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|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $19.99 |
Audio commentary by Ridley Scott; Deleted scenes; Artwork and photo galleries; Original storyboards; Alternate music track
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Scene Selection
1. Main Titles [2:20]
2. Early to Rise [2:20]
3. Rough Landing [4:34]
4. Walking Distance [3:29]
5. Dead a Long Time [3:32]
6. Eggs or Something [4:15]
7. A Wonderful Defense Mechanism [3:18]
8. Missing a Guest [4:14]
9. Taking Off [2:23]
10. Last Supper [:34]
11. Seek and Destroy [5:11]
12. "Here Kitty" [:25]
13. No Blood, No Dallas [9:14]
14. A Confrontation with Ash [:25]
15. Priority One [4:30]
16. Scared Stiff [2:40]
17. Destruct System Activated [1:01]
18. T Minus Thirty Seconds [3:27]
19. The Last Survivors [5:27]
20. End Titles [7:28]
Combining the monster film fright of The Thing From Another World with the suspense of Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None, Ridley Scott's atmospheric Alien (1979) delved deep into the dark fears of space exploration in a year when Star Trek: The Motion Picture was more concerned with spectacular space battles. Sigourney Weaver, in the definition of a breakthrough role, stars as the most steadfast crewmember of the mining ship Nostromo, which after touching down for an emergency call unwittingly receives an unwelcome guest -- yes, an alien. As the mysterious, bloodthirsty creature roams the dark ship, the remaining crew -- including John Hurt, Yaphet Kotto, Tom Skerritt, Ian Holm, and Harry Dean Stanton -- fall prey both to their own emotions and the monster. Latching itself onto Hurt's face and giving birth in an infamous, stomach-turning way, the titular visitor embodies ghastly characteristics that are at the same time motherly, violent only from an instinct to protect and reproduce. These concepts of motherhood and reproduction are further explored in the original's star-studded sequels -- James Cameron's Aliens, David Fincher's Alien 3, and Jean-Pierre Jeunet's Alien Resurrection. Indeed, one could say that Scott's film is the first feminist monster movie, reinforced by both the mother-monster and Weaver's strong-willed Ripley, who goes against the damsel-in-distress stereotypes of most horror flicks. (Ironically, the role was originally written as a man.) Designed with psychosexual imagination by macabre artist H.R. Giger, Alien still elicits screams from viewers -- screams that unfortunately, in space, no one can hear. Jason Bergenfeld, Barnes & Noble
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About Alien
Parents need to know that, while the demonic space monsters at the center of this 1979 classic shocker have since been overexposed via inferior sequels, video games, parodies, and comic books (even Superman battled them!), some of the best minds in cinema tried to ensure this movie would be a nightmare-inducer. Keep that in mind. Indeed, small kids are better off with E.T. Teens can take it for the thrill-ride that it is, and perhaps even discuss why they think it works so well (or doesn't) in evoking elemental terror.
Families can talk about why the movie was so effective (or not) in evoking fear.