometheus.
Alien Resurrection is what made me hate Joss Whedon, because even after it was essentially unanimous that it was the worst possible Alien movie, he maintained that the script was great and everything else is what made it shit.

It was an awful script and he wouldn't even take responsibility.
 
The reactor is going critical. The countdown is on. The clock is ticking...

Scullibundo said:
RIPLEY: "See you, Hicks"
http://suitupscene.com/files/scenes/aliens-1142276.jpg[/IM
HICKS: "Dwayne. It's Dwayne..."
[IMG]http://suitupscene.com/files/scenes/aliens-1142080.jpg[/IM
Beat. Ripley looks touched.
RIPLEY: "Ellen."
[IMG]http://suitupscene.com/files/scenes/aliens-1142373.jpg[/IM
Beat.
HICKS: "Don't be gone long, Ellen."
[IMG]http://suitupscene.com/files/scenes/aliens-1142080.jpg[/IM
[/QUOTE]

Ultimately they will make it out with one or two seconds to spare. That tender little exchange nearly cost everyone their lives. ;)
 
There are so many amazing things about this film that I know I really can't do a proper appreciation post. I love this movie so much I feel like I can't do it justice without spending an exorbitant amount of time writing it, and even then I know I'd have to watch it again (and I just saw it last week!). Probably once with commentary on too.

GAF even managed to get Ebert's review in on the first page which has always struck me as the best non-cast/crew commentary on the film; this is a movie that feels like a punch to the stomach, even after its bite has been watered downed by years of repeat viewings and seeing it pretty much cut and paste into the gaming world via Halo and Starcraft.

I don't understand the back-and-forth between Alien and Aliens fans; Alien always struck me as a sci-fi/horror movie where Aliens is a sci-fi Action movie; same saga, almost different genres. I love both movies, but where Aliens is my Absolute Number One Favorite Action Movie of all Time, Alien isn't my favorite horror-themed film. Alien also requires that I compare it to Scott's other sci-fi masterpiece, Blade Runner, and I think in my mind that brings Alien down slightly. Unfair, I know, but that's just how things worked out.

On Director's Cut vs. Theatrical, I honestly prefer the Director's Cut for the little bits and pieces that make the film feel more solid; The death of Ripley's daughter really defines her relationship and the lengths she goes to for Newt much better. After dumping the Queen out of the Airlock, you notice that Newt runs to Ripley and calls her "Mommy" instead of "Ripley". The final scene of the film is Ripley and Newt in the stasis pods, at such an angle that Ripley appears to be sleeping next to her new-found daughter and watching over her. Without the scene explaining Ripley's loss early in the film, it just doesn't jump out so well or have quite the same impact.

The colony scenes aren't required but nice, same with the auto-guns. There are a few scenes here and there with the marines that don't really serve much purpose, but viewed as a whole, any minute where people are walking around looking for something or getting ready to do something is another minute of tension building up for the inevitable explosion.

Edit: Fuck, forgot the exchange between Hicks and Ripley where they use eachother's first names was DC-only. Chalk that up as another reason I favor the DC.

Also, despite going on to do amazing work in Terminator 2 and Jurassic Park, I feel like Stan Winston is at his absolute peak here (he won his first Oscar for it). Those other two films suffer slightly because early CGI is used and looks cheap, bringing the rest of the films down slightly (not knocking either of them, love me some T2 and JP too!). Apart from a few rear-projection shots, everything looks good even today. There's puppetry, miniatures, guys-in-suits... and what's sad is that nowadays it would just be some god damned CGI-monstrosity that looks more like a guy in a rubber suit than the actual guy in a rubber suit. Winston also got to do the directing work for the scene where Newt is shoulder-deep in water as Ripley tries to cut her out as the aliens swarm in and one erupts from beneath the water. I'm not sure if the shot stands out because I know he personally handled it or if it's just really well done and creepy, but I think it's one of the top scenes in the film.

Was just discussing with a friend the other day how Cameron even managed to find a perfect child actor (which is dangerous territory) in Carrie Henn.

It's also worth mentioning that while James Horner has had better scores since, he really cut his teeth on Aliens (it was his first major score and also his first Oscar nod). I often wonder what his score might be like if he were given the opportunity to work at his own pace.

So... yeah... Aliens. Fuck Yeah!
Wrote a god damned huge post while trying not to!
 
Furret said:
No one in the history of the multiverse has ever argued that it's his best score.

Especially not if they've already seen the Star Trek film he ripped most of it out of.

which star trek film might that be lol
 
JB1981 said:
which star trek film might that be lol
Due to time constraints, Horner lifted a lot of cues from his own work on Star Trek II. He and Cameron weren't on friendly terms after that, but eventually patched up their relationship to work on Titanic and Avatar.
 
tuffy said:
Due to time constraints, Horner lifted a lot of cues from his own work on Star Trek II. He and Cameron weren't on friendly terms after that, but eventually patched up their relationship to work on Titanic and Avatar.

LOL. Time constraints nothing. Horner lifts from his own work all the time. James HORNer.
 
I'm ready, man, check it out. I am the ultimate badass! State of the badass art! You do NOT wanna fuck with me. Check it out! Hey Ripley, don't worry. Me and my squad of ultimate badasses will protect you! Check it out! Independently targeting particle beam phalanx. Vwap! Fry half a city with this puppy. We got tactical smart missiles, phase-plasma pulse rifles, RPGs, we got sonic electronic ball breakers! We got nukes, we got knives, sharp sticks...
 
Good movie... but I don't know. I only really like the final 40 min or so. The characters besides Ripley, Hicks, Bishop and Burke made me want to punch who ever finalized the dialog. It is so bad and cheesy, especially compared to the realistic interactions of the first film.
 
tuffy said:
Due to time constraints, Horner lifted a lot of cues from his own work on Star Trek II. He and Cameron weren't on friendly terms after that, but eventually patched up their relationship to work on Titanic and Avatar.
And Avatar has terrible score.

James Hornered!
 
Crucified said:
Alien Resurrection is what made me hate Joss Whedon, because even after it was essentially unanimous that it was the worst possible Alien movie, he maintained that the script was great and everything else is what made it shit.

It was an awful script and he wouldn't even take responsibility.

Joss Whedon fucking blows and that's all that needs to be said.
 
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