10/10
An incredibly thorough, informative and intriguing documentary about the making of the landmark sci-fi/horror classic "Alien"
17 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This amazingly compelling and comprehensive retrospective documentary about the making of the fantastic sci-fi/horror masterpiece "Alien" leaves no stone unturned. Among the many people interviewed are director Ridley Scott, writers Dan O'Bannon and Ronald Shussett (O'Bannon admits that his earlier collaboration "Dark Star" with John Carpenter was a big influence on "Alien"), producer David Giler, composer Jerry Goldsmith, editor Terry Rawlings, conceptual designer Ron Cobb, creature designer H.R. Giger, monster head maker Carlo Rambaldi, cinematographer Derek Vanlint, visual effects supervisor Brian Johnson, and cast members Sigourney Weaver (who had a trial by fire experience on the picture because "Alien" was her first substantial lead role), Tom Skerritt, Veronica Cartwright, Harry Dean Stanton, and John Hurt (who replaced Jon Finch at the eleventh hour). Director Charles de Lauzirika covers all the necessary bases in fascinatingly minute detail: the genesis of the story, how the characters were devised as basically truckers in space, the casting process, choosing the right director, designing the sets and the monster, the arduous, demanding and difficult principal shooting of the picture, the filming of the infamous chestburster scene, the editing, Goldmith's beautifully chilling score, shortening the movie to a reasonable two hour length, the visual effects, the use of miniatures, the initial previews for the film, and the movie's tremendous box office success. Although this documentary runs nearly three hours, it's never dull and always engrossing. Absolutely essential viewing for fans of the film.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed