Tag: Sigourney Weaver

  • ALIENS

         I don’t write about many big-budget
    Hollywood blockbusters. But writing about Aliens feels like
    a privilege—like describing someone you feel honored to know. It
    has all of this: solid story, great characters, action,
    atmosphere. And several subtle under-texts I hope I can do justice
    to. Most obvious: the opportunity Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) gets
    to love a child again.
    First I
    need to confess I’m not a big fan of the original
    Alien. (Aliens was the first sequel to this
    original.) I remember being blown away by the first half of
    Alien, then sitting there watching the rest go downhill.
    I realize most viewers will not agree (Alien shows up on so
    many Best Horror and Best Sci-fi Lists). And viewers don’t really
    care about my complaints with Alien. The last thing I want
    to do is to write is a point by point comparison between the two
    movies.
    Ironically, I do want
    to give credit to the original for those elements in
    Aliens that carried over from the first movie…and there are
    plenty. It would be unfair to ignore those contributions.

    One of the original’s
    strengths was the memorable Ripley, the only survivor. The rest of
    the crew was savagely slaughtered, as a result of encountering the
    alien. After Ripley’s escape she was left floating out in space—a
    long while.
    Aliens brings her back, and seeks
    to develop her character in much more detail. That is a lot to ask
    but the screenwriting (James Cameron) and acting (Sigourney Weaver
    and many others) are up to it. Alien showed us a character
    who inspired us—tough, courageous, loyal, creative…someone who
    refused to freak out under brutally trying circumstances.
         Aliens shows Ripley’s strengths as well. But in addition it fills in a
    much more complete character—everything I mentioned before, but
    someone who can’t leave her past experiences behind. Every time
    she sleeps, more nightmares about what she survived.

    image

    Birthing a mass killer; another in an unending series of
    nightmares

    And the 57 years she spent floating
    in space afterwards cost her dearly—the chance to know her
    daughter. A child when Ripley left. She died two years before
    Ripley was found. Ripley promised to be home for her birthday.
    Now, no way she can make up for her time away. She has simply
    missed out on her daughter’s whole life.

    image

    Ripley’s only attachments, 57 years later — Jones the cat, and
    corporate PR person Burke (Paul Reiser)

    Now we get a chance to know Ripley’s
    vulnerable side. A simple description —someone suffering
    post-traumatic stress syndrome. Her first goal—simply put her life
    back together. No rewards for destroying the alien—the corporation
    she worked for does not believe an alien even existed. They revoke
    Ripley’s license to work in space.

    She can live with that
    judgment; she never expected justice. What makes her furious is
    that the corporate people insist that everything is fine on that
    planet; the one where the alien was discovered, LV-426. They
    explain that colonists have settled there with no problems. What
    is there to investigate, the corporate executive asks her.
    Many sequels face a tough task—simply to convince you that the
    hero would return to the same place, to a similar situation they
    faced in the original. Cameron’s great screenplay does a
    believable job answering this question. Ripley is told that the
    corporation recently lost touch with the colonists
    on        LV-426. They suspect
    the worst, and are sending in a team of Marines. They would like
    Ripley to accompany the Marines—as an “advisor.”
    At first, your reaction is the expected one—She would be
    crazy to go anywheres near there. But I think a lot of us
    can understand—even identify with, Ripley’s reasons. Most of all,
    she cares about the colonists who settled there. She knows what it
    was like to meet up with one of these creatures. Anything she can
    do to help, she is ready to do.

    And she wants to see
    the aliens destroyed…period. After experiencing the kind of
    killing just one can do, she wants to see the marines go in, like
    high-tech exterminators. Plenty of reasons—she not only saw the
    mature-stage alien kill friends, but watched the developing
    life-form killing others. (You may be fortunate enough to see a
    scene cut from the original release, but shown later on, making it
    even clearer. Ripley finds Dallas, a man who was possibly her
    lover, dying slowly from an alien parasite.)
    In Ripley’s nightmares she dies in agony—and releases another
    savage killer loose on the universe. She hopes she can put the
    dreams behind her. And getting her license back to work in space
    again; that is part of the deal.
    Ripley and the corporate negotiator Burke are the only non-marines
    aboard. The soldiers accept them only grudgingly. Nothing
    personal; you see the close-knit bond within this unit—they have
    learned together, grown together, bonded as a result. The officer
    in charge, Lieutenant Gorman, is a bit of an outsider too—most of
    his experience came from simulations…he is far from battle-tested.

    image

    .
    Marines; a close-knit group

    Arriving at the planet seems uneventful but bad omens are
    definitely there. Not a single human. Small spots of dissolved
    metal. Evidence of destruction—and worse—signs that one wing of
    the building was secured…as if it served as the colonists’ last
    stand.
    Then motion-sensors
    detect someone—who changes Ripley’s life. A young girl with
    tangled hair, a dirty face, seemingly unable to speak. She runs
    for shelter in a closed space behind a store-room—bites a marine
    who tries to pull her out. They choose Ripley to talk to her—she
    crawls through a narrow passage to do this, no hesitation.
    Ripley can sense this is the girl’s sanctuary—invading here is the
    ultimate threat. In addition, a fan spins overhead—a potential
    distraction, able to ruin many people’s concentration. Hard to
    maintain any serenity here.
    Through all this, Ripley does what she planned; grabs this child,
    but then holds her gently, tells her again and again, it’s okay.
    No words in reply, just scared, angry whimpering.
    Outside, the Lieutenant tries to question her, but his patience is
    long gone. Ripley hands her a cup of hot chocolate.
    Liquid sloshes onto her face. Ripley wipes it off. Her words so
    gentle:

    “That good, huh? Uh oh, I made a clean
    spot, guess I’ll have to do the rest. That’s a pretty little girl
    under there.” The girl stays silent but signs of humanity subtly
    returning to her face.  She finally speaks—tells Ripley her
    name is Newt; her brother, father and mother are dead—“Can I go
    now?”
    Instead of trying
    to taking charge (and pushing her away instantly) by saying,
    “No you can’t.“ Ripley simply says she thinks Newt will be
    safer if she stays. Wonderful instincts.

    But Newt’s words are
    chilling—more so because she stays quiet…no need to shout to make
    her point.
    It won’t make any
    difference, she says.

    image

    Ripley makes the effort to bond with the lone survivor, Newt

    Just about the same time, a marine
    detects lifeforms in one building—the marines assemble a team to
    search and destroy. The lieutenant, Ripley, and Burke remain in
    the vehicle—watch helplessly from the relative safety inside.
    (Alien used this device,
    with great effectiveness.)
    Not that the marine training—or the sergeant in command, is
    incompetent, but one error after another spells sure disaster.
    Ripley realizes the grunts are walking just above a cooling
    system—stray fire could puncture it and destroy the whole
    installation. High power weapons can’t be fired; the grunts must
    use flame-throwers and other short-range fire—fight the creatures
    at close range. And the place is crawling with them. The
    lieutenant watches as the team is slaughtered— tries to come up
    with strategy on the fly—finds himself freezing up. It’s simply
    all going too fast for him—not simulation anymore.

    image

    Well-trained, well-armed, intelligent—Yet still walking straight
    into disaster

    Ripley
    tells him to pull the team out—then takes the wheel of the
    vehicle, and drives into the carnage to pull out the survivors.
    The lieutenant tries to grab it back, almost wrecking the vehicle.

    She reaches the few
    left—smashes her way outside. An alien lands on the windshield,
    breaks through it, reaches out for her. Ripley brakes, throwing it
    off, then runs it over. Corporal Hicks shouts at her that they are
    safe now; she is grinding the axle, close to destroying it.
    No contempt in his shouting; he knows she is sky-high on
    adrenaline. Hicks is a blend of quiet calm, and ability to think
    and make decisions in a split-second; she may remind you of the
    presence Audie Murphy brought with him, back in the 1950’s.
    Only three Marines who went inside get out alive. Prospects for
    survival feel like they’ve gone from poor to—even worse. Yet with
    all that, positive relationships still develop. Ripley’s courage
    under fire impressed Hicks. His ability to find his gentle side
    when he can afford to, and his tough side other times—both draw
    Ripley to him. Promise me you’ll kill me if the aliens ever get
    through, she asks.
         Both of us, Hicks tells her. He introduces her to a close friend—his
    high-power weapon. Hicks is a good teacher and Ripley a good
    student. She is fast to learn the basics.

    image

    Hicks; A corporal—now highest in the chain of command

    Meanwhile, Ripley bonds with Newt—not an
    easy task. At first, only traumatic memories link them—past
    violence and unending bad dreams. Sleeping is an ordeal for both.
    Newt tells Ripley her mother used to tell her there were no
    monsters…”but there are.”
    Again, Ripley knows better than to condescend to Newt—and ruin her
    credibility in an instant. “Yes. There are,” Ripley tells
    her. Not all of it clicks like Hollywood dialogue. Ripley tells
    Newt that her doll Casey doesn’t have bad dreams.

    She’s made out of plastic,
    Newt tells her.
    No snappy
    comebacks from Ripley. But she has the sense to know—you don’t
    always need them. She does promise Newt always to be there for
    her, gives her a locator device that Hicks had given to her.

    The story still has
    surprising twists and turns left. I wanted to mention some
    under-texts giving it more power. Okay…
    Like the original team of marines, Ripley eventually has no choice
    but to fight an alien at close range. Without the luxury of any
    gun. Either that or leave Newt behind as food for alien larva. You
    know what choice Ripley makes.

    image

    Absolutely committed to keeping her promises

    Cameron’s script is effective in creating vivid characters. But
    Cameron also shows good judgment—(generally) keeping elements
    thought up by writers of the original. Alien was not the
    first movie to use the concept of parasites in its story. But it
    probably took more time and energy on this concept than any movie
    before—carefully giving you a series of nasty glimpses…watching
    the alien grow from one stage to the next.

    image

    The facehugger

    First a lifeform with legs
    that wrap around a face, then shoves a tube down into your gut. An
    exterior skeleton falls away, but something remains alive inside
    you. Growing into an eel-like creature with sharp teeth that uses
    them to tear its way out. This lifeform grows into a fully mature
    alien.
         Aliens keeps most of
    this. One surprise; we find that the first stage (the “face
    hugger”) can move freely when outside its egg. One of these comes
    after Ripley and Newt with a vengeance. The rest of the crew is
    unaware of danger…unable to hear the two as they scream—another
    ironic reference to the original.
    Last—I need to mention this; highly unusual in the mid-80’s,
    especially in a mainstream Hollywood production. I apologize for
    not giving credit for this insight; I just can’t remember who
    wrote this, where I read it.
    The writer mentioned Ripley’s sudden realization that one alien is
    a female—and a mother…like herself. She looks this alien in the
    face just a second, before annihilating a roomful of offspring—a
    momentary look of apology…one mother to another.
    I didn’t catch this the first time I watched Aliens;
    watching again, I am still not sure I see it. But forget me a
    minute; my job is point things out that others may
    appreciate; I wouldn’t want to leave out this point. Decide for
    yourself if you notice it.

    image

    Woman, samurai, mother