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Encyclopedia > Aliens (movie)
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Film poster for Aliens

Aliens is a 1986 science fiction horror movie starring Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn, Lance Henriksen, Carrie Henn, Bill Paxton and Paul Reiser. It is a sequel to the 1979 Alien.

Contents

Overview

Directed by James Cameron from a story written by him, David Giler and Walter Hill, the film is more a high-paced, action adventure than the tense sci-fi horror of the first film. It was tremedously successful, following Cameron's The Terminator in helping to establish him as a major action director. The film, like its predecessor, was shot in England on a budget of only about $18 million. The production was somewhat problematic, marred by several disputes between Cameron and the film crew, which eventually led to an all-out strike late in the production.


Plot

In this film, Warrant Officer Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver), the only human survivor of Alien, is rescued from space after 57 years in hypersleep. She learns that a colony has been founded on LV_426, where she first encountered the alien. When contact with the colony is lost Ripley (now a Lieutenant) is drafted to assist a squad of gung-ho Colonial Marines to investigate. They travel aboard the vessel Sulaco (like the The Nostromo, a nod to Joseph Conrad)


The marines and Lieutenant Ripley find themselves trapped in the seemingly deserted colony while armies of aliens come after them. The story adds much to the overall mythos of the series, including Cameron's introduction of an "alien queen" to the creatures' life cycle, and introduces the character of the android Bishop, the only character except Ripley to appear in more than one movie in the series (not counting Ripley's cat, Jones).


Analysis

It has been pointed out by some critics that Aliens works as an allegory of the Vietnam War, in that an overly confident military finds itself in a quagmire battling an unseen opponent they cannot comprehend. Sigourney Weaver, who holds strong views on gun control, has stated that she was deeply uncomfortable with the amount of gun violence in the movie, and that Ripley would be required to strap on heavy artillery herself. But she admitted she ended up enjoying the role, and that the gunplay held a seductive appeal.


The film added an additional level of depth to Ripley's character by establishing a daughter who grew old and died while Ripley was lost in space. Thus, when Ripley discovers the little girl, Newt (Carrie Henn), hiding in the ruins of the colony, Newt becomes a surrogate daughter for Ripley, allowing Ripley to overcome her feelings of guilt and achieve closure.


Accolades

Aliens was nominated for seven Academy Awards and ended up winning two (Sound Effects Editing and Visual Effects). Sigourney Weaver received her first Academy Award nomination for this film. Another actor whose career benefited from Aliens was Bill Paxton; he plays the reluctant grunt, Hudson, who later defiantly battles to the death when swarmed by the aliens.


Versions

Aliens’ theatrical running time was 137 minutes. Later, Cameron cut together a 154 minute version that expands upon the daughter subplot. It also includes scenes of the colony before the alien infestation, as well as extra battle scenes involving the marines' robot sentries. This was first released on laserdisc and VHS in 1992 and in The Alien Legacy in 2001. Both versions of the film were released together for the first time in the 2003 Alien Quadrilogy DVD box set.


Sequels

This film was followed in 1992 by the ill-received Alien³ in 1997 by Alien: Resurrection and in 2004 by Alien Vs. Predator.


Cast

Crew

  • Gale Anne Hurd - Producer
  • David Giler - Executive Producer
  • Walter Hill - Executive Producer
  • Gordon Carroll - Exectutive Producer
  • Adrian Biddle - Cinematographer (replaced Dick Bush)
  • Ray Lovejoy - Editor
  • Stan Winston - Creature SFX
  • James Horner - Composer

External link

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Aliens (1986 movie)


Alien movie series
Alien | Aliens | Alien³ | Alien: Resurrection
Cross_overs
Alien vs. Predator
Relating to the Alien universe
Bishop | Ellen Ripley | LV-426 | Nostromo | United States Colonial Marines | Weyland_Yutani | Xenomorph | Yautja







  Results from FactBites:
 
ALIEN (0 words)
It is not one movie, but all movies, thus falling perfectly under egghead Umberto Eco's definition of a cult movie.
But the plot device in the first Alien movie is one that has been done the year before by Jamie Lee Curtis in Carpenter's Halloween horror movie and every subsequent slasher movie from Friday the 13th to Nightmare on Elm Street.
Add to this stunning special effects and an alien brought to life by special effects wiz Carlos Rambaldi (who later designed E.T. brooding music by Jerry Goldsmith (Oscar winner for The Omen) and it is not difficult to see why the movie has achieved both the cult status and box office success it did.
Alien: The Director's Cut Movie Review - Alien: The Director's Cut Movie Trailer - The Boston Globe (0 words)
Ridley Scott's 1979 "Alien" is remembered as the film that not only fused the sci-fi of "Star Wars" with the splatter of "Halloween" but that helped launch the careers of Sigourney Weaver and, ultimately, directors James Cameron and David Fincher, who both oversaw controversial sequels.
This critic still thinks Cameron's 1986 "Aliens" is the superior film (not to mention one of the best pure action movies of all time), but at the very least Scott has reset the stage for endless film-geek arguments.
One of the real pleasures of revisiting "Alien" is to watch the emergence of both Ellen Ripley as a character and Sigourney Weaver as a star.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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