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{{otheruses4|the first film in a series|other films/spin-offs|Alien (film series)}}
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{{Infobox_Film |
name = Alien |
image = Alien movie poster.jpg |
caption = The original 1979 theatrical poster |
writer = '''Story:'''<br>[[Dan O'Bannon]]<br>[[Ronald Shusset|Ronald Shusett]]<br>'''Screenplay:'''<br>[[Dan O'Bannon]]<br>David Giler''<br>(uncredited)''<br>[[Walter Hill (director)|Walter Hill]]<br>''(uncredited)'' |
starring = [[Sigourney Weaver]]<br>[[Tom Skerritt]]<br>[[Bolaji Badejo]]<br>[[John Hurt]]<br>[[Veronica Cartwright]]<br>[[Harry Dean Stanton]]<br>[[Ian Holm]]<br>[[Yaphet Kotto]] |
director = [[Ridley Scott]] |
producer = Gordon Carroll<br>David Giler<br>[[Walter Hill (director)|Walter Hill]] |
cinematography = Derek Vanlint |
editing = [[Terry Rawlings]] |
distributor = [[20th Century Fox]] |
released = '''Theatrical Cut:'''<br>[[May 25]], [[1979]]<br>'''Director's Cut:'''<br>[[October 29]], [[2003]] |
runtime = '''Theatrical Cut:'''<br>117 min.<br>'''Director's Cut:'''<br>116 min. |
rating = Restricted |
country = [[United Kingdom]]<br>[[United States]] |
language = English |
budget = $11,000,000 |
music = [[Jerry Goldsmith]]<br>[[Howard Hanson]] ''(Symphony No. 2)'' |
amg_id = 1:1503 |
imdb_id = 0078748 |
followed_by = ''[[Aliens (film)|Aliens]]''
}}

'''''Alien''''' is a culturally influential [[1979 in film|1979]] [[science fiction film| science-fiction]] [[horror film]], directed by [[Ridley Scott]] and starring [[Sigourney Weaver]]. The film's title refers to the main antagonist, a highly aggressive, unfamiliar [[extraterrestrial life]]-form. Reluctantly following a distress beacon in [[deep space]], a crew member of the space-faring towing vehicle [[Nostromo (spaceship)|''Nostromo'']] encounters a young [[Xenomorph (Alien)|Alien]] that attacks and infects him. The creature soon comes aboard the ship, wreaking havoc and threatening the entire crew.

''Alien'' garnered both critical acclaim and [[box office|box-office]] success, spawning a [[Hollywood]] [[media franchise]] of literature, video games, merchandise, and three official [[sequels]]. The film effectively launched actress [[Sigourney Weaver|Sigourney Weaver's]] career. By featuring a strong [[heroine]], ''Alien'' also proved unconventional (by Hollywood standards) for the action genre. While the Alien itself (referred to in spin-offs as a [[Xenomorph (Alien)|''xenomorph'']]) was a popular aspect of the film, the story of [[Ellen Ripley]] became the thematic thread that ran through the series. Together with the films of [[David Cronenberg]] from the 1970s<ref>Most notably [[Shivers (film)|''Shivers'']], ''[[Rabid]]'' and ''[[The Brood]]''</ref>, ''Alien'' emerged as a central work in the development of the [[body horror|body-horror]] subgenre.<ref>Mark Jancovich, ''Horror, the Film Reader'', Routledge 2002, p. 5; for a general overview including further sources, compare also Daniel Pimley, [http://www.pimley.net/documents/thebodyinalien.pdf "Representations Of The Body In ''Alien'': How can science fiction be seen as an expression of contemporary attitudes and anxieties about human biology?"], 2003</ref> Publicity for the film involved a [[tagline]] that became widely known: ''"In space no one can hear you scream."''

Sequels to the film include: ''[[Aliens (film)|Aliens]]'' ([[1986 in film|1986]]), ''[[Alien³]]'' ([[1992 in film|1992]]) and ''[[Alien: Resurrection]]'' ([[1997 in film|1997]]). The 21st century saw a possible end of the ''Alien'' franchise in favor of a [[Fictional crossover|crossover]] with the [[Predator (film series)|Predator series]] ''[[Alien vs. Predator (film)|Alien vs. Predator]]'' ([[2004 in film|2004]]) and its sequel ''[[Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem]]'' ([[2007 in film|2007]]).<ref>
{{Cite news | author = Paul Davidson | title = ''AVP'' Killed ''Alien 5''
| publisher = IGN Entertainment (with further reference to AICN) | date = [[2006-02-08]]
| url = http://movies.ign.com/articles/686/686746p1.html | accessdate = 2007-09-17}}
</ref>

==Plot==
The ''[[Nostromo (spaceship)|Nostromo]]'', an interstellar commercial towing-vehicle with a crew of seven, has set out from [[Epsilon Reticuli#Epsiolon Reticuli A|Thedus]] to Earth, hauling twenty-million tons of mineral [[ore]]. At the start of the film, the ship's [[computer]] ''MU-TH-R 182'', simply called "Mother" by the crew, receives an apparently unidentifiable signal from a [[LV-426|moon]] orbiting a nearby [[planet]],<ref>Later ''Alien''-series films identified the moon as [[LV-426|''LV-426 "Acheron"'']], located in the [[Zeta Reticuli|Zeta II Reticuli]] system.</ref> while monitoring the ship's operations. "Mother" wakes the crew from [[Stasis (fiction)|stasis]], so they can investigate the signal's origin. With the ore and mining facilities left in orbit, the tug portion of the ''Nostromo'' lands on the moon, suffering serious damage during the rough landing.
[[Image:AlienSS.png|left|thumb|Most of the cast together in the ship's bridge, with Ripley ([[Sigourney Weaver]]) in the center.]]

Captain Dallas ([[Tom Skerritt]]), Kane ([[John Hurt]]) and Lambert ([[Veronica Cartwright]]) leave the ship to investigate the signal. They soon discover a derelict spacecraft of unknown origin. The group enters the craft, finding the [[Space Jockey (Alien)|pilot's]] desiccated remains. Kane descends into a chamber beneath the pilot, discovering thousands of leathery eggs protected by a [[Force field (science fiction)| forcefield]]. One of the eggs opens, a lifeform inside leaps out, burns through the visor of Kane's spacesuit and attaches itself to his face. Dallas and Lambert carry the unconscious Kane back to the ''Nostromo''. Ripley ([[Sigourney Weaver]]), the commanding officer while Dallas and Kane are off ship, refuses to let them back onboard, citing [[quarantine]] protocol. However, Science Officer Ash ([[Ian Holm]]) disregards Ripley's decision and lets them in. In the ship's infirmary Dallas and Ash attempt to remove the creature from Kane's face, but they discover they cannot remove it by force without harming Kane. When they try to cut off one of its digits, the alien's highly acidic blood sprays on the floor and burns its way through several decks of the spaceship. Due to this lethal defense mechanism, the crew cease from further attempts at removal. Eventually the creature detaches from Kane's face on its own, and the crew find it dead. Kane wakes up, seemingly unharmed.

With the ship repaired, the crew leave the moon and have one last meal before re-entering [[hypersleep]]. During the meal Kane begins to choke and convulse until an alien creature bursts through his chest, killing him. The creature then scurries away. After ejecting Kane's body into space in a brief funeral, the crew splits up into two teams to capture it. Ash rigs together a tracking-device, while Brett ([[Harry Dean Stanton]]) assembles a weapon similar to a [[cattle prod| cattle-prod]]. Picking up a signal, Parker ([[Yaphet Kotto]]), Brett, and Ripley think they have the creature cornered, only to discover Jones, the crew's cat. Realizing they might pick up the cat on the tracker again later, Parker sends Brett back to catch Jones. During his search Brett encounters the alien, now fully grown and enormous. The creature attacks him with its inner jaws and hauls the paralyzed crew member into an air-shaft.

The crew realizes that the alien has used the air-shafts to move through the ship. Dallas enters the network of air-shafts with a flamethrower, intending to drive the alien into an airlock in order to blow it out into space. Using the trackers, the crew picks up the alien's signal moving toward Dallas. Attempting to escape, Dallas runs right into the creature. His body disappears. Ripley queries Mother for advice on destroying the alien, but in the process discovers that [[Weyland-Yutani|"The Company"]]<ref>The film does not name the company. However, some film-props like beer-cans had the name ''Weylan-Yutani'' printed on them. It also appeared on two computer screens. Although the name remained almost invisible on-screen, James Cameron used it for the 1986 sequel, changing it to ''Weyland-Yutani''.</ref> had already detected the alien transmission, had decoded the signal as a warning and wanted one of the alien lifeforms brought back — ostensibly for weapons-development — even at the expense of the crew. Ash, the Company's agent on board, attacks Ripley after she learns of the "Special Order 937", but Parker and Lambert arrive before he can kill her. Parker dislodges Ash's head with a fire-extinguisher, revealing Ash as an [[android]].

The three remaining crew members decide to destroy the ''Nostromo'' and escape in the shuttle ''Narcissus''. While Ripley preps the ''Narcissus'' for launch, Parker and Lambert go to gather coolant for the shuttle's life-support system. Ripley hears the screams of her colleagues over the ship's communication system and runs off to investigate. She arrives too late, discovering the alien has killed Parker and Lambert. Ripley activates the ship's self-destruct sequence and races to the shuttle, but sees the alien near the shuttle entrance. After an unsuccessful attempt at aborting the self-destruct sequence, Ripley escapes with Jones to the shuttle again, with the alien nowhere in sight this time. Ripley takes off in the ''Narcissus'', and the ''Nostromo'' explodes. While preparing for hypersleep Ripley discovers that the alien has hidden itself inside the shuttle. Ripley manages to slip on a [[space suit| space-suit]]. She then blasts the alien out of the shuttle's airlock with a grappling-gun. When the Alien (still tethered to the grappling hook) climbs into one of the shuttle's engine nacelles, Ripley activates the engine and blasts it clear into space. The film ends as Ripley and the cat enter hypersleep.<ref>In a congenial nod toward ''Alien'', director [[David Fincher]] chose to cite Ripley's final words in ''Alien'' at the end of his film ''[[Alien³]]'' ([[1992 in film|1992]]) as an incoming transmission after the shutdown of the colony on [[Fiorina 'Fury' 161|Fiorina 161]], decades after the events in ''Alien'' occurred.</ref>

==Cast==
*'''[[Sigourney Weaver]]''' as '''[[Ellen Ripley]]'''. Ripley is the Warrant Officer onboard the ''Nostromo'' and the chief protagonist of the film. This was Weaver's first leading role in a motion picture.
*'''[[Tom Skerritt]]''' as '''[[List of characters in the Alien series#Dallas|Dallas]]'''. Dallas is the Captain of the ''Nostromo''. He leads the landing party to investigate the distress signal on LV-426 and subsequently leads the crew in dealing with the hostile Alien onboard the ''Nostromo''.
*'''[[John Hurt]]''' as '''[[List of characters in the Alien series#Kane|Kane]]'''. Kane is the ''Nostromo''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s [[Executive Officer]]. He is the first to encounter the alien lifeform on LV-426 and serves as host for the Alien which then stalks the crew.
*'''[[Veronica Cartwright]]''' as '''[[List of characters in the Alien series#Lambert|Lambert]]'''. Lambert is the ''Nostromo''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s navigator. She is the most emotionally vulnerable member of the crew and the first to lose her cool when they are attacked by the Alien.
*'''[[Ian Holm]]''' as '''[[List of characters in the Alien series#Ash|Ash]]'''. Ash is the ''Nostromo''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Science Officer. He performs tests on the alien lifeform which attaches itself to Kane and communicates his findings to the Weyland-Yutani Corporation. He is later revealed to be an [[android]] and betrays the crew.
*'''[[Harry Dean Stanton]]''' as '''[[List of characters in the Alien series#Brett|Brett]]'''. Brett is the ''Nostromo''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Engineering Technician and cares for Jones, the ship's cat. He and Parker view themselves as the "grunts" of the crew and argue with the others for larger shares of the crew's profits.
*'''[[Yaphet Kotto]]''' as '''[[List of characters in the Alien series#Parker|Parker]]'''. Parker is the ''Nostromo''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Chief Engineer. He shares the closest relationship with Brett and works with him to repair damage to the ship. The two characters argue with the other crew members over their shares in the ship's profits.
*'''[[Bolaji Badejo]]''' as '''[[Xenomorph (Alien)|the Alien]]'''. The Alien is the antagonist of the film. It stalks the ''Nostromo''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s crew members, killing them off one by one. [[Percy Edwards]] provided the creature's vocalizations while [[Eddie Powell]] stood in for Badejo for performing stuntwork.
[[Image:Bye bye.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Kane examines an egg, unaware of the coming danger]]
Actor [[Jon Finch]] was originally cast in the role of Kane, but as principal photography on ''Alien'' commenced, the crew soon noticed that he looked ill and rushed him to hospital, where doctors diagnosed a severe case of [[diabetes]]. John Hurt, in London and available at that time, subsequently replaced Finch.

==Inspirations==
Some reviewers have noted that the basic plot of ''Alien'', the pitting of a small group of humans against a relentless alien creature in a remote location, derives from earlier science-fiction horror films.<ref>
{{cite web| url = http://www.futuremovies.co.uk/review.asp?ID=111| title = FutureMovie's review of Alien| accessdate = 2006-08-30| author = Adrian Mackinder}}</ref><ref>
{{cite web| url = http://www.duallens.com/index.asp?reviewId=101303| title = A Voyage Interrupted: Alien and Science-Fiction Film| author = Todd Wardrope| accessdate = 2006-09-04}}</ref><ref name="ebert">
{{cite web| url = http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20031026/REVIEWS08/310260301/1023| title = Chicago Sun-Times Review of Alien| author = Roger Ebert| accessdate = 2006-08-30}}</ref>
Dan O'Bannon has over the years expressed clear views on the exact sources.<ref name="McIntee">[[David A. McIntee]], "Beautiful Monsters: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to the Alien and Predator Films", ''Telos'' 2005, pp. 19-28 & p. 39.9</ref> He has even gone as far as saying: "A lot of people speculated as to where I stole it from. The truth is I stole it from everywhere."<ref>Interview with Dan O'Bannon in the documentary ''Alien Evolution'' (Channel 4, 13th October 2000)</ref>

Admitted inspirations include:
* ''[[The Thing from Another World]]'' ([[1951 in film|1951]]), featuring the hunting of professional men (soldiers in this case) through closely confined areas.
* ''[[Forbidden Planet]]'' ([[1956 in film|1956]]) in which a ship lands despite warnings and an invisible creature hunts them down one by one.
* ''[[It! The Terror from Beyond Space]]'' ([[1958 in film|1958]]) where a spaceship crew bring a murderous alien onboard who then hunts them down. Ivor Powell, the associate producer, has also highlighted the influences.
* ''[[Planet of the Vampires]]'' ([[1965 in film|1965]]), in which humans discover the remains of a large alien sitting at the controls of its spaceship.
* "Junkyard", a short-story by [[Clifford D. Simak]]: humans find deserted spaceships on an asteroid and the crew stumble across an egg-chamber.
* ''Strange Relations'' by [[Philip José Farmer]] which deals with extraterrestrial reproduction.
* Various stories from ''[[Weird Tales]]'' in which monsters eat people from the inside.
* ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey (film)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]'' which inspired some scenes in ''Aliens''. One is the similarity between HAL 9000 "HAL" and MU-TH-R 182 "MOTHER" as the ships' central computers that make the decisions for humans when they are in [[cryogenic hibernation]]; the computers also hide ulterior motives not known to the crew.

O'Bannon denies influence on the part of ''[[The Voyage of the Space Beagle]]'', which features aliens laying eggs in people which then hatch and eat their way out. However, a lawsuit brought by [[A. E. van Vogt]] ended with a settlement out of court.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mysciencefictionlife/A20258336 BBC - My Science Fiction Life - The Voyage of the Space Beagle<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Philip French suggests another non-science-fiction parallel: Agatha Christie's ''[[And Then There Were None]]''.<ref>
{{cite web| url = http://film.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/Critic_Review/Observer_review/0,,1075900,00.html| title = Guardian Review of Alien| accessdate = 2006-08-30| author = Philip French}}</ref>

==Production==
===History and early versions===
[[Image:Chris Foss Pyramid Book of Alien.JPG|350px|thumb|right|According to the book "The Book of Alien" (Titan Books © 1979), [http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/alien_early.html a very early draft of the script] envisaged the eggs housed in a completely separate architectural structure, shaped in the form of a massive pyramid. The British [[illustrator]] and science-fiction artist [[Chris Foss]] drew these illustrations of the discarded sequence.]]

After completing ''[[Dark Star (motion picture)|Dark Star]]'' (1974), [[Dan O'Bannon]] wanted to take some of the ideas (such as where an alien hunts a crew through a ship) and make them into a science-fiction horror film, at that time provisionally called ''Memory''. He also worked on a script entitled ''Gremlins'' (not to be confused with the unrelated 1984 film of the same name), about [[gremlin]]s getting loose aboard a [[World War II]] [[bomber]] and wreaking havoc with the crew (the ''B-17'' segment of the film ''[[Heavy Metal (film)|Heavy Metal]]'' (1981) used a significantly altered version of this original story). Screenwriter [[Ronald Shusset|Ronald Shusett]] contacted O'Bannon about collaborating on projects. Although Shusett wanted input on a script that would later become ''[[Total Recall]]'', they decided to focus on the lower-budget ''Memory''. However, O'Bannon got drafted in to work on [[Alejandro Jodorowsky]]'s adaptation of [[Frank Herbert]]'s ''[[Dune (novel)|Dune]]''. Although this came to nothing, he did meet [[H.R. Giger]], [[Chris Foss]] and [[Jean Giraud|Moebius]] on set and a lot of their work together led to later developments when production of ''Alien'' started in earnest.<ref name="McIntee" /> For Giger's well-recognized influence see below. Foss' spaceship designs remained unused (some later appeared in some of his books) but Mœbius's designs for the ''Nostromo'' spacesuits made it into the final film.<ref name="McIntee" />

When O'Bannon returned to America, broke, after the ''Dune'' film project collapsed, he ended up sharing a flat with Shusett. Shusett suggested mixing in elements of ''Gremlins'' and how the alien got on board. He said: "It screws one of the crew. Something jumps up at his face, grabs hold of him and shoves its seed down his throat, then later it bursts out." [[Ron Cobb]] had worked on the designs for ''Dark Star'' (and would later provide the bulk of the designs for ''Alien''); he offered the idea of the creature's acid blood stopping the crew from simply blowing it up. These various ideas came together in the O'Bannon and Shusett script ''Star Beast''.<ref name="McIntee" /> At this stage the title loomed as the main problem. Casting around for a better name, O'Bannon noticed the number of times the word "alien" occurred in the script, and so he adopted this for the film's title.<ref name="McIntee" />

The original script bears many resemblances to the film as actually produced, yet with significant differences. The spaceship — designed with a low-budget production in mind — originated as a small craft, initially a galactic coastguard-like ship and then a commercial vessel, called the ''Snark''.<ref name="McIntee" /> In the original script, the ship has an all-male crew, including the Ripley character (though the script's "Cast of Characters" section explicitly states that "The crew is unisex and all parts are interchangeable for men or women").<ref name="McIntee" /> Actor [[Tom Skerritt]] originally won the role of Ripley, but later, in the course of developing the script, character re-casting made Ripley a woman, because producer [[Alan Ladd, Jr.]], and [[script doctor| script-doctor]]s Walter Hill and David Giler had heard rumors of Fox working on other titles with strong female leads.<ref name="McIntee" />

The script recounted how, after responding to the intercepted alien message, the crew discover the derelict alien craft and its dead pilot. Ominously, the pilot in its death-throes had scratched a triangle on its control-console. The crew members go outside and see the remains of an ancient [[pyramid]]. They lower Kane into the structure, where he finds a chamber with a breathable atmosphere. An [[altar]]-like structure houses the alien embryo-eggs, and a hieroglyph depicts the alien's life-cycle.<ref name="McIntee" /> This concept survived for a long time, and preliminary H.R. Giger pyramid-drawings intended for ''Alien'' exist, but eventually the producers went with the idea of combining the wrecked derelict ship with the egg-chamber (also designed by Giger), although the ideas of the pyramid, the altar and the hieroglyphs re-surfaced in the [[Aliens vs. Predator (computer game)|Aliens vs. Predator]] computer game and in the [[2004 in film|2004]] film ''[[Alien vs. Predator (film)|Alien vs. Predator]]''.

Apart from the disappearance of the pyramid, the final script changed the story's pacing. The impregnation occurred around the mid-point in the film, with a long, slow build up of tension reminiscent of the atmosphere generated in ''[[At the Mountains of Madness]].'' It also ended with an Alien egg seen clinging to the bottom of the escaping shuttle, a detail that survived various drafts and disappeared only in the final version dated June 1978.<ref name="McIntee" />

The original cut of the film also included a scene where, after the attacks on all her fellow crew-members, Ripley heads towards the shuttle, then stumbles across a room where she finds Dallas — barely alive — and Brett (Dallas and Brett, the first two crew-members to fall victim to the Alien, had disappeared). Dallas and Brett, cocooned in mucus, have apparently started mutating into alien eggs. Dallas begs Ripley to kill him, and she does so by using her flamethrower device. Although editing removed this scene from the final theatrical cut, the idea emerged later in scenes in ''Aliens'', ''Alien Resurrection'', and ''Aliens vs. Predator''.

===Pre-production===
O'Bannon and Shusett almost completed the sale of the film to [[Roger Corman]]. However, at the last minute, their friend Michael Haggerty said he could get them a better deal; and thus they sold the script to the Brandywine company of David Giler, Gordon Carroll, and [[Walter Hill]], who had a production-deal with [[Twentieth Century Fox]] with Hill attached to direct.<ref name="McIntee" /> A single [[tagline]] promoted the script to [[film studio|studio]] executives: "''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]'' in space".<ref>[http://www.montrealmirror.com/ARCHIVES/2003/102303/film1.html "''A space odyssey'' — Sir Ridley Scott looks back on his classic ''Alien''"]</ref>

Hill and Giler re-wrote the script, making it more action-oriented, adding the character of Ash, and rewriting much of the dialogue. They also introduced a motherhood theme, though the detail of Ripley going back for the cat originated in the period of the male Ripley-character.<ref name="McIntee" /> These changes caused tension between O'Bannon and the other production members that lasted through the making of the film. Parts of O'Bannon's scripts appear on various DVD releases, with the full early version presented on the ''[[Alien Quadrilogy]]''.

At this stage, a hiatus occurred in the production, as the studio expressed alarm at the prospect of committing to a new science-fiction film in the pre-''Star Wars'' era when such films remained a rarity.<ref name="quaddvd">
''Alien Quadrilogy'' DVD set
</ref>

When ''Star Wars'' became a box-office hit, Fox gave the film the go-ahead with an $8 million budget — much higher than the writers had originally hoped. During the production hiatus, Ridley Scott replaced and revised many of the design-elements before principal photography started at [[Shepperton Studios]] in [[England]]. Giger, brought in from [[Canton of Zürich|Zürich]] (Switzerland), set up at the studios along with Ron Cobb as a type of [[artist in residence|artist-in-residence]]. (Giger kept a diary through the production which became the basis for his book ''Giger's Alien'').<ref>
{{cite web| url = http://www.insidepulse.com/article.php?contentid=48557| title = R0BTRAIN's Bad Ass Cinema: Alien| author = Robert Sutton| accessdate = 2006-09-04}}
</ref>

===The alien===
{{Details|Xenomorph (Alien)|this character}}

[[Image:Hrgigeralien.jpg|thumb|200px|H.R. Giger's original design for the Alien, based on his earlier work, [[Necronom IV]]]]

Swiss painter and sculptor [[H. R. Giger]] designed the alien creature's adult form and the alien architecture. The designs feature the creative use of bones in the architecture (the set constructors used real bones in making the interior of the alien ship). Giger received an [[Academy Award]] for his work on the original film. The design of the creature with strong Freudian sexual undertones and multiple phallic symbols, while simultaneously presenting an overall feminine figure, provided a compelling androgynous image, conforming to archetypal mappings and imageries in horror films that often redraw gender lines.<ref>Lina Badley, ''Film, Horror, and the Body Fantastic: Contributions to the Study of Popular Culture'', Greenwood Press 1995</ref>

The adult alien appears predominantly black in color, similar in cast to heavily tarnished silver. In keeping with Giger's blending of biological and mechanical life-forms, some shots reveal a metallic patina. It has an elongated shiny head with no eyes. (Some production stills reveal a human skull used in the sculpture beneath its translucent anterior shell). Below, the jaw holds the razor-sharp metal teeth. The mouth houses a tongue-like body part with a second mouth on the end. On the alien's back stand four curved black pipes (Giger designed these for the purpose of breaking up the back). Apart from this, the alien has an anthropomorphic form, with two legs and two arms, its hands each armed with six long, black, razor-sharp claws. The "blood" of the creature, a powerful acid, also serves as a natural defense mechanism.

The slime of the costume would eat through the paint, so it needed repainting every day.<ref>
{{cite news | title = 201 Greatest Movie of all Time | pages = 97 | publisher = Empire |date=March 2006 (Issue 201)}}
</ref>

===Set design and construction===
Michael Seymour worked as the film's production designer. John Mollo supervised the costumes, including the distinctive spacesuits, and [[Carlo Rambaldi]] produced the crucial mechanical effects for the title-alien's head. The team of Brian Johnson and Nick Allder — who had worked on ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey (film)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]'' and ''[[Space 1999]]'' — headed up [[special effects]]. Scott turned to a computer-animation pioneer, [[Bernard Lodge]], from his old college — the [[Royal College of Art]] in [[London]] — to produce the film's [[green-line]] computer displays. The thin layer of mist that "notified the eggs" came from smoke and a pulsating laser, which the film crew borrowed from the band [[The Who]].

According to the behind-the-scenes documentary ''The Beast Within: The Making of "Alien"'', the film crew built the spaceship set in one piece. To move around the set, actors had to navigate through the hallways of the ship. Toward the end of the shoot, many members of the cast and crew recalled walking inside the set alone as a very unnerving experience. Some maintain that such emotions come across on the screen.

Some shots on the planet's surface outside the ''Nostromo'' and on the "[[Space Jockey (Alien)|Space Jockey]]'s" dais used children in spacesuits (specifically Ridley Scott's and the cameraman's children) as stand-ins in order to make the spaceship's landing-legs seem larger. Ridley Scott said in the director's commentary on the DVD, "This shot here, actually is three children made in miniature spacesuits...who were my two sons and the cameraman's son.... I had small costumes made for them so the landing legs looked bigger..."<ref name="aliendvd">{{cite video|title = Alien: 20th Anniversary Edition director's commentary|people = Ridley Scott|format = [[DVD]]|date=1999}}</ref>

Ridley Scott re-used the ''Nostromo'''s and the shuttle's computer-graphics, specifically the ''PURGE''-screen, for the computer-screens inside the [[Spinner (Blade Runner)|''Spinner'' hover-cars]] in his film ''[[Blade Runner]]''.

Other filming has re-used the set. In particular, the [[BBC One]] series of ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (TV series)|The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'' re-used some of the ''Nostromo'' hallways, as well as other parts of the set. These appear most prominently in the scenes set onboard the [[Vogon]] Constructor Fleet.<ref name="McIntee" />
When the [[BBC]] science-fiction [[sitcom]] ''[[Red Dwarf]]'' moved production to Shepperton Studios it used some surviving ''Nostromo'' hallway sets from ''Alien'' in Series 5, most notably in the episode "DNA" (as revealed on the DVD commentary<!-- which DVD commentary?-->).

===Music===
Ridley Scott's vision of the film came under the influence of [[Isao Tomita]]'s synthesizer-arrangement of [[Gustav Holst|Holst]]'s ''[[The Planets]]'', especially of the movement "Mars: Bringer of War", and at one point in pre-production Tomita appeared a serious candidate to write the original score for the film.<ref>David Stoner, Booklet commentary for the original ''Alien'' soundtrack CD release, Silva Screen Records, 1987</ref> With the dropping of these plans, however, [[Jerry Goldsmith]] came to compose the film music. Instead of aiming at a typical 1970s science-fiction score utilizing synthesizers,<ref>Compare for example some cues from Goldsmith's 1976 score for [[Logan's Run (1976 film)|''Logan's Run'']].</ref> the composer's music reflects the film's underlying [[horror film|horror-film]] genre with its use of bleak orchestrations, most notably in the higher woodwinds, oscillating string-textures and bizarre, sometimes savage sounds, especially from the brass-section, which his orchestrator Arthur Morton built from the orchestral palette with various modern compositional techniques. Goldsmith also composed a main theme in the romantic style that barely appears in the finished film. A short passage from ''[[Eine kleine Nachtmusik]]'' by [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart]] also plays as ''source music'' during the scene in which Dallas spends some time alone relaxing in the shuttle ''Narcissus''.

Director Ridley Scott and editor Terry Rawlings became quite attached to several of the pre-existing [[Cue (theatrical)| cue]]s that they had used for the temporary score while editing the film. As a result Scott and music editor Robert Hathaway moved around much of Goldsmith's score, re-edited cues and re-scored several sequences. In some parts of the film the temp score remained in place:<ref>Interviews on the "Quadrilogy" DVD release of this film document the viewpoints of Goldsmith, Rawlings and Scott in regard to this situation and why it occurred.</ref> segments of four [[monaural]] cues from Goldsmith's 1962 score for [[Freud the Secret Passion|''Freud – The Secret Passion'']] appear in the film,<ref>Excerpts from <i>Charcot's Show</i> and large parts of the cue ''Desperate Case'' play during the airduct sequence. Editing also preserved excerpts from ''Main Title'' during the acid-spill laboratory sequence and from the cue ''The First Step'' as Ripley searches for the cat on the <i>Nostromo</i>'s bridge.</ref> and the final minutes of the first movement of [[Howard Hanson|Howard Hanson's]] ''Symphony No. 2 "Romantic"'' replaced Goldsmith's music for the concluding moments of the film's showdown, as well as the complete music for the end credits. As a result, Goldsmith's original soundtrack LP represented more the original score he wrote than what ended up appearing in the film.

As an additional feature the initial ''20th Anniversary Edition'' [[DVD]] of ''Alien'' included both an isolated music-only soundtrack that restored the cue-order originally envisioned by the composer, resynchronizing the cues to their appropriate places, as well as a second isolated film-music soundtrack with the re-scored and re-arranged cues from the official 20th Century Fox release of the film, while the full production soundtrack played between music cues. In the final DVD release most of the scenes showing the ''Nostromo'' exterior and all of the sequences from [[Howard Hanson]]'s second symphony ("Romantic"), some of which went along with them, have disappeared for reasons unknown.

The original film score by Jerry Goldsmith played under the conductor's baton of [[Lionel Newman]], who also received main-title credits, a practice that had become unusual by the time of the film's release. The [[National Philharmonic Orchestra]] played the music. The soundtrack [[CD]] of ''Alien'' has [[as of 2007| now]] gone out-of-print. Over the years several bootlegged copies of Goldsmith's score appeared on the market, among them a Spanish two-CD release with all used and unused cues, including the retained temp score, and an archive bootleg that also included alternate takes from the recording sessions.

On [[November 15]], [[2007]], Intrada Records released the complete score to the film with additional alternate score tracks and the original LP-program in a 2-CD set. This release first published Jerry Goldsmith's complete score remixed and remastered from the original 1" master tapes.

In 1980 Jerry Goldsmith's film music for ''Alien'' received nominations for the [[Golden Globe Award]] (Best Original Film Score), the [[Grammy Award]]s (Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special) and the ''Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music''.

====Official soundtrack releases====
# Original soundtrack (Fox Music, 1979; LP; 10 tracks)
# Re-issue of the original soundtrack (Silva Screen Records, 1987; CD; 10 tracks)
# ''The Alien Trilogy'' (Colosseum, 1996; CD; 13 tracks, incl. 7 tracks from the original ''Alien'' soundtrack)
#''20th Anniversary Edition'' DVD containing two isolated music tracks: a) the original score and b) the alternate music track (Fox Home Entertainment, 2000)
# ''Alien Complete Score'' 2-CD set, released on Intrada Records, [[November 15]], 2007 with complete score with several alternate tracks and the original LP program.

In addition several compilation re-issues and re-recordings of some of Goldsmith's music for ''Alien'' have appeared.<ref>See [http://www.soundtrackcollector.com/catalog/soundtrackdetail.php?movieid=1048 www.soundtrackcollector.com] for an almost complete listing.</ref>

====Bootleg releases====
# "Limited library archival pressing" (Soundtrack Library, 1999; CD-R; 32 tracks; allegedly including alternate takes from the recording sessions)
# ''Alien: First Release of the Complete Score from the Stereo Master Tapes'' (Total Sound, 2000; CD-R; 21 tracks; assembled from the production of the ''20th Anniversary Edition'' DVD)
# ''Alien: Banda Sonora Original del Film y Temas Rechazados'' (Memory Records, 2001; 2-CD release; 25 + 21 tracks; including rejected cues, temp score cues and bonus material)
# "Director's Cut bootleg" (Nostromo Enterprises, 2006; 2-CD release; 30 + 25 tracks; in most parts a re-assembly of preceding bootlegs and official releases and compilations, including re-masters from the production of the ''Alien'' special edition DVD and the soundtrack for Iwerk's ''Aliens: Ride at the Speed of Fright'' by composer [[Richard Band]])

==Influence==
[[Roger Ebert]] called ''Alien'' (and John Carpenter's ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'') "the most influential of modern action pictures". He went on to say that many of "the films it influenced studied its thrills but not its thinking", including the re-make of ''[[The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003 film)|The Texas Chainsaw Massacre]]''.<ref name="ebert" />
Andrew O'Hehir wrote, "almost every horror film since ''Alien'' has ripped it off in some way, but most of the imitations have focused on details."<ref>
{{cite web|url = http://dir.salon.com/story/ent/movies/review/2003/11/01/alien/index.html?CP=IMD&DN=110|title = Alien review on Salon.com|author = Andrew O'Hehir|accessdate = 2006-09-06}}
</ref>

Analysts have examined the film's gender-politics and its influence on the subsequent development of the leading heroine in Hollywood film,<ref>For example: Carol J. Clover, ''Men, Women and Chainsaws: Gender in the Modern Horror Film'', British Film Institute 1992</ref> also noting that the film's narrative broke with the prominent custom of repressing female roles in science-fiction films, since the woman, representing nature, biology and sexuality, normally functioned as an antagonistic, ridiculing signifier of science and technology.<ref>Daniel Pimley, "Representations of the Body in ''Alien''", 2003, p. 7</ref> Some critics see the non-traditional re-interpretation of the female lead in ''Alien'' as a necessity, since only a female, (i.e. "natural") entity can successfully fight the anti-technological, biologically reproducing and overly sexualized xenomorph in a science-fiction environment.

The film received some academic attention and commentators linked it to wider cultural idioms, especially those popular in the 1970s and 1980s such as [[abjection]].<ref>Barbara Creed, "Horror and the Monstrous Feminine — An Imaginary Abjection", in ''Screen'', Vol. 27, No. 1, 1986</ref> James Kavanaugh criticized the film's "internally overdetermined and contradictory construction" in disguising humanist ideologies as feminism.<ref>James H. Kavanaugh, "'Son of a Bitch': Feminism, Humanism and Science in ''Alien''", in ''October'', Vol. 13, 1980, pp. 90-100</ref> Film-critic Kathleen Murphy called Kavanaugh's analysis an assaulting, "academically approved gobbledygook".<ref>Kathleen Murphy, "The Last Temptation of Sigourney Weaver", in Richard T. Jameson (ed.), ''Film Comment'', Film Society of Lincoln Center (publ.), Vol. 28, No. 4, July–August 1992, p. 17</ref> Several academic theses on the film, which matured over the following years, appeared in print in the book ''Alien Zone: Cultural Theory and Contemporary Science Fiction Cinema''.<ref>Annette Kuhn (ed.), London 1990; a second book with further analyses came out under the title: ''Alien Zone 2: The Spaces of Science-Fiction Cinema'' (Annette Kuhn, ed.; London 1999); for a partial overview of available sources see also [http://home.earthlink.net/~gospodean/awwwjeezitsdeansblog/id13.html here].</ref>

''Alien'' became the first R-rated film to have a merchandising line aimed at children. The children's products released included various toys and models based on the creature and on its egg, [[jigsaw puzzle]]s, a [[board game]], a [[Viewmaster]]-style movie reel, and a storybook. [[Kenner|Kenner Products]] released an 18-inch Alien figure with articulated parts including the retractable jaw and glow-in-the-dark cranium. However, the toy did not sell well.<ref>
{{cite web|url = http://members.aol.com/earlvira/alienpredatortoys.htm|title = The History of Unproduced ''Alien'' and ''Predator'' Toy|author = Marc H. Cawiezel|accessdate = 2006-09-04}}
</ref>

==Awards and accolades==
''Alien'' won the 1979 [[Academy Award]] for [[Academy Award for Visual Effects|Best Visual Effects]] and also received a nomination for [[Academy Award for Best Art Direction|Best Art Direction-Set Decoration]].<ref> Also, the movie recieved won the 1979 [[British Academy of Film and Television Arts|BAFTA]] awards for Sound and Production Design and for Music Score (Jerry Goldsmith, and earned nominations for best Supporting Actor (John Hurt), Editing, Costume Design and Best Newcomer to a Leading Role (Sigourney Weaver).
{{citeweb|url = http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/DisplayMain.jsp?curTime=1166469765420|title = Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences: Alien search results|accessdate = 2006-12-18}}</ref>
The [[Saturn Award|Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA]] named it the [[Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film|Best Science Fiction Film]] of the year and Ridley Scott Best Director, and it won the [[Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation]].<ref>
{{citeweb|url = http://www.saturnawards.org/past.html#scifi|title = Saturn Award: Past Award Winners|accessdate = 2006-12-18}}
</ref>
In [[2002 in film|2002]], the [[National Film Registry|United States National Film Registry]] deemed the film "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" and inducted it into its collection.<ref>
{{citeweb|url = http://www.loc.gov/film/titles.html
|title = Films Selected to The National Film Registry, Library of Congress 1989-2005|accessdate = 2006-12-18}}
</ref>

In 2007 ''[[Empire Magazine]]'' named the "chestburster" scene in ''Alien'' the greatest 18-rated movie moment ever as part of its 18th birthday issue.<ref>
{{citeweb|url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6597295.stm|title = Alien named as top 18-rated scene|accessdate = 2007-04-28|publishdate=2007-04-26}}
</ref>

The chestburster scene made it #2 on Bravo's "The 100 Scariest Movie Moments".

==Special Edition (2003)==

[[October 29]] [[2003]] saw the re-release of ''Alien'' in cinemas as a ''Ridley Scott Director's Cut''. This release restored many but not all of the deleted scenes, which had already appeared as bonus materials on previous [[VHS]], [[laserdisc]] and [[DVD]] releases of the film, and made unobtrusive deletions to the original. The new release also added some minor visual effects to the film: a shot of the sunrise on the moon, lights on the helmets of Dallas, Lambert and Kane moving under a natural arc on the alien moon as well as a field of stars in the background, when the ''Nostromo'' synchronizes its orbit around the moon.

Ridley Scott stated that ''Alien'' didn't require this tweaking and drew attention to the use of the term "Director's Cut" for marketing reasons only (and inconsistently as well). In the ''Alien Quadrilogy'' DVD materials, he goes out of his way to state his preference for the original: "Rest easy, the original 1979 theatrical version isn't going anywhere." He re-edited the film himself, but only after viewing the studio's attempt to do so. He has characterized the studio's initial version as "too long" and felt that it ruined the film's pacing.

The ''Alien Quadrilogy'' boxed set released on [[December 2]] [[2003]] includes both the Special Edition and the original theatrical version. Because the new version slightly shortened many of the scenes and shots from the original release and edited them with discreet acceleration to pander to modern film-audiences' viewing habits,<ref>"Alien – Director's Cut", in ''Moviestar'', Vol. 82 (VI. 2003 / November/December), p. 45 sqq (incl. interview with Ridley Scott)</ref> the ''Special Edition'' actually runs forty seconds shorter than the original 1979 theatrical release,<ref>Marco Schmidt, [http://archiv.mopo.de/archiv/2003/20031023/plan7/kinos_filme/filmkritiken/hmp2003102216406735.html "Der Film war schon damals verdammt gut: Interview with Ridley Scott on ''Alien - Director's Cut''"], ''Hamburger Morgenpost'', 10-23-2003</ref> despite the addition of almost six minutes of new material.<ref>20th Century Fox, [http://www.apple.com/trailers/fox/alien_25/interview/ ''Official interview with Ridley Scott'']</ref>

==Spin-offs==
The [[novelization]] by [[Alan Dean Foster]] appeared in 1979. It includes dramatizations of most scenes, also the scenes found in the ''Special Edition'' (but notably excluding the "Space Jockey" scene) as well as scenes scripted but never filmed, or filmed but never included in any release version of the film. Notably, the novelization includes the discovery of the radio-transmitter aboard the derelict, a moment when the surviving crew-members contemplate taking [[suicide pill]]s and the detection of the alien as it searches for food in one of the ''Nostromo'''s storage-chambers. One of the most infamous episodes however, and one which the crew only partially filmed, involved a failed attempt to blow the alien out of an airlock, which does not succeed because — as Foster implies — the character Ash intervenes by sounding the ship's alarm to scare the alien away from the airlock. In addition, the characters Ripley and Dallas become suspicious of Ash's intentions after this incident. For many years Foster's novelization provided fans and others with the only known source for the "missing cocoon scene from ''Alien''" (''see also above'').

Subsequent [[spin-off]]s include [[comic books|comic]]s, [[novel]]s, and [[computer game]]s. ''Alien'' itself received a comic-book adaptation by writer [[Archie Goodwin]] and artist [[Walter Simonson]] called ''Alien: The Illustrated Story'', published by the [[Heavy Metal (magazine)|''Heavy Metal'']] magazine, promptly followed by ''Alien: The Movie Novel'', a photographic film-novel as well as a miscellaneous behind-the-scenes book called ''The Book of Alien''. However, the franchise failed to soar before the release of Cameron's sequel and the subsequent adaptations by [[Dark Horse Comics]] in the late 1980s. The Aliens have since also appeared in numerous comic-book [[Intercompany crossover|crossovers]] featuring [[Predator (alien)|Predators]], [[Superman]], [[Batman]], [[WildC.A.T.s]], [[Green Lantern]], [[Judge Dredd]] and others.

==References ==
===References===
{{reflist|1}}

===General references===
* Annette Kuhn (ed.), ''Alien Zone: Cultural Theory and Contemporary Science Fiction Cinema'', New York / London 1990, ISBN 0-860919-93-5
* Annette Kuhn (ed.), ''Alien Zone 2: The Spaces of Science-Fiction Cinema'', London 1999, ISBN 1-859847-46-3
* [[David A. McIntee]], ''Beautiful Monsters: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to the Alien and Predator Films'', Telos Publishing, 2005, ISBN 1-903889-94-4
* Paul Scanlon & Michael Gross, ''The Book of "Alien"'', Titan Books, 1979/2003, ISBN 1-852864-83-4

==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
* {{imdb title|id=0078748|title=Alien}}
* {{filmsite|id=alie|title=Alien}}

{{start box}}{{s-awards}}
{{succession box |
| before = ''[[Superman (1978 film)|Superman: The Movie]]''
| after = ''[[Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back]]''
| title = [[Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film]]
| years = 1979
|}}
{{end box}}
{{alien}}
{{Ridley Scott Films}}
{{Americanfilms1970s}}

[[Category:Alien films]]
[[Category:1979 films]]
[[Category:1970s horror films]]
[[Category:Best Science Fiction Film Saturn]]
[[Category:Films directed by Ridley Scott]]
[[Category:Films shot anamorphically]]
[[Category:Hugo Award Winner for Best Dramatic Presentation]]
[[Category:United States National Film Registry]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:Robot films]]

[[br:Alien]]
[[bg:Пришълецът]]
[[ca:Alien]]
[[cs:Vetřelec (film)]]
[[da:Alien]]
[[de:Alien – Das unheimliche Wesen aus einer fremden Welt]]
[[et:Tulnukas (film 1979)]]
[[es:Alien, el octavo pasajero]]
[[fr:Alien - Le huitième passager]]
[[gl:Alien]]
[[it:Alien]]
[[he:סאגת הנוסע השמיני]]
[[lt:Svetimas (1979 filmas)]]
[[hu:A nyolcadik utas: a Halál]]
[[nl:Alien (film)]]
[[ja:エイリアン (映画シリーズ)]]
[[no:Alien]]
[[nds:Alien]]
[[pl:Obcy - ósmy pasażer Nostromo]]
[[pt:Alien]]
[[ru:Чужой (фильм)]]
[[simple:Alien (Film)]]
[[sk:Votrelec]]
[[sr:Osmi putnik]]
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Revision as of 18:31, 8 February 2008

Alien
The original 1979 theatrical poster
Directed byRidley Scott
Written byStory:
Dan O'Bannon
Ronald Shusett
Screenplay:
Dan O'Bannon
David Giler
(uncredited)

Walter Hill
(uncredited)
Produced byGordon Carroll
David Giler
Walter Hill
StarringSigourney Weaver
Tom Skerritt
Bolaji Badejo
John Hurt
Veronica Cartwright
Harry Dean Stanton
Ian Holm
Yaphet Kotto
CinematographyDerek Vanlint
Edited byTerry Rawlings
Music byJerry Goldsmith
Howard Hanson (Symphony No. 2)
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release dates
Theatrical Cut:
May 25, 1979
Director's Cut:
October 29, 2003
Running time
Theatrical Cut:
117 min.
Director's Cut:
116 min.
CountriesUnited Kingdom
United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$11,000,000

Alien is a culturally influential 1979 science-fiction horror film, directed by Ridley Scott and starring Sigourney Weaver. The film's title refers to the main antagonist, a highly aggressive, unfamiliar extraterrestrial life-form. Reluctantly following a distress beacon in deep space, a crew member of the space-faring towing vehicle Nostromo encounters a young Alien that attacks and infects him. The creature soon comes aboard the ship, wreaking havoc and threatening the entire crew.

Alien garnered both critical acclaim and box-office success, spawning a Hollywood media franchise of literature, video games, merchandise, and three official sequels. The film effectively launched actress Sigourney Weaver's career. By featuring a strong heroine, Alien also proved unconventional (by Hollywood standards) for the action genre. While the Alien itself (referred to in spin-offs as a xenomorph) was a popular aspect of the film, the story of Ellen Ripley became the thematic thread that ran through the series. Together with the films of David Cronenberg from the 1970s[1], Alien emerged as a central work in the development of the body-horror subgenre.[2] Publicity for the film involved a tagline that became widely known: "In space no one can hear you scream."

Sequels to the film include: Aliens (1986), Alien³ (1992) and Alien: Resurrection (1997). The 21st century saw a possible end of the Alien franchise in favor of a crossover with the Predator series Alien vs. Predator (2004) and its sequel Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem (2007).[3]

Plot

The Nostromo, an interstellar commercial towing-vehicle with a crew of seven, has set out from Thedus to Earth, hauling twenty-million tons of mineral ore. At the start of the film, the ship's computer MU-TH-R 182, simply called "Mother" by the crew, receives an apparently unidentifiable signal from a moon orbiting a nearby planet,[4] while monitoring the ship's operations. "Mother" wakes the crew from stasis, so they can investigate the signal's origin. With the ore and mining facilities left in orbit, the tug portion of the Nostromo lands on the moon, suffering serious damage during the rough landing.

File:AlienSS.png
Most of the cast together in the ship's bridge, with Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) in the center.

Captain Dallas (Tom Skerritt), Kane (John Hurt) and Lambert (Veronica Cartwright) leave the ship to investigate the signal. They soon discover a derelict spacecraft of unknown origin. The group enters the craft, finding the pilot's desiccated remains. Kane descends into a chamber beneath the pilot, discovering thousands of leathery eggs protected by a forcefield. One of the eggs opens, a lifeform inside leaps out, burns through the visor of Kane's spacesuit and attaches itself to his face. Dallas and Lambert carry the unconscious Kane back to the Nostromo. Ripley (Sigourney Weaver), the commanding officer while Dallas and Kane are off ship, refuses to let them back onboard, citing quarantine protocol. However, Science Officer Ash (Ian Holm) disregards Ripley's decision and lets them in. In the ship's infirmary Dallas and Ash attempt to remove the creature from Kane's face, but they discover they cannot remove it by force without harming Kane. When they try to cut off one of its digits, the alien's highly acidic blood sprays on the floor and burns its way through several decks of the spaceship. Due to this lethal defense mechanism, the crew cease from further attempts at removal. Eventually the creature detaches from Kane's face on its own, and the crew find it dead. Kane wakes up, seemingly unharmed.

With the ship repaired, the crew leave the moon and have one last meal before re-entering hypersleep. During the meal Kane begins to choke and convulse until an alien creature bursts through his chest, killing him. The creature then scurries away. After ejecting Kane's body into space in a brief funeral, the crew splits up into two teams to capture it. Ash rigs together a tracking-device, while Brett (Harry Dean Stanton) assembles a weapon similar to a cattle-prod. Picking up a signal, Parker (Yaphet Kotto), Brett, and Ripley think they have the creature cornered, only to discover Jones, the crew's cat. Realizing they might pick up the cat on the tracker again later, Parker sends Brett back to catch Jones. During his search Brett encounters the alien, now fully grown and enormous. The creature attacks him with its inner jaws and hauls the paralyzed crew member into an air-shaft.

The crew realizes that the alien has used the air-shafts to move through the ship. Dallas enters the network of air-shafts with a flamethrower, intending to drive the alien into an airlock in order to blow it out into space. Using the trackers, the crew picks up the alien's signal moving toward Dallas. Attempting to escape, Dallas runs right into the creature. His body disappears. Ripley queries Mother for advice on destroying the alien, but in the process discovers that "The Company"[5] had already detected the alien transmission, had decoded the signal as a warning and wanted one of the alien lifeforms brought back — ostensibly for weapons-development — even at the expense of the crew. Ash, the Company's agent on board, attacks Ripley after she learns of the "Special Order 937", but Parker and Lambert arrive before he can kill her. Parker dislodges Ash's head with a fire-extinguisher, revealing Ash as an android.

The three remaining crew members decide to destroy the Nostromo and escape in the shuttle Narcissus. While Ripley preps the Narcissus for launch, Parker and Lambert go to gather coolant for the shuttle's life-support system. Ripley hears the screams of her colleagues over the ship's communication system and runs off to investigate. She arrives too late, discovering the alien has killed Parker and Lambert. Ripley activates the ship's self-destruct sequence and races to the shuttle, but sees the alien near the shuttle entrance. After an unsuccessful attempt at aborting the self-destruct sequence, Ripley escapes with Jones to the shuttle again, with the alien nowhere in sight this time. Ripley takes off in the Narcissus, and the Nostromo explodes. While preparing for hypersleep Ripley discovers that the alien has hidden itself inside the shuttle. Ripley manages to slip on a space-suit. She then blasts the alien out of the shuttle's airlock with a grappling-gun. When the Alien (still tethered to the grappling hook) climbs into one of the shuttle's engine nacelles, Ripley activates the engine and blasts it clear into space. The film ends as Ripley and the cat enter hypersleep.[6]

Cast

  • Sigourney Weaver as Ellen Ripley. Ripley is the Warrant Officer onboard the Nostromo and the chief protagonist of the film. This was Weaver's first leading role in a motion picture.
  • Tom Skerritt as Dallas. Dallas is the Captain of the Nostromo. He leads the landing party to investigate the distress signal on LV-426 and subsequently leads the crew in dealing with the hostile Alien onboard the Nostromo.
  • John Hurt as Kane. Kane is the Nostromo's Executive Officer. He is the first to encounter the alien lifeform on LV-426 and serves as host for the Alien which then stalks the crew.
  • Veronica Cartwright as Lambert. Lambert is the Nostromo's navigator. She is the most emotionally vulnerable member of the crew and the first to lose her cool when they are attacked by the Alien.
  • Ian Holm as Ash. Ash is the Nostromo's Science Officer. He performs tests on the alien lifeform which attaches itself to Kane and communicates his findings to the Weyland-Yutani Corporation. He is later revealed to be an android and betrays the crew.
  • Harry Dean Stanton as Brett. Brett is the Nostromo's Engineering Technician and cares for Jones, the ship's cat. He and Parker view themselves as the "grunts" of the crew and argue with the others for larger shares of the crew's profits.
  • Yaphet Kotto as Parker. Parker is the Nostromo's Chief Engineer. He shares the closest relationship with Brett and works with him to repair damage to the ship. The two characters argue with the other crew members over their shares in the ship's profits.
  • Bolaji Badejo as the Alien. The Alien is the antagonist of the film. It stalks the Nostromo's crew members, killing them off one by one. Percy Edwards provided the creature's vocalizations while Eddie Powell stood in for Badejo for performing stuntwork.
File:Bye bye.jpg
Kane examines an egg, unaware of the coming danger

Actor Jon Finch was originally cast in the role of Kane, but as principal photography on Alien commenced, the crew soon noticed that he looked ill and rushed him to hospital, where doctors diagnosed a severe case of diabetes. John Hurt, in London and available at that time, subsequently replaced Finch.

Inspirations

Some reviewers have noted that the basic plot of Alien, the pitting of a small group of humans against a relentless alien creature in a remote location, derives from earlier science-fiction horror films.[7][8][9] Dan O'Bannon has over the years expressed clear views on the exact sources.[10] He has even gone as far as saying: "A lot of people speculated as to where I stole it from. The truth is I stole it from everywhere."[11]

Admitted inspirations include:

  • The Thing from Another World (1951), featuring the hunting of professional men (soldiers in this case) through closely confined areas.
  • Forbidden Planet (1956) in which a ship lands despite warnings and an invisible creature hunts them down one by one.
  • It! The Terror from Beyond Space (1958) where a spaceship crew bring a murderous alien onboard who then hunts them down. Ivor Powell, the associate producer, has also highlighted the influences.
  • Planet of the Vampires (1965), in which humans discover the remains of a large alien sitting at the controls of its spaceship.
  • "Junkyard", a short-story by Clifford D. Simak: humans find deserted spaceships on an asteroid and the crew stumble across an egg-chamber.
  • Strange Relations by Philip José Farmer which deals with extraterrestrial reproduction.
  • Various stories from Weird Tales in which monsters eat people from the inside.
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey which inspired some scenes in Aliens. One is the similarity between HAL 9000 "HAL" and MU-TH-R 182 "MOTHER" as the ships' central computers that make the decisions for humans when they are in cryogenic hibernation; the computers also hide ulterior motives not known to the crew.

O'Bannon denies influence on the part of The Voyage of the Space Beagle, which features aliens laying eggs in people which then hatch and eat their way out. However, a lawsuit brought by A. E. van Vogt ended with a settlement out of court.[12] Philip French suggests another non-science-fiction parallel: Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None.[13]

Production

History and early versions

File:Chris Foss Pyramid Book of Alien.JPG
According to the book "The Book of Alien" (Titan Books © 1979), a very early draft of the script envisaged the eggs housed in a completely separate architectural structure, shaped in the form of a massive pyramid. The British illustrator and science-fiction artist Chris Foss drew these illustrations of the discarded sequence.

After completing Dark Star (1974), Dan O'Bannon wanted to take some of the ideas (such as where an alien hunts a crew through a ship) and make them into a science-fiction horror film, at that time provisionally called Memory. He also worked on a script entitled Gremlins (not to be confused with the unrelated 1984 film of the same name), about gremlins getting loose aboard a World War II bomber and wreaking havoc with the crew (the B-17 segment of the film Heavy Metal (1981) used a significantly altered version of this original story). Screenwriter Ronald Shusett contacted O'Bannon about collaborating on projects. Although Shusett wanted input on a script that would later become Total Recall, they decided to focus on the lower-budget Memory. However, O'Bannon got drafted in to work on Alejandro Jodorowsky's adaptation of Frank Herbert's Dune. Although this came to nothing, he did meet H.R. Giger, Chris Foss and Moebius on set and a lot of their work together led to later developments when production of Alien started in earnest.[10] For Giger's well-recognized influence see below. Foss' spaceship designs remained unused (some later appeared in some of his books) but Mœbius's designs for the Nostromo spacesuits made it into the final film.[10]

When O'Bannon returned to America, broke, after the Dune film project collapsed, he ended up sharing a flat with Shusett. Shusett suggested mixing in elements of Gremlins and how the alien got on board. He said: "It screws one of the crew. Something jumps up at his face, grabs hold of him and shoves its seed down his throat, then later it bursts out." Ron Cobb had worked on the designs for Dark Star (and would later provide the bulk of the designs for Alien); he offered the idea of the creature's acid blood stopping the crew from simply blowing it up. These various ideas came together in the O'Bannon and Shusett script Star Beast.[10] At this stage the title loomed as the main problem. Casting around for a better name, O'Bannon noticed the number of times the word "alien" occurred in the script, and so he adopted this for the film's title.[10]

The original script bears many resemblances to the film as actually produced, yet with significant differences. The spaceship — designed with a low-budget production in mind — originated as a small craft, initially a galactic coastguard-like ship and then a commercial vessel, called the Snark.[10] In the original script, the ship has an all-male crew, including the Ripley character (though the script's "Cast of Characters" section explicitly states that "The crew is unisex and all parts are interchangeable for men or women").[10] Actor Tom Skerritt originally won the role of Ripley, but later, in the course of developing the script, character re-casting made Ripley a woman, because producer Alan Ladd, Jr., and script-doctors Walter Hill and David Giler had heard rumors of Fox working on other titles with strong female leads.[10]

The script recounted how, after responding to the intercepted alien message, the crew discover the derelict alien craft and its dead pilot. Ominously, the pilot in its death-throes had scratched a triangle on its control-console. The crew members go outside and see the remains of an ancient pyramid. They lower Kane into the structure, where he finds a chamber with a breathable atmosphere. An altar-like structure houses the alien embryo-eggs, and a hieroglyph depicts the alien's life-cycle.[10] This concept survived for a long time, and preliminary H.R. Giger pyramid-drawings intended for Alien exist, but eventually the producers went with the idea of combining the wrecked derelict ship with the egg-chamber (also designed by Giger), although the ideas of the pyramid, the altar and the hieroglyphs re-surfaced in the Aliens vs. Predator computer game and in the 2004 film Alien vs. Predator.

Apart from the disappearance of the pyramid, the final script changed the story's pacing. The impregnation occurred around the mid-point in the film, with a long, slow build up of tension reminiscent of the atmosphere generated in At the Mountains of Madness. It also ended with an Alien egg seen clinging to the bottom of the escaping shuttle, a detail that survived various drafts and disappeared only in the final version dated June 1978.[10]

The original cut of the film also included a scene where, after the attacks on all her fellow crew-members, Ripley heads towards the shuttle, then stumbles across a room where she finds Dallas — barely alive — and Brett (Dallas and Brett, the first two crew-members to fall victim to the Alien, had disappeared). Dallas and Brett, cocooned in mucus, have apparently started mutating into alien eggs. Dallas begs Ripley to kill him, and she does so by using her flamethrower device. Although editing removed this scene from the final theatrical cut, the idea emerged later in scenes in Aliens, Alien Resurrection, and Aliens vs. Predator.

Pre-production

O'Bannon and Shusett almost completed the sale of the film to Roger Corman. However, at the last minute, their friend Michael Haggerty said he could get them a better deal; and thus they sold the script to the Brandywine company of David Giler, Gordon Carroll, and Walter Hill, who had a production-deal with Twentieth Century Fox with Hill attached to direct.[10] A single tagline promoted the script to studio executives: "Jaws in space".[14]

Hill and Giler re-wrote the script, making it more action-oriented, adding the character of Ash, and rewriting much of the dialogue. They also introduced a motherhood theme, though the detail of Ripley going back for the cat originated in the period of the male Ripley-character.[10] These changes caused tension between O'Bannon and the other production members that lasted through the making of the film. Parts of O'Bannon's scripts appear on various DVD releases, with the full early version presented on the Alien Quadrilogy.

At this stage, a hiatus occurred in the production, as the studio expressed alarm at the prospect of committing to a new science-fiction film in the pre-Star Wars era when such films remained a rarity.[15]

When Star Wars became a box-office hit, Fox gave the film the go-ahead with an $8 million budget — much higher than the writers had originally hoped. During the production hiatus, Ridley Scott replaced and revised many of the design-elements before principal photography started at Shepperton Studios in England. Giger, brought in from Zürich (Switzerland), set up at the studios along with Ron Cobb as a type of artist-in-residence. (Giger kept a diary through the production which became the basis for his book Giger's Alien).[16]

The alien

File:Hrgigeralien.jpg
H.R. Giger's original design for the Alien, based on his earlier work, Necronom IV

Swiss painter and sculptor H. R. Giger designed the alien creature's adult form and the alien architecture. The designs feature the creative use of bones in the architecture (the set constructors used real bones in making the interior of the alien ship). Giger received an Academy Award for his work on the original film. The design of the creature with strong Freudian sexual undertones and multiple phallic symbols, while simultaneously presenting an overall feminine figure, provided a compelling androgynous image, conforming to archetypal mappings and imageries in horror films that often redraw gender lines.[17]

The adult alien appears predominantly black in color, similar in cast to heavily tarnished silver. In keeping with Giger's blending of biological and mechanical life-forms, some shots reveal a metallic patina. It has an elongated shiny head with no eyes. (Some production stills reveal a human skull used in the sculpture beneath its translucent anterior shell). Below, the jaw holds the razor-sharp metal teeth. The mouth houses a tongue-like body part with a second mouth on the end. On the alien's back stand four curved black pipes (Giger designed these for the purpose of breaking up the back). Apart from this, the alien has an anthropomorphic form, with two legs and two arms, its hands each armed with six long, black, razor-sharp claws. The "blood" of the creature, a powerful acid, also serves as a natural defense mechanism.

The slime of the costume would eat through the paint, so it needed repainting every day.[18]

Set design and construction

Michael Seymour worked as the film's production designer. John Mollo supervised the costumes, including the distinctive spacesuits, and Carlo Rambaldi produced the crucial mechanical effects for the title-alien's head. The team of Brian Johnson and Nick Allder — who had worked on 2001: A Space Odyssey and Space 1999 — headed up special effects. Scott turned to a computer-animation pioneer, Bernard Lodge, from his old college — the Royal College of Art in London — to produce the film's green-line computer displays. The thin layer of mist that "notified the eggs" came from smoke and a pulsating laser, which the film crew borrowed from the band The Who.

According to the behind-the-scenes documentary The Beast Within: The Making of "Alien", the film crew built the spaceship set in one piece. To move around the set, actors had to navigate through the hallways of the ship. Toward the end of the shoot, many members of the cast and crew recalled walking inside the set alone as a very unnerving experience. Some maintain that such emotions come across on the screen.

Some shots on the planet's surface outside the Nostromo and on the "Space Jockey's" dais used children in spacesuits (specifically Ridley Scott's and the cameraman's children) as stand-ins in order to make the spaceship's landing-legs seem larger. Ridley Scott said in the director's commentary on the DVD, "This shot here, actually is three children made in miniature spacesuits...who were my two sons and the cameraman's son.... I had small costumes made for them so the landing legs looked bigger..."[19]

Ridley Scott re-used the Nostromo's and the shuttle's computer-graphics, specifically the PURGE-screen, for the computer-screens inside the Spinner hover-cars in his film Blade Runner.

Other filming has re-used the set. In particular, the BBC One series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy re-used some of the Nostromo hallways, as well as other parts of the set. These appear most prominently in the scenes set onboard the Vogon Constructor Fleet.[10] When the BBC science-fiction sitcom Red Dwarf moved production to Shepperton Studios it used some surviving Nostromo hallway sets from Alien in Series 5, most notably in the episode "DNA" (as revealed on the DVD commentary).

Music

Ridley Scott's vision of the film came under the influence of Isao Tomita's synthesizer-arrangement of Holst's The Planets, especially of the movement "Mars: Bringer of War", and at one point in pre-production Tomita appeared a serious candidate to write the original score for the film.[20] With the dropping of these plans, however, Jerry Goldsmith came to compose the film music. Instead of aiming at a typical 1970s science-fiction score utilizing synthesizers,[21] the composer's music reflects the film's underlying horror-film genre with its use of bleak orchestrations, most notably in the higher woodwinds, oscillating string-textures and bizarre, sometimes savage sounds, especially from the brass-section, which his orchestrator Arthur Morton built from the orchestral palette with various modern compositional techniques. Goldsmith also composed a main theme in the romantic style that barely appears in the finished film. A short passage from Eine kleine Nachtmusik by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart also plays as source music during the scene in which Dallas spends some time alone relaxing in the shuttle Narcissus.

Director Ridley Scott and editor Terry Rawlings became quite attached to several of the pre-existing cues that they had used for the temporary score while editing the film. As a result Scott and music editor Robert Hathaway moved around much of Goldsmith's score, re-edited cues and re-scored several sequences. In some parts of the film the temp score remained in place:[22] segments of four monaural cues from Goldsmith's 1962 score for Freud – The Secret Passion appear in the film,[23] and the final minutes of the first movement of Howard Hanson's Symphony No. 2 "Romantic" replaced Goldsmith's music for the concluding moments of the film's showdown, as well as the complete music for the end credits. As a result, Goldsmith's original soundtrack LP represented more the original score he wrote than what ended up appearing in the film.

As an additional feature the initial 20th Anniversary Edition DVD of Alien included both an isolated music-only soundtrack that restored the cue-order originally envisioned by the composer, resynchronizing the cues to their appropriate places, as well as a second isolated film-music soundtrack with the re-scored and re-arranged cues from the official 20th Century Fox release of the film, while the full production soundtrack played between music cues. In the final DVD release most of the scenes showing the Nostromo exterior and all of the sequences from Howard Hanson's second symphony ("Romantic"), some of which went along with them, have disappeared for reasons unknown.

The original film score by Jerry Goldsmith played under the conductor's baton of Lionel Newman, who also received main-title credits, a practice that had become unusual by the time of the film's release. The National Philharmonic Orchestra played the music. The soundtrack CD of Alien has now gone out-of-print. Over the years several bootlegged copies of Goldsmith's score appeared on the market, among them a Spanish two-CD release with all used and unused cues, including the retained temp score, and an archive bootleg that also included alternate takes from the recording sessions.

On November 15, 2007, Intrada Records released the complete score to the film with additional alternate score tracks and the original LP-program in a 2-CD set. This release first published Jerry Goldsmith's complete score remixed and remastered from the original 1" master tapes.

In 1980 Jerry Goldsmith's film music for Alien received nominations for the Golden Globe Award (Best Original Film Score), the Grammy Awards (Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special) and the Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music.

Official soundtrack releases

  1. Original soundtrack (Fox Music, 1979; LP; 10 tracks)
  2. Re-issue of the original soundtrack (Silva Screen Records, 1987; CD; 10 tracks)
  3. The Alien Trilogy (Colosseum, 1996; CD; 13 tracks, incl. 7 tracks from the original Alien soundtrack)
  4. 20th Anniversary Edition DVD containing two isolated music tracks: a) the original score and b) the alternate music track (Fox Home Entertainment, 2000)
  5. Alien Complete Score 2-CD set, released on Intrada Records, November 15, 2007 with complete score with several alternate tracks and the original LP program.

In addition several compilation re-issues and re-recordings of some of Goldsmith's music for Alien have appeared.[24]

Bootleg releases

  1. "Limited library archival pressing" (Soundtrack Library, 1999; CD-R; 32 tracks; allegedly including alternate takes from the recording sessions)
  2. Alien: First Release of the Complete Score from the Stereo Master Tapes (Total Sound, 2000; CD-R; 21 tracks; assembled from the production of the 20th Anniversary Edition DVD)
  3. Alien: Banda Sonora Original del Film y Temas Rechazados (Memory Records, 2001; 2-CD release; 25 + 21 tracks; including rejected cues, temp score cues and bonus material)
  4. "Director's Cut bootleg" (Nostromo Enterprises, 2006; 2-CD release; 30 + 25 tracks; in most parts a re-assembly of preceding bootlegs and official releases and compilations, including re-masters from the production of the Alien special edition DVD and the soundtrack for Iwerk's Aliens: Ride at the Speed of Fright by composer Richard Band)

Influence

Roger Ebert called Alien (and John Carpenter's Halloween) "the most influential of modern action pictures". He went on to say that many of "the films it influenced studied its thrills but not its thinking", including the re-make of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.[9] Andrew O'Hehir wrote, "almost every horror film since Alien has ripped it off in some way, but most of the imitations have focused on details."[25]

Analysts have examined the film's gender-politics and its influence on the subsequent development of the leading heroine in Hollywood film,[26] also noting that the film's narrative broke with the prominent custom of repressing female roles in science-fiction films, since the woman, representing nature, biology and sexuality, normally functioned as an antagonistic, ridiculing signifier of science and technology.[27] Some critics see the non-traditional re-interpretation of the female lead in Alien as a necessity, since only a female, (i.e. "natural") entity can successfully fight the anti-technological, biologically reproducing and overly sexualized xenomorph in a science-fiction environment.

The film received some academic attention and commentators linked it to wider cultural idioms, especially those popular in the 1970s and 1980s such as abjection.[28] James Kavanaugh criticized the film's "internally overdetermined and contradictory construction" in disguising humanist ideologies as feminism.[29] Film-critic Kathleen Murphy called Kavanaugh's analysis an assaulting, "academically approved gobbledygook".[30] Several academic theses on the film, which matured over the following years, appeared in print in the book Alien Zone: Cultural Theory and Contemporary Science Fiction Cinema.[31]

Alien became the first R-rated film to have a merchandising line aimed at children. The children's products released included various toys and models based on the creature and on its egg, jigsaw puzzles, a board game, a Viewmaster-style movie reel, and a storybook. Kenner Products released an 18-inch Alien figure with articulated parts including the retractable jaw and glow-in-the-dark cranium. However, the toy did not sell well.[32]

Awards and accolades

Alien won the 1979 Academy Award for Best Visual Effects and also received a nomination for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration.[33] The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA named it the Best Science Fiction Film of the year and Ridley Scott Best Director, and it won the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation.[34] In 2002, the United States National Film Registry deemed the film "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" and inducted it into its collection.[35]

In 2007 Empire Magazine named the "chestburster" scene in Alien the greatest 18-rated movie moment ever as part of its 18th birthday issue.[36]

The chestburster scene made it #2 on Bravo's "The 100 Scariest Movie Moments".

Special Edition (2003)

October 29 2003 saw the re-release of Alien in cinemas as a Ridley Scott Director's Cut. This release restored many but not all of the deleted scenes, which had already appeared as bonus materials on previous VHS, laserdisc and DVD releases of the film, and made unobtrusive deletions to the original. The new release also added some minor visual effects to the film: a shot of the sunrise on the moon, lights on the helmets of Dallas, Lambert and Kane moving under a natural arc on the alien moon as well as a field of stars in the background, when the Nostromo synchronizes its orbit around the moon.

Ridley Scott stated that Alien didn't require this tweaking and drew attention to the use of the term "Director's Cut" for marketing reasons only (and inconsistently as well). In the Alien Quadrilogy DVD materials, he goes out of his way to state his preference for the original: "Rest easy, the original 1979 theatrical version isn't going anywhere." He re-edited the film himself, but only after viewing the studio's attempt to do so. He has characterized the studio's initial version as "too long" and felt that it ruined the film's pacing.

The Alien Quadrilogy boxed set released on December 2 2003 includes both the Special Edition and the original theatrical version. Because the new version slightly shortened many of the scenes and shots from the original release and edited them with discreet acceleration to pander to modern film-audiences' viewing habits,[37] the Special Edition actually runs forty seconds shorter than the original 1979 theatrical release,[38] despite the addition of almost six minutes of new material.[39]

Spin-offs

The novelization by Alan Dean Foster appeared in 1979. It includes dramatizations of most scenes, also the scenes found in the Special Edition (but notably excluding the "Space Jockey" scene) as well as scenes scripted but never filmed, or filmed but never included in any release version of the film. Notably, the novelization includes the discovery of the radio-transmitter aboard the derelict, a moment when the surviving crew-members contemplate taking suicide pills and the detection of the alien as it searches for food in one of the Nostromo's storage-chambers. One of the most infamous episodes however, and one which the crew only partially filmed, involved a failed attempt to blow the alien out of an airlock, which does not succeed because — as Foster implies — the character Ash intervenes by sounding the ship's alarm to scare the alien away from the airlock. In addition, the characters Ripley and Dallas become suspicious of Ash's intentions after this incident. For many years Foster's novelization provided fans and others with the only known source for the "missing cocoon scene from Alien" (see also above).

Subsequent spin-offs include comics, novels, and computer games. Alien itself received a comic-book adaptation by writer Archie Goodwin and artist Walter Simonson called Alien: The Illustrated Story, published by the Heavy Metal magazine, promptly followed by Alien: The Movie Novel, a photographic film-novel as well as a miscellaneous behind-the-scenes book called The Book of Alien. However, the franchise failed to soar before the release of Cameron's sequel and the subsequent adaptations by Dark Horse Comics in the late 1980s. The Aliens have since also appeared in numerous comic-book crossovers featuring Predators, Superman, Batman, WildC.A.T.s, Green Lantern, Judge Dredd and others.

References

References

  1. ^ Most notably Shivers, Rabid and The Brood
  2. ^ Mark Jancovich, Horror, the Film Reader, Routledge 2002, p. 5; for a general overview including further sources, compare also Daniel Pimley, "Representations Of The Body In Alien: How can science fiction be seen as an expression of contemporary attitudes and anxieties about human biology?", 2003
  3. ^ Paul Davidson (2006-02-08). "AVP Killed Alien 5". IGN Entertainment (with further reference to AICN). Retrieved 2007-09-17. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ Later Alien-series films identified the moon as LV-426 "Acheron", located in the Zeta II Reticuli system.
  5. ^ The film does not name the company. However, some film-props like beer-cans had the name Weylan-Yutani printed on them. It also appeared on two computer screens. Although the name remained almost invisible on-screen, James Cameron used it for the 1986 sequel, changing it to Weyland-Yutani.
  6. ^ In a congenial nod toward Alien, director David Fincher chose to cite Ripley's final words in Alien at the end of his film Alien³ (1992) as an incoming transmission after the shutdown of the colony on Fiorina 161, decades after the events in Alien occurred.
  7. ^ Adrian Mackinder. "FutureMovie's review of Alien". Retrieved 2006-08-30.
  8. ^ Todd Wardrope. "A Voyage Interrupted: Alien and Science-Fiction Film". Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  9. ^ a b Roger Ebert. "Chicago Sun-Times Review of Alien". Retrieved 2006-08-30.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m David A. McIntee, "Beautiful Monsters: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to the Alien and Predator Films", Telos 2005, pp. 19-28 & p. 39.9
  11. ^ Interview with Dan O'Bannon in the documentary Alien Evolution (Channel 4, 13th October 2000)
  12. ^ BBC - My Science Fiction Life - The Voyage of the Space Beagle
  13. ^ Philip French. "Guardian Review of Alien". Retrieved 2006-08-30.
  14. ^ "A space odyssey — Sir Ridley Scott looks back on his classic Alien"
  15. ^ Alien Quadrilogy DVD set
  16. ^ Robert Sutton. "R0BTRAIN's Bad Ass Cinema: Alien". Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  17. ^ Lina Badley, Film, Horror, and the Body Fantastic: Contributions to the Study of Popular Culture, Greenwood Press 1995
  18. ^ "201 Greatest Movie of all Time". Empire. March 2006 (Issue 201). p. 97. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  19. ^ Ridley Scott (1999). Alien: 20th Anniversary Edition director's commentary. {{cite AV media}}: |format= requires |url= (help)
  20. ^ David Stoner, Booklet commentary for the original Alien soundtrack CD release, Silva Screen Records, 1987
  21. ^ Compare for example some cues from Goldsmith's 1976 score for Logan's Run.
  22. ^ Interviews on the "Quadrilogy" DVD release of this film document the viewpoints of Goldsmith, Rawlings and Scott in regard to this situation and why it occurred.
  23. ^ Excerpts from Charcot's Show and large parts of the cue Desperate Case play during the airduct sequence. Editing also preserved excerpts from Main Title during the acid-spill laboratory sequence and from the cue The First Step as Ripley searches for the cat on the Nostromo's bridge.
  24. ^ See www.soundtrackcollector.com for an almost complete listing.
  25. ^ Andrew O'Hehir. "Alien review on Salon.com". Retrieved 2006-09-06.
  26. ^ For example: Carol J. Clover, Men, Women and Chainsaws: Gender in the Modern Horror Film, British Film Institute 1992
  27. ^ Daniel Pimley, "Representations of the Body in Alien", 2003, p. 7
  28. ^ Barbara Creed, "Horror and the Monstrous Feminine — An Imaginary Abjection", in Screen, Vol. 27, No. 1, 1986
  29. ^ James H. Kavanaugh, "'Son of a Bitch': Feminism, Humanism and Science in Alien", in October, Vol. 13, 1980, pp. 90-100
  30. ^ Kathleen Murphy, "The Last Temptation of Sigourney Weaver", in Richard T. Jameson (ed.), Film Comment, Film Society of Lincoln Center (publ.), Vol. 28, No. 4, July–August 1992, p. 17
  31. ^ Annette Kuhn (ed.), London 1990; a second book with further analyses came out under the title: Alien Zone 2: The Spaces of Science-Fiction Cinema (Annette Kuhn, ed.; London 1999); for a partial overview of available sources see also here.
  32. ^ Marc H. Cawiezel. "The History of Unproduced Alien and Predator Toy". Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  33. ^ Also, the movie recieved won the 1979 BAFTA awards for Sound and Production Design and for Music Score (Jerry Goldsmith, and earned nominations for best Supporting Actor (John Hurt), Editing, Costume Design and Best Newcomer to a Leading Role (Sigourney Weaver). "Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences: Alien search results". Retrieved 2006-12-18.
  34. ^ "Saturn Award: Past Award Winners". Retrieved 2006-12-18.
  35. ^ "Films Selected to The National Film Registry, Library of Congress 1989-2005". Retrieved 2006-12-18.
  36. ^ "Alien named as top 18-rated scene". Retrieved 2007-04-28. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |publishdate= ignored (help)
  37. ^ "Alien – Director's Cut", in Moviestar, Vol. 82 (VI. 2003 / November/December), p. 45 sqq (incl. interview with Ridley Scott)
  38. ^ Marco Schmidt, "Der Film war schon damals verdammt gut: Interview with Ridley Scott on Alien - Director's Cut", Hamburger Morgenpost, 10-23-2003
  39. ^ 20th Century Fox, Official interview with Ridley Scott

General references

  • Annette Kuhn (ed.), Alien Zone: Cultural Theory and Contemporary Science Fiction Cinema, New York / London 1990, ISBN 0-860919-93-5
  • Annette Kuhn (ed.), Alien Zone 2: The Spaces of Science-Fiction Cinema, London 1999, ISBN 1-859847-46-3
  • David A. McIntee, Beautiful Monsters: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to the Alien and Predator Films, Telos Publishing, 2005, ISBN 1-903889-94-4
  • Paul Scanlon & Michael Gross, The Book of "Alien", Titan Books, 1979/2003, ISBN 1-852864-83-4
Template:S-awards
Preceded by Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film
1979
Succeeded by

Template:Americanfilms1970s