The thread title needs to change badly. It is simply untrue at this point.
It should be this: Neil Blomkamp's Alien film possibly a direct sequel to Aliens.
I don't want hicks to get that ugly scar thats in the concept art
followed Aliens, everybody in Hollywood knows Alien 3 was a terrible mistake.
You are just being willfully obstinate now.
It's like you read my mind.I just don't think that this should be the thread title since nothing has been officially confirmed as of yet. It is all reading between the lines. I personally like the idea and am supportive of it, but I don't want them to change whatever happened in Alien 3 whith Weyland and the way it ended for example. Of course they could have opted not to kill of Newt and Beihn but anyone who played Colonial Marines (which is confirmed as canon by Fox) knows it wasn't Biehn at the beginning of Alien 3 anyway. The fact that Newt dies is not a reason to retcon the whole Alien 3 story. I personally have no issues with the fact she is being killed off. I didn't like her at all in Aliens. She was more annoying then actually helpful during the whole movie/plot. I sincerely hope they don't go the Aliens/action route with this movie. We have enough action movies anyway, and too little suspense/thriller movies like the first Alien.
Stop. Saying. Colonial Marines. Is. Cannon.
FFS guys...
Because it is? Fox is the license owner and they have decided it is canon. What's more to say? They retconned Hicks' death and now he is alive. This new storyline will be quite useful for this new Alien movie...
Why are so many people pretending James Cameron had anything to do with the creation of the Alien franchise, characters, or story? Why would the first person to take over the concept from the actual creators have to sign off to make something official? Just because he screwed it up first and missed the point of the original means he gets to have official say on who else can do the same?
Because it is? Fox is the license owner and they have decided it is canon.
James Cameron is the authority on the Alien franchise now? Wouldn't Scott's say have more weight?Because it's a fucking video game. And a bad one at that.
Now, what happened with the Ghostbusters game is an entirely different thing because it had the creators involved and they wrote the story to the game. Unless James Cameron came on board and said that Colonial Marines is true to his vision and tells a story he wanted and got involved with game and all that. Then it would be legit. But that didn't happen. All you have is that studio said it was cannon, and I should point out that at one point even AVP was considered cannon.
So STFU about Colonial Marines being cannon and pull your heads out of your asses. Seriously.
Is anyone so dense that they think Blomkamp will be obligated to follow the cannon of that POS game? Come the fuck on.
Just because the creator may disown the work doesn't mean others have to prevent themselves from seeing the good in it. We know that most of Fincher's disapproval was with the tampering behind-the-scenes; fair to say the studio drama tainted his perception of the film more than the final cut's quality. He'd never come right out and say "It's Fox's fault. Fox are assholes, they screwed me over on my vision"...of course he'd never outright say that. And I'm not saying his feeling are out of spite either, just that I feel a lot of his animosity for 3 is over what it represents as an experience he went through at that time, than what the film itself actually is.People hate Alien 3 because it's a shit movie, not just because it killed off two main characters Poochie-style. Even the director disowned the movie, maybe if Fincher had been allowed to make it without the studio interfering he could have salvaged something from the wreckage. The ending is the only good part.
The Assembly Cut makes minor improvements but it's still only polishing a turd.
It's pretty funny how people keep beating the "Colonial Marines is canon" drum. Alien 3 and Alien Resurrection were canon at one point as well. So was the Star Wars Expanded Universe. What's canon changes depending on the needs of the writers at any point in time. People should stop putting so much emphasis on it.
IGN had a long talk with Blomkamp about his approach, the films / Isolation. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRO5g51OMoM
IGN had a long talk with Blomkamp about his approach, the films / Isolation. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRO5g51OMoM
"I'm a fan of Alien. I'm a fan of Aliens. And Alien 3 onwards went in a direction I didn't want, so, like, I just get the chance to try to tell my version of how I think it should have happened."
Well that's interesting because it may hopefully explain if and when the Engineers went extinct, though I find it hard to believe it was by xenomorphs given the firepower the Engineers had, they could exterminate them well enough if they formed up a planned attack. I mean measly human soldiers and Ripley are able to kill hundreds with shit weapons and lack of really understanding them, don't see why the Engineers couldn't do better.This interview confirms Ridley Scott is producing and that it may run side to side with Prometheus 2 (launch-wise).
Quite literally fanfiction.It's a fan-film.
It's a fan-film.
alien 3 and resurrection were so stupid I think he has the right to overwrite it. Just pretend its like when Lucasfilm dumped out 100s of comics, novels, video games, and movies from canon.
Ripley wakes from cryosleep, walks into the showers where Hicks is soaping himself down. "I had the strangest dreams in cryo." she says. "Something about bald men and... basketball?"
If anything they'll just replace Blomkamp with a different director before canning it. I assume they might see a new Alien film as worth it regardless of what Chappie does critically speaking.If Chappie does ending up tanking, how likely is it that Fox pulls the plug on Aliens?
If Chappie does ending up tanking, how likely is it that Fox pulls the plug on Aliens?
Ugh. How is Alien 3 stupid? Because it killed characters you liked? Because it wasn't what you wanted? Or because you think it's a bad film?
Ripley wakes from cryosleep, walks into the showers where Hicks is soaping himself down. "I had the strangest dreams in cryo." she says. "Something about bald men and... basketball?"
All of the above plus it was a poorly made film
If Chappie does ending up tanking, how likely is it that Fox pulls the plug on Aliens?
I cant think of a better director, Weaver told Variety at the New York City premiere of Blomkamps latest film, Chappie. Hes a real fan. I think hell be true to the world and take it in unexpected directions. Its got a lot of sinew in it. It will certainly stand up to the others and probably break a lot of new ground as well.
I would love to make something in that world because the films use terror and dread and filmmaking techniques that are different than what Ive dabbled in before, [Blomkamp] said.
IGN: Have you played Alien: Isolation and if so what are your thoughts on the game?
Blomkamp: I think its amazing. Even from the first screen grabs, just the quality of the art direction and how it looks. Im such a visual person that the narrative of stuff is neither here nor there for me sometimes. Its literally about imagery. And when I saw the images I thought Sh*t, they cant be that good. And then I played it and to me it was that good. Its so good. Its ridiculous. Its actually interesting because it raises an interesting design question for me which is that when Alien was made it was cutting edge. Mother was cutting edge, and a green CRT monochromatic monitor was cutting edge, you know what I mean? And its like Aliens: The Directors Cut, with Reel 2 re-inserted, when youre on the colony planet and hes getting print-outs on dot-matrix paper with holes down the side that sh*t was real man. On the planet, in that future, that was cutting edge. So its an interesting debate if you look at it from my stand-point, which is do I make my cutting edge is it cutting edge, or is it actually closer to the first two. Because I wanted to be like it has the same parent. Its a genetic offspring of the first two movies, and Alien Isolation made me question that quite a lot. Because they got it so perfect with all of the late 1970s early 80s tech, its really cool.
Well Cameron has never known what it means to "build" to a scene. For him it's sudden spectacle and giant reveals. He could never direct a horror movie because those are built upon subtle dread and deliberately plotted out tense moments. He could second direct a fantastic chase scene from a monster but to imbue a sense of terror you need a emotional person behind the camera.
Okay, so if fears/phobias of rape/pregnancy/death in childbirth (that it was a man who was raped and died in childbirth carried a LOT of weight there) can be pursued adequately via an unknowable space monster that sweats KY, why would suffocation/drowning by that same creature be so out of bounds?
Again, the point where suspension of belief becomes too heavy to bear for some people is always interesting and fascinating to me. You can also look at like this: the prospect of becoming a horrific, unknowable thing, the powerlessness to stop it (and the pain you know you can't avoid as you slip towards that fate) is more than "realistic" to anyone who say, has lost someone to a terminal disease, and the fact that metaphor could be played out via a giant fanged dickmonster from outer space? I can roll with that.
I don't see why that has to be a breaking point, or why "They're just ants" is axiomatically a better decision. I don't even think it has to be an either/or. There's room for both, and I think you can and should blend them.
I think honestly being able to nail down their "nature" is a miscalculation in the first place. Maybe they're not just "parasites" - and part of what made the thing so fucking scary in that first movie is that you couldn't define what it was so easily. So yeah, the fact it can reproduce in multiple ways, one of which being the absolutely horrifying slow-motion, unstoppable slide towards a repugnant metamorphosis INTO the face-raping catchers mitt from outer space? That's a damn good idea, to me. So was the "they're big space ants" thing. But that one is also a little too reductive when it didn't need to be.
Good idea.
"They're big space ants" is the reductive statement.
Ants don't need an unwilling host of another species to achieve adulthood, and it's the act of rape of that unwilling host that defines the xenomorph. It is born from it, born from an unspeakable act, it's the manifestation of it.
It's all about sex, that is when we are used and discarded, and that is when the xenomorph takes not only our humanity, but also our life, and our DNA with the 'offspring' of something unwanted and alien. They are a parasite, it's what the key themes in play of rape and pregnancy are all about. Turning us into the facehugger that starts the cycle just undermines the act of what defines the xenomorph.
Understanding the nature of the xenomorph doesn't make it less scary, it makes it more so. Because nature can be brutally efficient. Aliens got it spot-on in this regard.
It's not about suspension of disbelief, it's about what works best.
What's with all the Alien 3 hate? Not only is it a good movie (Assembly Cut even better), killing off Hicks and Newt was absolutely the right thematic choice for a sequel. Sigourney actually had a say on this plot point iirc, and for the character arc it was the right call. They were bagage. They were out of place. They served their purpose of giving Ripley a momentary "break" in Aliens, so taking them right away in 3 was the perfect reality check moment for the audience and the main character. No one was safe, ask Clemens who got his skull punched in right as we were starting to warm up to his character.
Alien isnt about cozy alien killing family team moments. Its a bleak fucking universe where the good guys sooner or later inevitably loose.
Aliens instilled in us a sense of heroism and victory. Alien 3 knocked us right the fuck back into the dark, gothic and depressing reality of the Alienverse. One where it totally makes sense that the most we could hope for, was for Ripley to choose to go out on her own terms.
A3 was a bold fucking movie. Regardless of how it got there behind the scenes, it decided to give us a downbeat, lonely and dirty tale instead of the safe, crowd pleasing action team-up stuff Cameron's movie was obviously moving towards. It would never happen today and the sad part is that so many people seem to prefer the safe and expected. Thats why shit like The Avengers sets the box office on fire.
Whatever. Writting it off is a predictable bitch move by the same company that said Colonial Marines was canon. They dont give a fuck and just say what current geekdom wants. And apparently its working too :/
Here comes the Aliens sequel with Hicks I guess. Dont expect me to be too surprised if it fucking blows and suddenly Alien 3 starts to suspiciously be more appreciated.
Ressurection can fuck off though. Made absolutely no sense whatsoever on any level.