Monday, June 20, 2016

100 Scariest Movie Moments: #2 Alien

Alien is a film that has been analyzed in every conceivable way by every person to have ever believed themselves to be worthy of analyzing movies. And the usual interpretations are that it’s either a story about the horror of rape, or a haunted house film in which the audience has an answer to “why don’t they get out of the house?” (It’s space, so there’s nowhere to go.)

I certainly don’t claim either of these interpretations to be wrong. They both have perfectly valid logic behind them. However, I’ve found myself connecting to the film on a slightly different level, by focusing on what comes after the rape; a horrifying, painful pregnancy and a “child” who is destructive and dangerous. To me, this is fundamentally a story about the horror of bad pregnancy and a bad offspring. Now go and watch Prometheus with the assumption that it’s an inversion of the Alien formula, and is about a repressive parent... it just improved a lot, didn’t it?

The film is surprisingly realistic by the standards of horror films, which all too often function only because people in them are idiots. Instead, this film has people making mistakes that seem logical, at least for a fairly undisciplined cargo crew. It’s true the entire plot is set off because they ignored quarantine procedures, but they only did so because they feared for the life of one of their shipmates (John Hurt) who’d been attacked by an alien organism.

As it turns out, the thing that assaulted him had also impregnated him with yet another alien organism which eventually bursts out of his chest and begins growing and attempting to kill the crew. It’s a very simple premise, and it works mainly because the film is so well directed, acted and designed.

The main complication that happens later in the film is the revelation that the company the crew works for set up the entire scenario to capture an alien specimen for research, and that their science officer, Ash (Ian Holm) is an android sent to make sure that this is exactly what happens. This is clearly a terrifying realization to the crew, but I’m not sure how much it really affects the film for the audience. The idea of evil Mega Corporations sacrificing people for profits is an old cliché, although perhaps not as old when the film was made. Ash is dispatched quite quickly, with his parting words wishing them luck. In a more modern film, he likely would have been kept alive to provide a secondary threat to the crew, and I’m torn on whether this would have been preferable.

Eventually, the crew is whittled down to just Ripley (Sigourney Weaver). Any modern viewer will know this because of Ripley’s now-legendary status as an unstoppable badass movie heroine developed in later movies. Here though, she’s at best presented as slightly smarter than the other members of the crew, and her survival seems to be largely a matter of luck. She spent most of the movie as one member of an ensemble.

The final showdown is a let-down. There’s no denying that. Ripley blows up the ship, but makes it out in an escape pod, not realizing the alien made it in there as well. The Xenomorph costume is just too cheesy when we finally get a good look at it, and the film might have been better off without a final shock. However, that’s a fairly minor criticism for a movie that’s otherwise truly amazing.

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