Since hatching “Alien” 33 years ago, Ridley Scott has hoped no other filmmakers would try to answer this question: Where did the space eggs containing those terrifying beasts come from?
Scott has hints of an answer himself with “Prometheus,” a cousin to “Alien” that opens Friday and marks the filmmaker’s return to science fiction after a 30-year break.
His origin story doesn’t offer easy solutions, though, and raises as many questions as it answers about the derelict space ship where humans discovered the eggs that unleashed such horror in the 1979 film and its three direct sequels, along with two hybrid “Alien vs. Predator” flicks.
Other directors — James Cameron on 1986’s “Aliens,” David Fincher on 1992’s “Alien 3” and Jean-Pierre Jeunet on 1997’s “Alien Resurrection” — had carried on with Scott’s creation. And while Scott veered away from science fiction after 1982’s “Blade Runner,” he always wondered if there might be a fresh way back into that “Alien” universe.
“At the end of the ‘Alien’ franchise, when all was said and done with the fourth film, it seemed to me you can’t use that creature one more time. It was too familiar and no longer frightening. Therefore, is it over?” Scott said.
Yet fans have wondered for decades about that fossilized “space jockey” depicted in “Alien,” the apparent pilot of the extra-terrestrial wreck that franchise hero Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) and her crew stumbled across. Who was he, what was he, where did his cargo of alien eggs come from, and where were they bound?
“I remember from the very first ‘Alien,’ there was one overriding question no one had addressed in any of the four,” Scott said. “I kind of sat on it, hoping it wouldn’t come up.”
Some of the secrets are revealed in “Prometheus,” which stars Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Guy Pearce and Charlize Theron as explorers who set out to find the “engineers” that created humanity but discover that those makers have terror in store for their offspring.
The “P” word — prequel — has been tossed about to describe the new film. But “Prometheus” is more a precursor than a straightforward prequel to “Alien.”
“To call it a prequel is limiting, but it does have a connection,” Pearce said. “It basically plants the seed for that original ‘Alien’ film, but it’s a really clever way to go about it, looking at this mission we’re actually on and how it does connect with that alien creature that Ripley does find.”
Set in the late 21st century, a few decades before the action of the original film, “Prometheus” exists in a world familiar to that of the “Alien” franchise — with a monolithic corporation, space explorers in hibernation chambers for their long journey, an enigma of an android whose motivations keep the crew — and the audience — guessing.
And, of course, loads of nasty creatures, in far greater variation than in any of the “Alien” movies.
“There are elements of a world he created that are definitely similar. But that doesn’t make it a prequel,” Theron said. “I felt like this was a stand-alone film. This film asks really big questions that were never asked in ‘Alien.’ Age-old questions of who our creators are, what would they look like, what would they want from us? What would we want from them?”
Theron plays the ice-queen overseer of the company backing the voyage, Pearce is the corporation’s patriarch, Fassbender’s the inscrutable android with agendas all his own, and Rapace is something of an update of Weaver’s Ripley, an idealistic scientist forced to become a bad-ass action hero.
Like “Alien,” ”Prometheus” has ghastly, gory moments as creatures infiltrate human hosts. Rapace is the focus of the film’s most-memorable instance, one to rival the shock of the infant alien bursting from John Hurt’s chest in the 1979 original.
“It’s something that’s literally under your skin and already makes you feel kind of queasy,” Fassbender said. “Then to see it on screen. It’s kind of a sick fantasy to have, but with any luck, millions of people will be suffering nightmares from that hectic scene in the middle with Noomi.”
Rapace spent about a week shooting that scene, and it gave her nightmares herself.
“I was a complete mess,” Rapace said. “I even had a dream that I woke up from a nightmare holding my tummy and thought, something was moving in there, and thought, oh my God, this cannot be happening. I better call someone, and the first thought was to call Ridley. He’ll know what to do.”
Scott knows what he’d like to do now with “Prometheus”: make a sequel.
There are no simple answers at the end of the film, which sets the characters and the audience up for even bigger questions to ask in the next chapter.
A “Prometheus” follow-up might explain more of the connections to “Alien,” but this first film is more of a taste or a teaser on how the two stories fit together.
“That would be too linear, too neat. That would be like a jigsaw puzzle, putting all the pieces in place,” Scott said. “It’s like doing ‘Blade Runner’ again. You can’t just pick up where you left off and continue. You have to ask how we can rework this into the universe we live in 40 years on.”
Martin Scorsese On “The Saints,” Faith In Filmmaking and His Next Movie
When Martin Scorsese was a child growing up in New York's Little Italy, he would gaze up at the figures he saw around St. Patrick's Old Cathedral. "Who are these people? What is a saint?" Scorsese recalls. "The minute I walk out the door of the cathedral and I don't see any saints. I saw people trying to behave well within a world that was very primal and oppressed by organized crime. As a child, you wonder about the saints: Are they human?" For decades, Scorsese has pondered a project dedicated to the saints. Now, he's finally realized it in "Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints," an eight-part docudrama series debuting Sunday on Fox Nation, the streaming service from Fox News Media. The one-hour episodes, written by Kent Jones and directed by Elizabeth Chomko, each chronicle a saint: Joan of Arc, Francis of Assisi, John the Baptist, Thomas Becket, Mary Magdalene, Moses the Black, Sebastian and Maximillian Kolbe. Joan of Arc kicks off the series on Sunday, with three weekly installments to follow; the last four will stream closer to Easter next year. In naturalistic reenactments followed by brief Scorsese-led discussions with experts, "The Saints" emphasizes that, yes, the saints were very human. They were flawed, imperfect people, which, to Scorsese, only heightens their great sacrifices and gestures of compassion. The Polish priest Kolbe, for example, helped spread antisemitism before, during WWII, sheltering Jews and, ultimately, volunteering to die in the place of a man who had been condemned at Auschwitz. Scorsese, who turns 82 on Sunday, recently met for an interview not long after returning from a trip to his grandfather's hometown in Sicily. He was made an honorary citizen and the experience was still lingering in his mind. Remarks have... Read More