
Directed
by: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Actors: Sigourney Weaver, Winona Ryder, Ron Perlman, Dominique
Pinon, Michael Wincott, Brad Dourif, and more.
USA / 1997.
Review By: Geir
Frierstad 19©97
Is there any point in writing an introduction of the Alien-saga?
Are there anyone here who aren't familiar with Ridley Scott's
nail bitingly good sci-fi horror movie "Alien" from
1979, with unavoidable sequels by James "I can spend more
money than you" Cameron and David "Commercial? Me?
Hah!" Fincher, respectively? I thought not... The
Alien-series has always been a good source of income (perhaps
with the exception of Fincher's "Alien³"), so it comes
as no surprise that the boys at 20th Century Fox have been
working overtime to find a way to bring
our-heroine-who-kicks-alien-butt Ripley back on the big screen,
so that they can earn even more money. Having been burned once
already by Fincher's attempt at being even more dark, sinister
and moody than Scott was with the original "Alien," one
has now come to the conclusion that humor may be a cool way of
adding some spice to the Alien-series. One can almost imagine the
somewhat overweight producers at Fox sweating slightly in a
stuffy, smoke-filled meeting room: "Hey, this horror angle
isn't working anymore. Let's throw some weird, offbeat humor into
the mix - maybe that'll help the movie sell more tickets? What do
you say about hiring that weirdo French guy who did those
freakin' twisted dark comedies? What was it they were called
again? Delicatessen and The Lost Children City or something like
that. Jean-Pierre (they're all called that over there in
frogland, aren't they?) will do the right thing, right? Get
France on the horn, now!" They did. The result is
"Alien: Resurrection."
| First a short summary of the story for
those of you who insist on being in the know on such
stuff: A handful of morally dead scientists (including Brad Dourif, who geeky movie-fans will recognize as the madder than a bag of nuts Dante from "Death Machine") are performing genetic experiments on an old blood sample from Ripley, as well as our old friends - the aliens. After seven failed attempts, they manage to produce a *fairly* normal clone of Ripley, although one spawned from a blend of human and alien DNA. Meet Ripley v8.00 - she's not nice. Or is she? All of this is going on inside some military spaceship cruising around in our solar system. Along comes the pirate ship Betty, with a cargo of cryogenically frozen people on board, which the scientists need to grow aliens in. Betty's crew consists of a selection of interesting individuals, including Michael Wincott, Ron Perlman, Dominique Pinon and last, but DEFINITELY not least, the incredibly cute Winona Ryder (there's no reason to debate whether or not to see this movie now, guys!). |
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To the surprise of no one in particular (except
the scientists - of course), the aliens manage to break out of
their cell, and all hell breaks loose. An emergency procedure
autopilots the ship back to home base - Earth - and our pirate
friends now have find a way to get off the ship and blow it up
before it reaches Earth.
No big surprises in the plot department, in other words, but who
had honestly expected that? It doesn't matter anyway - this is a
wonderfully entertaining film, saturated with Jeunet's (where's
Marc Caro?) weird and wonderful sense of humor, which is
definitely helping raise the movie's entertainment value up a
couple of notches.
What makes the movie infinitely much better than its predecessor
(Fincher's "Alien³" for those of you who flunked math
in school), however, are the much improved characters. While
"Alien³" had a bunch of identical bald brits lining up
to get shredded by the alien, this movie at least has a bunch of
highly original *personalities* lining up to get shredded by the
aliens. Granted, most of them die anyway, but we're at least able
to see what character got whacked by the alien this time, rather
than constantly asking "which bald guy croaked now?"
This helps the movie a lot.
There really isn't much more to say apart from this. The movie
*looks* great, as expected. Jeunet yanked the ears of his old
partner and cinematographer, Darius Khondji, to work his magic
behind the camera for him again (have a look at "The City of
Lost Children" and "Se7en" for excellent examples
of what wonderful pictures this man can conjure up). A somewhat
surprising element of "Alien: Resurrection" is the
ENORMOUS amount of gore it contains. Pretty much anything that
moves is shredded in the most graphic and unappetizing ways you
can think of. One of the "highlights" is when one
unfortunate soldier gets the top of his head twisted until it
shatters, spraying, uhm, "stuff" all over the place.
Another scene reminiscent of Peter Jackson's "Bad
Taste" has one of the characters peeling out part of his
brain from the back of his neck and looking at it before he
perishes. The producers sure didn't save any money on the
ketchup, in other words...
However, this is not a reason not to see the movie, unless you
have a weak stomach - this is a great movie. The underwater scene
alone is worth the price of admission.
In closing, I should probably add that the movie attempts to
build on the alien-saga by introducing yet another type of alien.
They fail, however, as it's more ridiculous than scary (I would
definitely like to avoid meeting it in a dark alley if I had the
choice, though ;).
Still, who cares? The movie is great anyway! Go see it!
Grade: Four and a
half Ripley-clones (out of five)
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