Spectral Glider
Member
Space Cobra VS Land Shark.
"I am sick and tired of these motherfuckin space cobras on my ship!"
Space Cobra VS Land Shark.
out of all the other idiotic things in the film, this one keeps coming back to me:
if LV-223 is not LV-426 (maybe at some point it's re-assigned a number), then what is the point of showing the proto-xenomorph (the deacon)? how did it get from LV-223 to LV-426? are we to assume another slumbering jockey is on board the other ship and through another miraculous series of completely idiociy and ill-informed decisions, shaw manages to have it killed by another squid thing?
goddamnit this movie gets worse the more i think about it.
It's still gestating (Just got back from seeing it) but other than visually I have a feeling it may not rest well.
Are people done being excited about Lindelof yet? Not anyone specifically but for a while I was excited he was involved (maybe because everyone else seemed to be), but I don't know who to blame right now.
i understand that, but i think its obvious that we as the audience are to conclude that it is the progenitor for the giger alien.The Deacon isn't really the same as the Xenomorph either. I assume the Xenomorph was just a later design.
whats still gestating?It's still gestating (Just got back from seeing it) but other than visually I have a feeling it may not rest well.
it's sad that this is probably what will actually happen.It will probably jump on the ship with Shaw and David. She is the surrogate mother, or something. Maybe LV-426 is the Engineer's home world and will be massacred by a single xenomorph. These are questions for the next film.
I enjoyed Star Trek and Coyboys and Aliens for the free-wheeling kind of SF they were, so I have no issue with him in particular, but this needed someone very different to write it.
Why would there be shattered childhoods? Did you guys watch Alien as little kids?
Sunshine.
fuk it, bring on Prometheus vs Predator. Shaw with the head of David go to engineers "earth"and jump right into an all out war between zenomorphs and predators.
I was actually joking, but yes, I watched all the good R-rated shit from the 70's and 80's as a kid in the 90's.
"I traveled for 2 years, I'm not here to make friends. I'm here to make money."
*leaves job 5 minutes in*
These characters...
Also Fun Question, how does the original hugger get so large without eating a single thing. PlotHole#142103312 but yes, it doesn't matter. Like the rest.
There sure is a lot of whining about plot holes here. One of the themes of the movie was that shit is unexplained and you can't really ever find some things out. Not being able to draw a direct line from A to B doesn't bother me in this film.
i understand that, but i think its obvious that we as the audience are to conclude that it is the progenitor for the giger alien.
whats still gestating?
it's sad that this is probably what will actually happen.
Sorry, I just meant to say my feelings on the plot/narrative are still gestating having just seen it. But there were a lot of inconsitencies with me as well and the ending coming up fast on me. Like it was necessary to wrap it up. The whole Shaw thing was so confusing. She was meant to be quarantined followed by stasis and yet she's in the private wing, performing surgery on herself, and when she's seen again by David and Weyland, it's like they expected her.
Visually I fucking loved it though.
I tend to think David was testing the goo for healing properties, or eliminating Holloway because he felt he was a threat to the actual mission. He may have known more than he let on from the start.
What was the point of the initial scene with the engineer where he drinks the black goo and then falls off the waterfall? There was a ship taking off and then he kills himself. Also, is the goo's effectiveness is equivalent to the amount taken since he is affected immediately and it took hours/a day to create issues with Holloway.
What was the point of the initial scene with the engineer where he drinks the black goo and then falls off the waterfall? There was a ship taking off and then he kills himself. Also, is the goo's effectiveness is equivalent to the amount taken since he is affected immediately and it took hours/a day to create issues with Holloway.
out of all the other idiotic things in the film, this one keeps coming back to me:
if LV-223 is not LV-426 (maybe at some point it's re-assigned a number), then what is the point of showing the proto-xenomorph (the deacon)? how did it get from LV-223 to LV-426? are we to assume another slumbering jockey is on board the other ship and through another miraculous series of completely idiotic and ill-informed decisions, shaw manages to have it killed by another squid thing?
goddamnit this movie gets worse the more i think about it.
Let's say the space jockey from Alien is Dr. Shaw.
She left the planet in one of those horseshoe alien ships. She was already infected by that black goo (after sex) and was still a living host.
She landed or crashed on the other planet that is visited in 'Alien' and another alien burst from her chest.
The audio that she was recording at the end of Prometheus was her basically saying "if you get this message, don't come here or you'll die." She must have been recording this on the ship she took off in.
So THAT's the beacon that Ripley and them get in Alien. Ripley has to translate it because it's recorded on outdated technology. She does eventually realize, too late of course, that it was actually a warning not to come there. which is what Shaw was recording at the end of the movie.
its all speculation because nothing really makes sense in that movie. haha.
I bet it's been brought up, but what was up with this guy being in the movie?
![]()
Clearly there was something about this scene that people missed and couldn't put together but I don't get it. One of my brightest friends asked the same question after the movie. I felt like it was fairly obvious from the imagery and certainly confirmed via the direction of the movie plot.
The substance it consumed broke it down to a DNA level and spread its DNA throughout the water. It was the creator of life for the human species we follow in the story.
The engineer basically seeded life on Earth with his DNA (or a planet that isn't Earth, but looks a lot like it).
Basically, his DNA was the building blocks for life on Earth.
Sorry, I just meant to say my feelings on the plot/narrative are still gestating having just seen it. But there were a lot of inconsitencies with me as well and the ending coming up fast on me. Like it was necessary to wrap it up. The whole Shaw thing was so confusing. She was meant to be quarantined followed by stasis and yet she's in the private wing, performing surgery on herself, and when she's seen again by David and Weyland, it's like they expected her.
Visually I fucking loved it though.
I tend to think David was testing the goo for healing properties, or eliminating Holloway because he felt he was a threat to the actual mission. He may have known more than he let on from the start.
Was a great adventure up to the part where itturned into Event Horizon. In total, horrible.
The other scientists were bringing her to stasis. They thought she was anesthesized but she wasn't. She knocks them out and the races to the med pod. While this is happening the capt and the rest of the crew are contending with Xeno fiefield and David and the others are tending to Weyland who is anxious to meet the sole surviving engineer.
Yea...I only saw bits of that movie as a kid. I watched it today for the first time since forever. Holy shit...I've not seen something that terrible in a long ass time. Like...damn. I could have used that time being productive or something.
So why was the medical-pod designed for males only?
So why was the medical-pod designed for males only?
Yeah, I can buy getting freaked out by a giant alien body and deciding to leave. They didn't know it was going to be that kind of job. But the part where they get lost makes no sense. It wasn't even necessary, either. They were already trapped in the dome by the storm. Just make the worm come to them.
It was for Peter Weyland.
"Holy fucking shit-are you seeing this? Look at these dead bodies-man I am freaking the fuck out-what killed these things???"
5 minutes later
"ohh! Look a space snake! Hey baby!! Hey sweetie, come here!!"
So why was the medical-pod designed for males only?
These might be the non-fallen angels, that are fighting the fallen-angels. It might be them who stopped the fallen-angels, and hence why all the jockeys have been fucked with and unable to go kill mankind, even the ones not on lv:223 (like the one in Alien found in space).
The mural shows a fallen-angel punching an angel.
Ridley said Paradise would be disturbing, and that the engineers are fallen angels who "have all the fun, look great, do cool stuff". So Paradise, and non-fallen angels, would be the opposite: ugly, boring, not doing the cool stuff.
edit: nm, saw the text above
Fifield was freaking out, the Biologist really didn't freak out at the dead engineers.
Even when the worm was there, Fifield was still freaking out. The Biologist didn't freak out until the worm attacked him.
This was a really stupid obstacle anyways. She just reprogrammed it in 10 seconds to do the job anyways. I guess maybe to explain to the dense that Weyland was alive, but was anyone questioning that Weyland was alive at that point? It was painfully obvious that Weyland was the one David was talking with earlier in the film. Not to mention it was revealed he was alive immediately after the scene, there was no reason to drop a clue.
They are on another fucking planet. There is no where to go. Do your fucking job.
"Holy fucking shit-are you seeing this? Look at these dead bodies-man I am freaking the fuck out-what killed these things???"
5 minutes later
"ohh! Look a space snake! Hey baby!! Hey sweetie, come here!!"
Right I get the scenario, but the entire crew wouldn't know that she was expected to be in stasis? I guess maybe I'm the one reaching here.
Wait you're saying Event Horizon is terrible? What the fuck?
Edit;
This is such a load of shit. Whining doesn't equal pointing out how the entire movie was one giant walking plothole, and having a slight expectation of a coherent story. Since all the other films had them, and discussing how completely irrational all of them are.
On top of the plot holes, there is lack of character development and interaction with the story. The characters don't address the plot holes, nor do they address their own actions in the movie. Bother is the wrong word, pointing out its shortcomings and laughing at how ridiculous it is to have a woman die by a pillar falling directly onto her, while noomi rolls out of the way, is just plain bad writing.
You couldn't see the bad writing, right? Not that it bothered you.
Before we continue, was it a shock to you that Weylands daughter was Charlize? That's been my profiling question before I continue any conversation.
I dont mind horrible sci-fi B grade movies either, and they don't bother me. But don't act like you didn't notice how the characters could care less when someone died, or fetal removal, or staples in a stomach, or pretending you cant give coordinates to someone that just gave you coordinates... etc...
Fifield was freaking out, the Biologist really didn't freak out at the dead engineers.
Even when the worm was there, Fifield was still freaking out. The Biologist didn't freak out until the worm attacked him.
When she reprogrammed it, it still didn't perform a cesarean, it was foreign object removal. It still was programmed for a male.
"Holy fucking shit-are you seeing this? Look at these dead bodies-man I am freaking the fuck out-what killed these things???"
5 minutes later
"ohh! Look a space snake! Hey baby!! Hey sweetie, come here!!"
A xenobiologist is fascinated by an alien lifeform.
Shock.
That just says it all. Why would they keep the real goal of a trillion dollar expedition a secret, when it was likely people would react just like Fifield did? Wouldn't Weyland want to hire people that wouldn't balk at the first sight of an alien body? It was a ridiculous premise to swallow. It was obviously Lindelof's excuse to write in a bunch of lazy exposition.Sounds like a reasonable reaction to me. If you were hired under false pretenses would you stick around regardless of the pay?