ALIEN: THE DIRECTOR'S CUT
Verdict: 5/5 stars
Alien is part of John Ulmer's Favorite Movies Series
(http://www.wiredonmovies.com/favorites). Alien: The Director's Cut is
equally recommended.
REVIEW BY JOHN ULMER
I attended a screening of "Alien: The Director's Cut" not four hours ago,
and not four hours ago I was thrilled. I knew that I was going to get a
chance to witness one of the most atmospheric and thrilling films of all
time--with added footage. Fans who picked up the DVD (now out of print to
make way for the new "Alien Quadrilogy") may have already seen a few of the
deleted segments, while other fans who didn't, and are waiting on the
promised quadrilogy to be released next year, will be enthralled. This film
doesn't feature a wealth of new footage such as "Apocalypse Now Redux,"
scenes that could damage its flow, but instead gives us scenes that click
together a bit more. One of these is when Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) finds
Dallas (Tom Skerritt) attached to the wall with alien mucus seen later in
"Aliens." It doesn't make sense to feature it in the original cut, and
director Ridley Scott was smart for deleting it when the film hit theaters
back in 1979. It doesn't really make much sense, and stops the gripping flow
of the ending when Ripley is racing to get to the escape shuttle. It causes
people to think, What? and then they start letting their minds wander. But
now that we have seen "Aliens," and understand the significance of the mucus
(sounds funny, huh?), it makes complete sense. This is the fan's version.
Plus, it's fun to get to see the movie on the big screen for those who
didn't twenty-four years ago.
The plot (as if you didn't know it by now): A mining ship in the future
named the Nostromo, carrying seven passengers back to earth, stops in its
course to locate an SOS beacon on a distant planet, which may, or may not,
actually be a warning signal as opposed to a distress beacon--too late to
find out, since they land on the planet and one of the investigating crew
members, Kane (John Hurt), gets attacked by a strange alien creature that
attaches itself to his face and doesn't let go.
The ship's captain, Dallas, hauls him into the ship's lab, where he is
looked over by the ship's scientist, Ash (Ian Holm), who takes an odd
affection to the creature that bothers Ripley, the second in command. The
technician, Parker (Yaphet Kotto), doesn't like any of this either, and
their suspicions reach a maximum when Kane wakes up from his sleep, the
alien unattached from his face, and proceeds to eat irregularly. Later that
night, back in their course to earth, a small alien bursts from Kane's
stomach at dinner. The alien escapes into the depths of the ship. Search
parties commence but the alien starts to grow more fierce and terrifying as
the film treads on--soon it's a man-eating set of teeth bent on killing the
lot of them.
Atmosphere is part of what makes "Alien" the terrifying nail-biter it is.
This isn't a routine horror flick that jumps through all the hoops--it's
original to a certain degree. Its inspiration comes from earlier films but
it improves upon them all for the most part. From its opening shots to its
final, it is eerie, moody, and scary. To show millions of aliens abounding
from hidden crevices would be typical--the fear of "Alien" lies in the
anticipation of the jump, or the startle. We wait, and wait, and suddenly
something leaps at the screen. It's not the alien. The alien is in front of
the thing that jumped. Our heart stops and then jolts again. Forget pumping
volts of electricity through dead people--place them in front of this and
their hearts will pound once again.
James Cameron's sequel "Aliens" (1986) is often considered the better of the
series, in terms of excitement and aliens themselves. But "Alien," like the
movie "Signs" (2002), isn't really about aliens. The film "Aliens" is
terrific--but so is "Alien," as its central idea is too unnerve the audience
through bumps and jolts. Not through blood and guts. Depends on what your
personal preferences are--startles or explosions? I appreciate and enjoy
both.
Ridley Scott knows how to evoke wonder and magnificence from his shots. The
opening sequence that shows the exterior of the Nostromo and then dissolves
to the interior, crawling along the shafts as we wait for something scary to
happen and then forget as we are wowed by the movement and visuals, is a
fine example of the art of filmmaking and not the filmmaking itself. Cameron
is one of my favorite directors. Scott, when given the right material, can
turn out wonders. "Alien" is his crowning achievement alongside the dark
1982 classic "Bladerunner," another sci-fi feast for the eyes and mind. I
wasn't a fan of "Gladiator," but let's not bring that up, shall we?
"Alien" may seem tame by today's standards. But this isn't a film that wants
to be another mindless blood and guts extravaganza. This is a smart horror
film, one that is as involving as it visually magnificent, one that is as
amazing as it is terrifying. This is horror at its finest. And if you didn't
get to see it on the big screen last time around, now is your chance to get
a glance at what you've been missing all these years.
Notes: The new "Alien: Director's Cut" version features over three minutes
of never-before-seen sequences, as well as restored prints and a newly
remixed surround-sound track. Attached to the director's release of the film
is also the first teaser trailer for next year's "Alien vs. Predator."
- John Ulmer
Webmaster of The Movie Portal
http://www.wiredonmovies.com/
Updated daily, offers over one thousand free movie scripts and hundreds of
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