this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2024
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Anyway, Alien: Romulus is the seventh film about these particular monsters. According to the producers, the film takes the franchise ‘back to its roots’. So we get a group of grimy crew-mates piloting a big rust-bucket of a spaceship who pick up an extraterrestrial stowaway and end up having to use their wits and courage to survive as it gobbles them up, one by one.

And it’s not a bad film. It’s nicely creepy, the special effects are good, the acting is perfectly serviceable. In fact, I could give you a normal review of Alien: Romulus, but just writing this is making me feel a little crazy. It’s not a bad film, but it’s also a direct copy of a much better film that already exists. That film is called Alien, and it came out in 1979. It had Sigourney Weaver in it. It hasn’t vanished. If you have a Disney+ subscription or a torrent client, you can watch it tonight. Why have we made it again? What’s the point? Why have we spent the past 45 years – which is longer than I’ve been alive – making seven different versions of the same film? What on Earth is going on?

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 3 months ago (1 children)

saw it, and I went put with the idea that it was an Alien movie whose target audience was young people that didn’t see the first alien movie.

I still prefer the original first alien movie. Like a lot, but this one is pretty decent. It was like a “netflix remake” with lots of copy/paste from the original movie. Some sentences are exactly copied, some scenes greatly copied and modernized for 2024 eyes.

The main differences that make the first Alien movie superior (to me at least). In this latest movie there is no “mother sound” in the original Alien the spaceship appear to breathe and live with a constant sound that really put you into the “Alien mood”.

Sigourney Weaver. Both her role and her acting were incredible. That is just decent in this new movie.

Critic about megacorps is visible in this new movie, but felt even more terrible in the older one IMHO.

Still, there are a few things not present in the original movie in this one that are a bit nice. The relation with the androids, some great action scenes. But that’s about it. If you love the alien universe it is a pretty decent Alien. If the first Alien is a 9/10 movie I would give this one a 7/10.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I'm always down for more android drama so that's worth two points itself.

I also love Weyland-Yutani's single minded obsession with "the perfect organism" biting them in the ass again and again when they're already making a superior version of humanity that can colonize space.

What's even the profit to be had in turning humanity into xenomorphs or whatever bullshit they're on? It's the fatal flaw of corporate bureacracy we're seeing in real time as our current mega-corps set piles of money on fire on the regular, they're not even fucking good at capitalism, just at beating down workers who don't have an alternative.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I always thought their goal was to weaponize the xenomorphs?

But I suppose it's not meant to be clear. They're greedy corporations looking to milk as much profit from anything they can find. Good thing corporations aren't like that in real life ;P

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

I think that's what Ashe and Burke talked about/implied so most people just rolled with it, it's not like MIC corruption is a rare theme, but they've been working up the human/xenomorph hybrid angle for a while.

https://screenrant.com/alien-weyland-yutani-xenomorph-goal-hybrid-species-marvel/

And it does tie a lot of threads together while being honestly a bit more horrifying imo. There's always been a bit of a background to the movies of "How could Weyland-Yutani be so stupid as to risk a xenomorph outbreak on Earth or a colony" and even "but Marines with guns absolutely slaughtered them so it's not even that good of a weapon" that this motivation addresses far more readily.