The title "Prometheus" probably reffers to the "Space Jockey".
Interesting ideas but I'm sceptical. The mission of the ship Prometheus presumably resembles that of the mythical Prometheus. If there is a Promethean character too, then I really doubt he or she will be non-human - that would sort of conflict with the myth.
so the title has a clever double meaning.
I think we can rely on it having a double meaning.
Also the planetoid in the original "Alien" appears to be partially terraformed. Why? It may be a mistake but Ash, when he studies the geology describes it as "Primordial" with "Rock,Lava base.Deep coal.Well below the line."
That's a Mondegreen for deep cold, I think, as Jedi points out.
Ridley wanted it to look like it had "grown" out of the landscape and had Giger design both as a result, implying the ship had a definite purpose in being there.
Giger - or someone - did speculate that the crashed ship had begun infecting or growing out into the landscape, IIRC.
The photos of the sets seem to suggest they carry this theme "backward" into the "prequel" and I'm pleased by that.
The Derelict-shaped rocky tunnel? Weird, that. The entrance ain't exactly alien-looking.
Also alot of the set designs again look like they are still Ron Cobb influenced, whcih again is very heartening. I supect the ships maybe too. The "Magellan" is an interesting name for the "other" ship (if it is another), as in reality the Magellanic Clouds are two neighbouring galaxies and Ferdiand Magellan was spanish seafaring explorer, which suggests that the ship is also similarly typed.
I'm hoping so. Those small engines in the set debris field after teardown are making me think in terms of a shuttle, lifeboat or lander, though.
And the design of the derelict as something "grown" was Ridley's idea to make Giger create something that didn't look like it was manufactured, which all the previous designs did, and they all ended up looking far too "human" in appearance instead of something truly alien. While Giger did create some designs for the planet's surface, none of it was actually used in the film.
That's not actually correct. They did base the rocks on bones, and they are biomechanical, just not as ostentatiously so as the ship. They have ribbed pipes everywhere, that sort of thing. Watch it in Bluray on a big screen if you can, and look hard, you'll see it.
Bear in mind that O'Bannon himself also created the final facehugger design we see in the film, partially based on one of Giger's designs, so he obviously felt it worked better that way.
I've never heard that story before. Roger Dicken - working loosely from Giger's "eye hand" painting - is credited by most sources, including Scott and Giger.
And there was a clearly defined culture there.. it wasn't just an egg depository, there was writing and hieroglyphics on the walls (that one painting that Giger did of the alien life cycle was actually meant to be seen on-screen), which leads to the idea that the creature may actually have been intelligent to the point of having a society and culture of its own, and not just a wild animal (it actually acted much more intelligently, even to the point of using one of the crew as a shield against the flamethrower).
Wasn't that actually about another alien culture, which used the creatures in their religious rituals? A sacrificial rite, to be specific. I don't think that was intended to indicate the creatures themselves were intelligent, it was third parties who built the pyramid.
I only hope that my anticipation doesn't become so great that the final film can't possibly meet my expectations.
Too late, I think!
Actually I don't think I'm wrong about much. In the published screenplay by Futura in 1979 it says "Deep Coal".It sounds like that in the film, though I'll admit cold sounds as logical but "deep?" and "Well below the line" suggests well below the limit of excavation.
Not unreasonable interpretations, I'll give you that. But they also say this asteroid is only a thousand metres across, so there are definitely some problems with the script's logic.

Deep cold, well below the *freezing* line, works for me.
It is suggested that the cavern containing the eggs is actually subterranean anyway.Certainly the scale of it no way matches the size of the craft as it is.
I still don't understand why so many people think this. I guess that matte painting looks bigger than it is meant to, to many people? The writer of Alien Harvest worked overtime to establish that interpretation: he had a figure-8-shaped derelict, which in crash-landing buries the forward "donut" and then blows off a section of hull from the rearward one, leaving only the familiar horseshoe shape aboveground. A horrible, stupid idea, IMO, but obviously he too thought the egg chamber was underground, simply because Ash lowers himself on a rope to get to it. But that writer also thinks the COCKPIT is underground, for what reason I'm at a loss to understand!
The cockpit is the dome on top of the central arm of the ship. That was built with a translucent plastic hemisphere, and it matches Giger's concept paintings of the Jocket set, which show a clear dome above the Jockey's chair/gun/telescope. So Ash lowers himself from near the top of the ship into the middle or lower part of the ship, is all. Regardless of the matte painting, the sets DO fit inside the ship at the established scale - in fact they're *under-scale*, and the room matches the shape of the belly of the craft and has the same "elbows" at the ends - IMO it was basically intended to be a big hollow in the lower forward quarter of the central arm of the ship, behind the entrance tunnel area.
I know it's a petty fanwank kind of thing, but I really hope Ridley re-establishes this in Prometheus.