- Forum Clout
- 93,058
Finally saw this last night.
I really enjoyed the first half of the movie and the final “encounter”.
Fede nailed the aesthetic and vibe of the first film which I appreciated greatly. I also enjoyed the practical effects but of course it’s all CGI-augmented which seems to be inescapable now.
The fan service was pretty out of control towards the end. We didn’t need repeated lines of dialogue or almost verbatim scenes from the first 3 films.
He really tried to synthesize elements of all three original films and Prometheus/Covenant here which was interesting in a way but I felt held back the story from possibly exploring new space.
i had some major gripes with the idea of this outpost being decommissioned/abandoned - WY would never do that. I also thought it needed a little more setup for why this 19 year old can use a company space shuttle as he pleases.
But most of all, I realized that I missed Ridley Scott’s inept old man philosophizing. For all my complaints about Prometheus and Covenant, he recognized that the Xenomorph is just a one-dimensional monster. WY, synthetics, hamfisted religious ideations, at least those are an attempt at exploring something greater than scifi horror, which the first film already did so perfectly that it didn’t need to be explored further with this creature.
I really enjoyed the first half of the movie and the final “encounter”.
Fede nailed the aesthetic and vibe of the first film which I appreciated greatly. I also enjoyed the practical effects but of course it’s all CGI-augmented which seems to be inescapable now.
The fan service was pretty out of control towards the end. We didn’t need repeated lines of dialogue or almost verbatim scenes from the first 3 films.
He really tried to synthesize elements of all three original films and Prometheus/Covenant here which was interesting in a way but I felt held back the story from possibly exploring new space.
i had some major gripes with the idea of this outpost being decommissioned/abandoned - WY would never do that. I also thought it needed a little more setup for why this 19 year old can use a company space shuttle as he pleases.
But most of all, I realized that I missed Ridley Scott’s inept old man philosophizing. For all my complaints about Prometheus and Covenant, he recognized that the Xenomorph is just a one-dimensional monster. WY, synthetics, hamfisted religious ideations, at least those are an attempt at exploring something greater than scifi horror, which the first film already did so perfectly that it didn’t need to be explored further with this creature.