I honestly didn't even mean that as an insult.Hehe.Scott and co are going to be haunted by this for years. Years, I tell you.
I find all the pseudo-religion fun. Apocryphal Easter eggs.
pun intended
I honestly didn't even mean that as an insult.Hehe.Scott and co are going to be haunted by this for years. Years, I tell you.
Why stop at size. Just as with the Alien Queen, I'm sure the females are going to have some sort of interesting divergent design.This sounds plausible. The engineers in the hologram did appear to be slightly different in size. Same goes for the bodies stacked up, but it's harder to tell there.
Appearance wise, I wouldn't be surprised if they looked alike/male and female aren't easily distinguishable.
If I told you one of those two writers is 14 years old, which one would you pick?Writer Jon Spaihts says his drafts involved a meeting in Weyland's office — which at various times was either on a space station, or actually on the surface of Mars, right in the middle of the terraforming project. "Terraforming was much more Mr. Weyland's burning dream in my drafts," says Spaihts.
Oh, and as for why Weyland is played by Guy Pearce in old-man makeup, Spaihts says Damon Lindelof's script showed the android David going inside Weyland's dreams while he was in hypersleep — and in his dreams, Weyland is a young man, on a yacht surrounded by beautiful women. These dream conversations got cut, but Pearce's casting was already locked in. Scott had originally wanted to cast Max von Sydow as Peter Weyland. (In Spaiht's script versions, Weyland isn't aboard the Prometheus at all — instead, there's a hidden squad of company soldiers.)
"Try harder."What is Lindelof's obsession with rich old men who ruin their kids lives?
Lindelof: Well, I will say that I haven't had any experience with rich old men who have ruined my life. Some less rich old men who have been wonderful role models. But I think that the Keynesian "rich old man with nefarious intent" is a classic character in both regular fiction and both straight up genre. And just too delicious to resist.
Guys, it took you two years to get there, maybe you could wait until you've spent more than a couple of hours in one of the many extraterrestrial facilities you've just discovered before declaring the expedition "a bust" and experimenting on your crew? Or am I making too much sense?What was David's motivation for "infecting" Holloway with black goop?
Lindelof: I'd say that the short answer is: That's his programming. In the scene preceding him doing that, he is talking to Weyland (although we don't know it at the time) and he's telling Weyland that this is a bust. That they haven't found anything on this mission other than the stuff in the vials.
I'm happy for you, Damon. It's cool how you keep your priorities straight.Lindelof: We're going to take those three generations, we're gonna lock them in a room together, we're gonna watch them have sex with each other. And then we're going to see what comes out. That was the experiment that Prometheus was running. And whether it was successful or whether it was a failure, it sure was fun to write.
Sounds like "yes, you are rewarded for having blind faith, and that's definitely not an anti-science idea."Is Prometheus anti-science?
Lindelof: It's definitely not anti-science. [...] I'm most definitively pro-science, but I think that the movie advances the idea that, can the two live along side each other? Is it possible to be a scientist and maintain some fungible faith in the unknown? And are you rewarded for having blind faith? I do think that the movie is making the meta-commentary in saying well Shaw is the true believer on board, and she's the one who survives. So what are we trying to say by telling that story?
Lindelof: they created us but now they want to destroy us, why did they change their minds? That's the question that Shaw is asking at the end of this movie, the one that she wants answered. I do think that there are a lot of hints in this movie that we give you quite and educated guess as to why.
Space Jesus, Space Jesus, Space Jesus.Lindelof: did something happen in between when those cave paintings were made — tens of thousands of years ago — and our arrival now, in 2093, 2,000 years after these things have perished. Did something happen in the intermediate period that we should be thinking about?
Is Prometheus anti-science?
Lindelof: It's definitely not anti-science. [...] I'm most definitively pro-science, but I think that the movie advances the idea that, can the two live along side each other? Is it possible to be a scientist and maintain some fungible faith in the unknown? And are you rewarded for having blind faith? I do think that the movie is making the meta-commentary in saying well Shaw is the true believer on board, and she's the one who survives. So what are we trying to say by telling that story?
Is there a good summary anywhere of the differences between the Spaihts draft and the Lindelof draft?
Not as far as I know.Is there a good summary anywhere of the differences between the Spaihts draft and the Lindelof draft?
alright so i didn't read the whole thread but i am curious, so what IS the GAF consensus on this movie right now if there IS a consensus? I am getting negative vibes here but haven't seen the movie yet hmm.... wondering if i even should at this point?
Asimov must be rolling in his grave something fierce.
I mean... I could understand that Weyland-Yutani wouldn't mind about Ash sacrificing the rest of the Nostromo crew so they'd get their hands on a precious sample, but David is just a goddamn liability to the whole mission (and Weyland himself, since he's on board), there.
"Let's infect one of our experts with that mysterious black goo stuff, sit back and see what happens!"
... Really?
Not that the rest of the Prometheus crew acts professionally/cautiously either (who the hell selected them?), but those are human, at least. David could be programmed not to piss in people's drinks.
There's an altar to H.R. Giger inside the "Head Room."
Another set that I worked on was known as the "Head Room." This was a ceremonial room that contained hundreds of ampules beneath a giant sculpture of an Engineer's head. Julian Caldrow did an amazing job of working out all of the details for this environment and created the set drawings. The final set was built at full scale and was incredible to walk on. I also sculpted an altar area for this set that paid homage to Giger -it is a relief sculpture hanging from the wall and has the impression of an alien form with flowing structures surrounding it. There are a lot of easter eggs in this sculpture including several hidden Giger motifs that were not used in the original film.
Most of the polarization has to do with the pseudo-religious references and plot/character turns that are more rooted in the themes of the movie than logic. That aside, the general consensus is that it is thoroughly gorgeous. I can't imagine passing up the chance to see it on the big screen.alright so i didn't read the whole thread but i am curious, so what IS the GAF consensus on this movie right now if there IS a consensus? I am getting negative vibes here but haven't seen the movie yet hmm.... wondering if i even should at this point?
GAF, is this movie worth seeing again in 3D?
I saw it both in 2D and 3D.GAF, is this movie worth seeing again in 3D?
Debating a third viewing...
I cant even comprehend how one can view the 3d in this as a distraction. The concept of that makes utterly 0 sense...I saw it both in 2D and 3D.
Although this was shot in 3D and is probably one of the better 3D of the modern era, I definitely preferred the 2D. I am admittedly not a fan of 3D in general, but I just considered it to be a distraction.
You should have looked a few posts up- you'd have seen a post about why they didn't just go with an older actor for Weyland:So I heard some people were pissed that Guy Pearce was Weyland, in old man prosthetic, because they expected him to appear as a younger person down the line. I didn't really expect that, but I think it's actually a cool kind of twist in a way. Everyone expected that maybe he'd find the fountain of youth or something, so that's why they casted him in the role, but instead he just gets fucking murdered as an old man. I thought that was a funny trick on those people who came in assuming.
io9 has an article up entitled '10 Thing You Didn't Know About Prometheus.'
They have some concept art from the artbook as well.
http://io9.com/5917639/10-things-you-didnt-know-about-the-design-of-prometheus
Has some insights about the differences between Spaihts and Lindelof's drafts.
You should have looked a few posts up- you'd have seen a post about why they didn't just go with an older actor for Weyland:
Most of the polarization has to do with the pseudo-religious references and plot/character turns that are more rooted in the themes of the movie than logic. That aside, the general consensus is that it is thoroughly gorgeous. I can't imagine passing up the chance to see it on the big screen.
For what its worth I loved it, though I tried to be objective in what I wrote above.
So I heard some people were pissed that Guy Pearce was Weyland, in old man prosthetic, because they expected him to appear as a younger person down the line. I didn't really expect that, but I think it's actually a cool kind of twist in a way. Everyone expected that maybe he'd find the fountain of youth or something, so that's why they casted him in the role, but instead he just gets fucking murdered as an old man. I thought that was a funny trick on those people who came in assuming.
Hey, it doesn't have to be Space Jesus. It could be Space Caesar. Maybe Brutus was a Space Jockey too.
I just thought it looked like shit.
Is there a good summary anywhere of the differences between the Spaihts draft and the Lindelof draft?
Can someone link me back to that interview with RS where he basically says that the Engineers hate us because we killed space jesus?
Golly, I'm all for ambiguity, but if we didn't know the answer to THAT one, the audience would have every right to string us up. Yes. There is an answer. One that is hinted at within the goalposts of "Prometheus." I'll bet if I asked you to take a guess you wouldn't be far off.
http://www.movies.com/movie-news/ridley-scott-prometheus-interview/8232
The relevant quote is at the bottom of the page. Scott said that he thought it was too "on the nose" to state it explicitly in the script, but he talks about what a cool idea and how he thinks it fits. Also worth noting is that when asked about why the Engineers hate us, Lindelof said:
Make of that what you will (it is Lindelof, after all) but there were enough pseudo-religious references in this movie, including the crucified Xenomorph, that I think the theory is on fairy solid ground.
Nah, he looked fine. He was 99 years old so of course he was going to look like shit.
My question:
Why was the medical device set to Male? Was it because it was for Peter Weyland?
No, I didn't say *he* looked like shit. I said *it* looked like shit. He looked like a 30 year old man who poured wax on his head.
Yes.
Except that he didn't, and I'm definitely not alone in thinking that. It's by far the worst effect in this film and extremely distracting.
I want to see it a second time. Is IMAX 3D worth it?I saw it both in 2D and 3D.
Although this was shot in 3D and is probably one of the better 3D of the modern era, I definitely preferred the 2D. I am admittedly not a fan of 3D in general, but I just considered it to be a distraction.
Okay, I'm saying I don't think he looked completely terrible. He just looked like an old guy to me. Did he look a little weird? Sure, but it wasn't distracting at all. He was in the film for like 15 minutes in parts. Not really a big deal at all.
Despite it being good 3D, it still was not able to surmount my lack of comfort with 3D.I cant even comprehend how one can view the 3d in this as a distraction. The concept of that makes utterly 0 sense...
So did Elizabeth Shaw ever find out that David poisoned her boyfriend? Or is that going to come up on the ride to the alien planet...
"David, btw, do you know how my boyfriend got infected...?"
*David quietly and quickly turns back to watching Lawrence of Arabia for the 50,000th time.*
Maybe Ridley's directors cut can fix this movie
The scene where she tells the other people not to take of their masks as they don't know if what killed Holloway was airborne, and David replies instantly "it isn't" is where she's supposed to work it out.
However, she's dumb so she probably didn't.