(fig. 1, original poster)
"Alien" (1979),
directed by Ridley Scott, is a movie that does not stand out for its plot, but
for its way of keeping the viewers on the edge of their seats. However many
times you watch the film, it can still make you jump and experience anixeity, as if you are really there, among
the crew, fighting off a "perfect" organism. Commonsensemedia.com states that: “Parents
need to know that Alien is a classic of sci-fi horror, and
while not as gory as most horror films, it's too intense for younger viewers.” (Commonsensemedia.org,
2014)
(fig. 2, movie still)
Alien is also a film, where
women are not portrayed as maidens in distress, screaming at the horrors in
front of them, waiting for a male figure to descend from the heavens and rescue
them, but the exact opposite. Ripley
(Sigourney Weaver) rationalises her
fears, trying to overcome them, finding answers on her own and fight her own
battles. She walks down the dark corridors, haunted by the alien, and makes you
think - what will I do if I was in the same position? R. Ebert states “certainly
the character of Ripley, played by Sigourney Weaver, would have appealed to readers in the Golden
Age of Science Fiction. She has little interest in the romance of finding the
alien, and still less in her employer's orders that it be brought back home as
a potential weapon.”(Ebert, 2003). Fig. 3 shows one of the few, but intense,
encounters with the alien.
(fig. 3, movie still)
What is also really
interesting about the film is the sound design. Throughout the whole movie, the
viewer has trouble hearing what do the characters talk about, making you more
aware of what is happening, a great little detail that adds to the overall
uneasy feeling. The camera, kept so close to the characters, switches to first
person perspective, putting the viewer directly into the action. The pacing of
the movie is also impeccable. "Alien" starts slowly, but then unfolds
with a rapid speed. Derek Malcolm talks about the movie: “Scott,
aided by his special effects team, headed by Brian Johnson and Nick Allder, and
many others who deserve to be mentioned but can't be, creates in the confined
space of his main set a sweaty little world on its own that responds ideally to
his obsessive close-ups and restless, magnifying style.” (Malcolm, 2009). On
fig. 3 we can see and really appreciate, the “alien” design inside the
spaceship.
In conclusion, "Alien" is a film
created with great attention to detail, it is a science-fiction for grown-ups
where two worlds collide and their objectives are exactly the same - to
survive.
Bibliography:
Ebert, R. (2003). Alien Movie Review & Film Summary (1979) |
Roger Ebert. [online] Rogerebert.com. Available at: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-alien-1979
[Accessed 23 Oct. 2014].
Malcolm, D. (2009). Derek Malcolm's Alien review from 1979.
[online] the Guardian. Available at:
http://www.theguardian.com/film/2009/oct/13/derek-malcolm-alien-review
[Accessed 23 Oct. 2014].
Commonsensemedia.org, (2014). Alien - Movie Review. [online]
Available at: https://www.commonsensemedia.org/movie-reviews/alien [Accessed 23
Oct. 2014].
Images:
Fig. 1 Beyondhollywood.com,
(2014). Alien (1979) Movie Review | BeyondHollywood.com. [online]
Available at: http://www.beyondhollywood.com/alien-1979-movie-review/ [Accessed
23 Oct. 2014].
Fig. 3 Ebert, R.
(2003). Alien Movie Review & Film Summary (1979) | Roger Ebert.
[online] Rogerebert.com. Available at: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-alien-1979
[Accessed 23 Oct. 2014].
Fig. 2 Film Freak Reviews,
(2013). Movie Review: Alien (1979) Horrorathon. [online] Available
at: http://filmfreakreviews.com/2013/10/25/movie-review-alien-1979-horrorathon/
[Accessed 23 Oct. 2014].