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Synopsis

“In space, no one can hear you scream.” A close encounter of the third kind becomes a Jaws-style nightmare when an alien invades a spacecraft in Ridley Scott’s sci-fi horror classic. On the way home from a mission for the Company, the Nostromo’s crew is woken up from hibernation by the ship’s Mother computer to answer a distress signal from a nearby planet. Capt. Dallas’ (Tom Skerritt) rescue team discovers a bizarre pod field, but things get even stranger when a face-hugging creature bursts out of a pod and attaches itself to Kane (John Hurt). Over the objections of Ripley (Sigourney Weaver), science officer Ash (Ian Holm) lets Kane back on the ship. The acid-blooded incubus detaches itself from an apparently recovered Kane, but an alien erupts from Kane’s stomach and escapes. The alien starts stalking the humans, pitting Dallas and his crew (and cat) against a malevolent killing machine that also has a protector in the nefarious Company.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:1503)

Director

Ridley_scott

Ridley Scott

One of the most promising directors of the late ‘70s, Ridley Scott displayed stylistic flair and remarkable storytelling abilities in such films as The Duellists (1977) and his landmark Alien (1979). Born in 1937, in Northumberland, England, Scott was educated at the West Hartlepool College of Art and London’s Royal College of Art. After completing his education, he became a set designer for the British Broadcasting Company in the early ’60s, eventually getting promoted to director of such popular BBC series as the long-running police adventure Z Cars. With the establishment of his own firm, Ridley Scott Associates, Scott was in on the ground floor of some of the most inventive European TV commercials of the 1970s.

The director’s transition to the big screen came with his direction of 1977’s The Duellists, a visually striking Napoleonic war film that won the Jury Prize for Best First Feature at the Cannes Film Festival. Further success followed with 1979’s Alien, which established… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 27 wall posts.
Picture of Vasu C

Vasu C

6Feb10

INCREDIBLE...visual effects,direction,movie.  
Picture of Weena Eloi

Weena Eloi

3Feb10

A film that sat in my soul and laid eggs and then violently burst out of my psyche.   
Picture of paulo.sales

paulo.sales

11Jan10

Alienation!  

Zachary Vogt

21Dec09

I found it surprisingly unsuccessful as a horror film--but certainly visually grand.   

Related Films

Fans

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
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A Proper "Alien" Resurrection

By Ben Simington on July 10, 2009
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences only got it half-right for Alien in 1980.  To say that Ridley Scott’s commercial breakthrough was robbed of its Oscar for Best Art Direction/Set Direction
read article

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Reviews

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By timotay​o on September 6, 2009

There is a strange personal story I have with this film.

I was somewhere between 5 and 10 or something; it was a slumber-party, and someone thought it would be a great idea to see this film…  read review

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By moonmas​ter9000 on August 2, 2009

If Ridley Scott made “Alien” today, no one would notice. You’d find it in Wal-Mart at the bottom of the the straight-to-DVD bargain-bin with all the other Bantha Poodoo. But that’s the problem with…  read review

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By October on January 21, 2009

Alien is thus far the closest celluloid manifestation of HR Giger art to date. As well as Ridley Scott, I have been a huge fan of HR Giger for a long time, and I love how much freedom Ridley Scott…  read review

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