Exactly. Win/win.
A shitty, unsatisfying ending is not a win. Nor is a sequel.
Exactly. Win/win.
Artist Ben Procter has uploaded an extensive collection of Prometheus art to his portfolio, including very detailed reference images for the Prometheus ship interiors and exteriors, the Space Jockey chair and costume design. The collection also includes several videos showing pre-viz elements as well as very nice panoramas. Definitely worth a look.
Ben Proctor said:![]()
Weyland's custom, much more elaborate hypersleep bed, necessitated by his advanced age and tenuous hold on life. I visualized him to be a little more cyborged-out after all the efforts made to extend his life span.
Ended up buying the art book on a whim. It's 1) huge, 2) gorgeous and 3) adds some details to the plot the film left open or implied or bungled.
I'll post a few thoughts after I've done a read through. One thing I found interesting, the Fifield design used in the the film did have an elongated head as with the initial design; we just never saw it because of how his scenes were filmed.
I finally received mine about a month ago. I'm very happy with the purchase.Ended up buying the art book on a whim. It's 1) huge, 2) gorgeous and 3) adds some details to the plot the film left open or implied or bungled.
I'll post a few thoughts after I've done a read through. One thing I found interesting, the Fifield design used in the the film did have an elongated head as with the initial design; we just never saw it because of how his scenes were filmed.
And the "Weyland is on the ship and wants eternal life" twist was also something Lindelof came up with...Someone on twitter (@tmvogel) met Jon Spaihts at Comic Con. Apparently in Spaihts draft only Holloway takes his helmet off and that there wasn't a scene where Millburn tried to pet the snakelike alien. On the black goo, Spaihts used the word biological software. The guy said that he got a sense that Spaihts script was slower and more science-driven.
Yeah, but it seems the video release will only include the first and last drafts of the script... I imagine (or maybe I've read somewhere, actually?) Spaihts went through several drafts before Lindelof got involved.Now I'm even more interested to see Spaihts draft.
And the "Weyland is on the ship and wants eternal life" twist was also something Lindelof came up with...
The guy sure has a talent for adding stupid shit.
Who was the idiot who picked Damon Lindelof to rewrite it?Someone on twitter (@tmvogel) met Jon Spaihts at Comic Con. Apparently in Spaihts draft only Holloway takes his helmet off and that there wasn't a scene where Millburn tried to pet the snakelike alien. On the black goo, Spaihts used the word biological software. The guy said that he got a sense that Spaihts script was slower and more science-driven.
Now I'm even more interested to see Spaihts draft.
Literally no one knows.So why did the engineer guy try to kill everyone when they woke him up?
Damon Lindelof had talked a bit about Prometheus at Comic-Con. Really interesting stuff so far. I'm still viewing it, but it seems like the Nerd HQ talk is the most worthwhile video to watch.
Live From Nerd HQ: Damon Lindelof & Seth Grahame-Smith
The movie made $300 million, which is pretty decent for an R-rated sci-fi film with no big-name american actors in the leading roles.
I know why she didn't do it, but it would have made for a much more satisfying ending.
im at work, what's interesting about it.
Someone on twitter (@tmvogel) met Jon Spaihts at Comic Con. Apparently in Spaihts draft only Holloway takes his helmet off and that there wasn't a scene where Millburn tried to pet the snakelike alien. On the black goo, Spaihts used the word biological software. The guy said that he got a sense that Spaihts script was slower and more science-driven.
Now I'm even more interested to see Spaihts draft.
Damon Lindelof had talked a bit about Prometheus at Comic-Con. Really interesting stuff so far. I'm still viewing it, but it seems like the Nerd HQ talk is the most worthwhile video to watch.
Live From Nerd HQ: Damon Lindelof & Seth Grahame-Smith
That scene was intentionally ambiguous. This blog post contains the best speculation I've seen:So why did the engineer guy try to kill everyone when they woke him up?
He's been saying this before anyone saw the movie. It's just funny to see him state it with a certain inflection now, after the reactions.this video is really interesting
and lindeloff really throws ridley under the bus over prometheus haha
compares himself to a sous chef, just recreating the head chef's menu
He's been saying this before anyone saw the movie. It's just funny to see him state it with a certain inflection now, after the reactions.
I still love ya, Lindeloff.
I dunno, he sure is quick to try and shift the blame (see Lost)...Lindelof is pretty vocal about taking blame for Prometheus, but I get the feeling that he wants to spill the dirt. You can really tell during this panel, but he obviously holds back not to get himself or anyone else in trouble.
Damon Lindelof had talked a bit about Prometheus at Comic-Con. Really interesting stuff so far. I'm still viewing it, but it seems like the Nerd HQ talk is the most worthwhile video to watch.
Live From Nerd HQ: Damon Lindelof & Seth Grahame-Smith
Man what a bunch of lame questions. The last question was basically "How awesome does it feel to be as awesome as you?" :lol
Man what a bunch of lame questions. The last question was basically "How awesome does it feel to be as awesome as you?" :lol
Someone on twitter (@tmvogel) met Jon Spaihts at Comic Con. Apparently in Spaihts draft only Holloway takes his helmet off and that there wasn't a scene where Millburn tried to pet the snakelike alien. On the black goo, Spaihts used the word biological software. The guy said that he got a sense that Spaihts script was slower and more science-driven.
Now I'm even more interested to see Spaihts draft.
BTW pretty shitty how Lindelof evaded all responsibility and pretty much painted himself as Scott's sock puppet, doing nothing but his bidding. He has acted this way before so I'm not surprised at all to be honest.
Lidelof has been pretty clear from even before the movie was released 1) that the movie is Ridley's vision and 2) specifically that Ridley intentionally wanted the movie to be ambiguous in ways that Lindelof felt might prove controversial.Spaihts's script sounds like an improvement based solely on the fact that the whole alien creator crap is pushed to the sides, and has honest to goodness xenomorphs with no weird goo shit just for the sake of being different. But whatever, who knows what other problems it contained.
BTW pretty shitty how Lindelof evaded all responsibility and pretty much painted himself as Scott's sock puppet, doing nothing but his bidding. He has acted this way before so I'm not surprised at all to be honest.
Lidelof has been pretty clear from even before the movie was released 1) that the movie is Ridley's vision and 2) specifically that Ridley intentionally wanted the movie to be ambiguous is ways that Lindelof felt might prove controversial.
I still don't really understand what people feel we missed out on with the allegedly more pure (or whatever) Spaihts draft. I love the grand concepts and open-endedness in Prometheus. This thread has reached 8000 posts for a reason.
That scene was intentionally ambiguous. This blog post contains the best speculation I've seen:
http://cavalorn.livejournal.com/584135.html
Short version: The Engineers' society values sacrifice above all else . The Engineer in the opening scene sacrifices his own life in order to bring life to an entire planet. Weyland, conversely, will go to any length to extend his own life even though he has already lived well beyond his years (to the point of virtual decay). He cares nothing for the lives of those around him including his creations: his biological daughter and David his artificially created son. This contrast comes to a head when the Engineer is awoken and confronted by David and Weyland.
That livejournal post goes even deeper if you want to get into further thematic speculation.
Lol, ok.I'm fine with the ambiguity and open-endedness.
It's the shitty script I didn't like.
What? My post had nothing to do with space Jesus.Yeah I read that about how the whole movie is about the space jesus idea. But why would the engineer who's been asleep for 2000 years wake up to some strange small people and suddenly go on a murderous rampage? Anyway it was a good movie but too many unanswered questions were central to the plot of the film (unlike, say, Alien 1, in which the unanswered questions were only tangential to the plot)
Spaihts's script sounds like an improvement based solely on the fact that the whole alien creator crap is pushed to the sides, and has honest to goodness xenomorphs with no weird goo shit just for the sake of being different. But whatever, who knows what other problems it contained.
BTW pretty shitty how Lindelof evaded all responsibility and pretty much painted himself as Scott's sock puppet, doing nothing but his bidding. He has acted this way before so I'm not surprised at all to be honest.
I'm fine with the ambiguity and open-endedness.
It's the shitty script I didn't like.
I though at some point she says "They're us" or something like that.
Pretty sure she said it "predated" us.Later one of the caracthers mentuon that their dna is older (not exact phrasing) than ours, which implys that we have been evolving since our creation
Pretty sure she said it "predated" us.
What she means by that / how she can tell? Not sure! We've been evolving? Well... yeah. Does that mean the Engineers are closer to our ape-like ancestors? And isn't the sample she's working from fairly recent anyway?
Ah, well.
(and of course, there would be the possibility the "Engineers" are based on us, not the other way around, but I guess Shaw saw the first scene of the movie / talked with the writers)
http://www.thedigitalbits.com/mytwocentsa205.html#071612Charles de Lauzirika was unable to show footage from his BD work on Prometheus or The Amazing Spider-Man, though he did promise that the Prometheus Blu-ray will be among the most comprehensive special editions he's ever created for a single film and that it will definitely "enhance your appreciation" of the story.
"enhance your appreciation" of the story.