Re: Ridley Scott: Alien Prequel Details
Really? They understand English?
Well hey they cut the power right? They must be able to
read English too! :lol
Maybe they consulted the blueprints first.
Hey why don't we talk about the Queen using the elevator to go to the landing pad. She must have known to press the "up" button. :eek
Okay sarcasm aside...
To be perfectly honest I too believed the aliens "cut the power" when I first watched the film nearly 25 years ago.
But upon rewatching the film (I don't know how many times..
a lot 
), I've come to understand that a lot of what can be used to determine the aliens' intelligence can actually go either way. To this day I don't know if this "was" Cameron's intention (for it to be ambiguous) or that he was simply "dumbing it down" for us.
And again for the record "Aliens" is one of my three all time favourite movies. I love this movie.
However as a superfan who costumes as a Colonial Marine, even "I" can see the flaws in this film, and how it dramatically changed the direction of just what the "aliens" truly are.
It's already been said much more eloquently here- to say it once again:
The creature in "ALIEN" was a literal manifestation of the meaning of the word "alien": foreign, strange, unfamiliar.
This in essence is the whole point of the movie.
However the creatures in "Aliens" ARE familiar- they are bugs. Oversized, incredibly dangerous bugs. They have a hive. They have a Queen. They leave you alone unless you **** them off (the Marines poke around the hive- they are ignored until they kill one of the newborn aliens).
This is more or less the behaviour of bees.
This is what detracts from the first film. Going from the completely unfamiliar to the familiar. It reduces the aliens from something mythical to mere wild beasts. If you have the firepower they aren't a threat and not frightening. How frightening would Micheal Myers be if the house he entered had a SWAT team in it waiting for him?
Part of the point of the first film is that the creature appeared unstoppable, which is what made it so terrifying. How was Ripley going to kill it? She had to blow up her own ship causing a supernova! But it stowed away on her escape craft! What was she to do?! Ingenuity (and a bit of luck) was with her that she was able to force it out the airlock, and blast it with the engines.
As I've already said, even after the alien is shown flying away, it is not clearly revealed as to whether it is dead or not. It could still be "out there" floating through space waiting to attack some hapless victim and start the cycle of eggs/birth all over again.
So it is this intimation that the creature might be "immortal" that gives it a mythical quality, enhancing its terror.
The creatures in "Aliens" are most definitely mortal.
For me ALIEN is a standalone film. And while "Aliens" shares some commonalities with ALIEN, the two films couldn't be more different.
Suffice to say I enjoy both films for what they are; the first a horror film, the second an action film.
Kevin