rodneyfaile
Sr Member
But this cuts both ways. Ridley wanted to see an utterly un-Roman, utterly extra-historical fantasy-art helmet on a gladiator in ancient Rome, and unfortunately got it.
Ridley is the historian when it comes to Alien.
But this cuts both ways. Ridley wanted to see an utterly un-Roman, utterly extra-historical fantasy-art helmet on a gladiator in ancient Rome, and unfortunately got it.
You're not parsing my comments correctly. I'm not assuming anything, I was advancing an opinion on a hypothetical situation which does not occur in the film. The ship looks like a different ship because it is a different ship.
I think that's the one they find on the floor in the ampule room.
I'm more concerned about how many of our characters are naturally or unnaturally gendered.
What I'm praying for is CRT monitors on those ships. If they've got flatscreen touchpanels - I'm out of there!!!
As always, Your Mileage May Vary
Actually, I parsed your comments quite fine.
Again, there is no reason to think that he will make that distinction within the two films or that he even cares to.
What I'm praying for is CRT monitors on those ships. If they've got flatscreen touchpanels - I'm out of there!!!
Ridley is the historian when it comes to Alien.
I would not be surprised in the least to see the suit somehow "meld" with the chair when the pilot sits down, giving the appearance that they're one and the same. Space Jockey equivalent of a safety harness.
Sometimes I think one reason the Star Wars prequels were received so poorly because people had decades to imagine the clone wars and envision their own stories When the movies hit, they just didnt compare to everyones imagination.