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		No. 24a - 
		Alien (1979)20th Century-Fox Productions/Brandywine Productions, 20th Century-Fox
 In Space No One Can Hear You 
		Scream.
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				Alien (1979), 
				DML Rating: ★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect Director: Ridley Scott; 
		Screenplay: Dan O'Bannon; 
		Writer: Ronald Shusett;
		
		Rated R for sci-fi gore, violence, strong language Starring: Tom Skerritt, Sigourney 
		Weaver, Veronica Cartwright, Harry Dean Stanton, John Hurt, Ian Holm, 
		Yaphet Kotto Movie Introduction: In deep space the crew of the 
		commercial starship Nostromo is awakened from their cryo-sleep 
		halfway through their journey home to Earth. The ship's computer, 
		Mother, gives orders to investigate a distress 
		call from an alien vessel. Three crew members, Captain Dallas, Kane and 
		Lambert exit their craft and explore the oddly shaped ship. There Kane 
		stumbles upon a nest of eggs deep within the alien ship. As Kane inspects 
		one of the orbs, it opens up, a creature leaps out and 
		attaches itself to Kane's helmet. Against Warrant Officer Ripley's objections, Kane is brought aboard. The creature has melted 
		through his helmet and is now attached to his face. Kane is in a coma, 
		but the organism is keeping him alive.
		
		 
		 Defining Moment:  
		chest pains The creature on Kane's face 
		appears to die 
		and falls off. After a brief medical examination, he appears to be fine. 
		The crew sits down for one last dinner before cryo-sleep, and the mood is light and pleasant. Kane 
		starts to enjoy his meal, but suddenly cannot swallow and appears to be 
		choking. He grasps at his chest, and collapses on the table in 
		incredible pain.  It is here that we learn the truth about the alien's gestation 
		using Kane as its host.   
		Something subtle you might have missed:  Jonesy Aboard the Nostromo is 
		Jones the cat, called "Jonesy". This ginger American shorthair 
		witnesses one grisly murder and almost costs Ripley her life trying to 
		keep the darn cat safe.    There are theories out there in 
		the nerd world that perhaps Jonesy was secretly a second android. This 
		might explain why the alien did not attack the cat when it hand the 
		chance. Is it possible that the cat was not a warm-blooded life form?   My theory is that the director needed 
		another creative way to put crew 
		members in senseless danger, and logically, risking all to save a stupid 
		cat would be most believable.  Memorable Quotes: 
		 “Something has attached itself 
		to him. We have to get him to the infirmary right away.” - 
		Capt. Dallas "You still don't understand what 
		you're dealing with, do you? The perfect organism. Its structural 
		perfection is matched only by its hostility." - Science Officer Ash 
		Dad's Review: In the late '70, sci-fi movies 
		were finding a wider audience thanks to that little space flick called
		Star Wars 
		(1977). In 1979, when Alien 
		hit cinemas, I embraced the fact that this thriller was not 
		populated with friendly Wookies and 
		English-accented droids. This was a uniquely terrifying experience, soon to be classified as "science fiction 
		horror".  Alien basically starts as a "day on 
		the life" of a space salvage crew. It does not pretend to be cute. The Nostromo 
		crew's life is mundane for the most part. Just like New York City 
		firemen or Alabama trash collectors. These are just salvage 
		workers out in space, 
		doing their job.  When a distress signal rouses 
		them from sleep, their orders are to investigate. Unfortunately for them, they encounter an organism 
		- one that has been 
		lying dormant, waiting to be found. It needs to gestate, to propagate. 
		It does so efficiently and without remorse. Did I mention that it has 
		concentrated acid for blood? 
		 The
		Nostromo crew of salvage workers, frankly, have very little chance against it. One aspect of this film was 
		particularly revolutionary. This was the late '70 and, in film, women were 
		rarely portrayed as leaders or heroes. 
		I particularly admire that 
		director Ridley Scott took a different angle. The director purposefully 
		conditions the viewers to see Dallas as the crew's leader. He is the 
		typical white male, handsome, in a position of authority, so we expect him to take charge and save the mission. 
		However, this is not what occurs.   It is the female officer, 
		Ripley, who makes sound decisions, pulls people together, and uses her courage and ingenuity. She assumes command and takes action. The 
		film industry is only now acknowledging the significant impact this film had 
		on women in cinema. Sigourney's performance
		IS amazing. She literally takes over a traditional male 
		stereotype and makes it her own. In fact, her entire acting career is 
		filled with her leadership, and shrewd decision-making regarding her 
		role choices. She is role model for all girls and women.     The film was a success, winning 
		an Oscar for Best Visual Effects. The Alien itself was designed by Swiss 
		artist
		H. 
		R. Giger, whose often disturbing art style combines human physiques 
		with machines. Giger describes it as "biomechanical".  Though it premiered to mixed 
		reviews in 1979, critics have since reassessed Alien and deemed it a Science 
		Fiction classic. Today, the Alien franchise  
		still carries on in film, comics and video games.  I recommend it for three 
		reasons: It's very realistic. It has some great jump moments. It 
		introduced the world to Sigourney.  Onto 
		No. 24b... More than one non-native       |