Alien 3 came out in the summer of 1992,
and it was a big deal at the time. Excitement had built up for it,
people were looking for the next big follow-up to the '86's James
Cameron flick, and was ready and rarin' for some more bug blastin'
action! And... They didn't get that. You know how I sit here and
pontificate to y'all about how to cut stupid movies some slack
because in the end, they delivered what they promised and nothing
more? (i.e. Pirates of the Caribbean promised nothing more than two
hours of Johnny Depp acting like a lunatic, Transformers and
Battleship promised nothing but a couple of hours of explosions,
ect.) As I said, you really shouldn't judge a movie for what it
isn't, as opposed to what it is. Sadly, Alien 3 is the picture
perfect example of a movie that promised more than what it delivered.
All the commercials and movie trailers for it made it look like it
was going to be a darker but more action packed film, along the same
lines as it's immediate predecessor. I mean, watch this trailer and
you'll know what I mean:
Now, for those of you who has seen the
movie... You know that what you just saw consisted of just about
every action scene in the movie. Alien 3 was one of those movies
that, like Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and Superman Returns, went
through so many rewrites and revisions, that it was bound to
disappoint no matter the outcome. One of the scripts was written by
David Twohy, the guy who co-created the Riddick Chronicles with Vin
Diesel. Which when you look at Pitch Black, you got to wonder if that
was a take on an Alien film he had in mind somewhere. You can read
all about those various proto-versions of the movie on it's Wikipedia
page, and there's plenty of them available online to read. But the
short of it is that the movie promised to be this worthy successor to
Aliens and ended up being something that was the exact opposite. It
was a suspense-horror movie, that the trailers tried to sell as an
action movie. Just by false advertisement, it was going to end up
sucking balls for a lot of moviegoers. I mean, it's like imagining
going into a what you're thinking is a buddy comedy movie, and you
get a serious toned political movie about ponzi schemes. You'd be
kinda pissed, wouldn't you?
This beautiful art here? It's like this through the entire first book. |
Now personally, I hold a special place
in my heart for the Aliens franchise, and you might expect, it goes
back to a comic book. Now you see, back in 1988, Dark Horse Comics,
still a fledgling comic company that never ventured beyond B&W
books focused on a lot of independent comics. One of the earliest
rights they got a hold of was the rights to comics of the movie
'Aliens', and boy did they ever deliver. I was in eighth grade when
the first book came out. It was B&W, and my immediate impression
wasn't that enthused. I mean, it's not in color like Spider-Man or
Batman. Why should I take it seriously? And that was when I not only
discovered B&W comic books, but discovered just how powerful it
can be with shading alone. The pictures you see off to the side are
excepts from that book, and man, oh man, was the entire book done
like that and was it beautiful. Mark A. Nelson was the artist, and I
remember looking at his art and just staring at it in amazement,
blown away about how detailed and rich the illustrations was. (It was
the comic that started me off on wanting to draw comics, but it would
be in 1990, with MacFarlane's Spider-Man book that REALLY cemented
that desire for me.) Now as great as the art was, the story was even
better! In a nutshell, it picked up ten years later, after the events
of the second movie. (The third movie had not been produced yet.)
Ripley was nowhere to be found, Newt was placed in an psychiatric
hospital, since the events of LV-426, and an acid-scarred Hicks had
become an alcoholic mess of a soldier, when a rival corporation has
discovered a star chart leading back to a homeworld where the Aliens
may have come from. It was a trilogy, all written by Mark Verheiden,
with the first drawn by Mark Nelson, the second airbrushed by Denis
Beauvias (and man, was that stuff beautiful! Utterly gorgeous, even
today!), with the third drawn by Sam Keith... Who is a 'take it or
leave it' kind of guy. Not my cup of tea, but I understand why people
liked his work. Just on Aliens, following Nelson and Beauvias... It
was really out of place.
Seriously beautiful.. This is the art in the second story arc. |
These comics were an awesome story,
that would have made an even more awesome movie. It started with a
slow and suspenseful build up, that ended with a goddamned
apocalypse. And then it kept going! It was really impressive. So if
you hadn't read the comics, you had your expectations from the first
two movies to go by. If you were a fan of the comics, you had the
expectations from the comics as well, and let me tell you... Those
would be some impressive expectations.
And the movie failed to meet them. Not
only was the five years of stories that I had faithfully been reading
totally negated, but the two main characters who I had been following
so closely for the last five years were killed unceremoniously
off-screen in the FIRST FIVE MINUTES! To say I was pissed was an
understatement. Later, Dark Horse reissued those comic stories, with
some rewritten editing, and the characters of Newt and Hicks changed
into new characters of “Billie” and “Wilkes”, and the Ripley
that showed up in the third book was changed to being an android or
something. In all honesty, it still works, and fits into the movie
universe continuity... But it really wasn't the same for me. This
comic I had read and loved, that really got me into being a hardcore
comics fan, and aspiring comics artist... No longer “counted”.
And to make it more irritating, the editions that Dark Horse sells
now are all the edited versions. It makes sense for them, but it's
not story I loved. And it was all because of that damn third movie.
You could live with it, if the movie had been good. I mean,
Terminator 2 negated a lot of the established stories from Dark
Horse's really good miniseries of them, but I didn't mind, because
Terminator 2 was a good movie.
And the movie suffered on a bunch of
fronts for it too. It was the one Alien film that new director David
Fincher wouldn't come back to do a commentary for, because his
experience for it was a nightmare. Constant script changes, producers
and actors pulling rank, budget slashes, and so on. It had started
filming before there was a finished script and upon completion, the
studio had dismantled and reassembled the movie without his consent.
He's pretty much disowned the movie, and seeing the movies he later
would have crafted (Seven, Fight Club, and Panic Room) it's hard to
blame him for the movie. Essentially, this movie had so much it had
to live up to, and it just couldn't do it. But here's the funny
thing. Once I got over the fact that a comic story I loved was
negated, and once I got over the fact that this movie pretty much
killed the potential of sequels (boy was I wrong there!), and once I
accepted that this was a movie that was created by accountants and
not a directorial vision...
...Alien 3's actually not that bad of a
movie.
No, seriously. It's not that bad of a
movie. You have to accept that it's a DIFFERENT movie, and not the
movie we were expecting or wanting... But it's not a BAD movie. Allow
me to explain.
Once you put aside the notion that
you're pissed off the movie wasn't an action movie, and you start
treating the movie as an actual Sci-fi/Horror movie, it's attributes
really start to shine through a lot. Alien 3 is actually a pretty
good suspenseful movie. The mostly spoiler free premise is this: On
the way home from LV-426 (Acheron), the Colonial Marine ship, the
Sulaco experiences an electrical fire on board. (Possibly due
to a xenomorph being on board.) As a result, the lifepods are
ejected, and it crash lands onto Fiorina “Fury” 161, a double Y
chromosome maximum security prison. It's a violent and hostile
planet, that has a problem with lice. (So everyone has a shaved
head.) Ripley is the only survivor, or at least she believed so,
until she discovers that an Alien has traveled down with her and is
now in the prison with her and the criminals. (Anything more gets
into spoiler territory. And while I'm sure most of you who's reading
this has seen it... Still, for the few that haven't... I'll be cool.)
The story's not really that bad. It's
pretty typical, and at this point in time, it's almost redundant with
alien monster movies, but at the time, it was pretty original. A
woman is stuck in a penal colony, with a bunch of murderer, rapists,
and thieves. We know they found religion and have taken a vow of
celibacy, but do they believe in that vow, or is it just because
temptation was less than likely? The warden is less than friendly and
cooperative, and the only thing keeping them at bay is that there's
something there that's worse than them. It really adds to the sense
of isolation and suspense to make a really good horror movie.
The characters, let's talk about them a
bit. Ripley's returned from the first movie, and honestly, she's not
that different. There's actually some likable flawed characters in
this movie. (Bearing in mind they're mostly violent convicts.)
There's the prison medic, Clemens, who's a very level headed and
quick tragic fellow. (Tragic as in how he got there.) The Warden
Andrews, who's this serious cock in an asshole, but you can kind of
see why he's like that. (I mean, you'd be impatient too if you had to
be in charge of that dive.) crazy prisoner Golic, who's played by
Paul McCann. (Known to you Doctor Who fans as the Eighth Doctor.) And
the character who really sells the movie to me, and to me, makes it
decent it the leader of the inmates, Dillon, played by Charles S.
Dutton. For those that don't know, Charles S. Dutton, was the star of
a really good show in the 90's called 'Roc', a comedy that dealt with
a lot of social issues, without being too preachy about it. The
acting on the show was so great, they even did the last few seasons
live, because all the actors were trained Broadway performers, and it
showed. It didn't get high ratings because... You know, it was a good
show and not some stupid piece of crap. Well, Dutton plays the
character of Dillon. He's supposed to be this hard ass convict, who's
the leader of the inmates, and founder of this sort of fundamentalist
religion they've vowed to follow. And Dutton REALLY sells the role.
As silly as the events in the movie can be, he does it all
straight-faced, honesty and with conviction. He's a great actor.
(Interestingly enough, he was in another movie, that's also kind of
an Alien rip-off, called Mimic, which also had a lot of great talent
involved in it, including Dutton... But it really sucked, but HE was
great in it.)
A lot of what makes the movie work for
me is the atmosphere. It's a wonderful set that's dark and
foreboding. The prison truly feels like an uninviting place, a
perfect place for a horror movie. Some of the camera work is great.
One of my favorite scenes in the movie, is the final chase scene,
where much of it is shot through the perspective of the alien,
scaling walls and dodging in and out of doorways. Alien 3 was one of
the last big budget monster movies to use practical effects, as the
following year gave us Jurassic Park, and after that, everyone and
their mother swore by CGI, whether it worked or not. (It was pointed out below that there have of course been big budget movies that use practical effects still, such as in Christopher Nolan's movie, like in Dark Knight, where they actually suplexed a goddamned semi truck. But generally speaking, studios seem more adamant about computer generating everything.) The music in
the movie, really hit it home. It's a very dark and foreboding,
experimental style of music, I've seen it used many times in other
dramatic movies since, but composer Elliot Goldenthal was the first
to actually develop this for a big mainstream movie. He calls it one
of his best musical scores, and he's right. I don't talk about movie
scores a lot, but I'm a huge lover of them. And while it's easy to
praise the John Williams, Hans Zimmer and Danny Elfmans of the film
industry... A lot of really good musical scores are actually from
very underrated movies. It's easy to say the Dark Knight's score is
awesome, because the movie is too. But Mortal Kombat is an awfully
silly movie, that's soundtrack wise is mostly known for it's techno
soundtrack... But not a lot of people remember the really good
musical score by George Clinton. (I think I might have a theme for my
next article now.) So yeah, Alien 3's music is really good.
Yeah, Alien 3 has it's flaws. And some
of them are rather serious flaws too. And while it did piss me off
when I first saw it, I grew to rather like it. Honestly, it should be
worse. It can be predictable. It should have been an utter disaster of a movie, but
somehow... It works. It's a far, FAR better movie than many give it credit for. Fincher just did that good of a job... Even if
he did disown the movie.
Stooge Rating:
SHEMP
4 comments:
On the note of practical and cgi special effects, Cracked.com, did an article not too long ago about some recent films/scenes that you thought were using CGI but actually were not. The twisting hallway scene from inception was one of them I believe.
You are right, and I adjusted it above. I read that article too, and it was interesting reading. Cracked is always a hit or miss for me. Sometimes, it's undeniably interesting reading that has some real genuine research put into it. Other times, I want to break their keyboards about how stupid their writers can be. (Not that I'm one to talk about someone being stupid. I believe an adage about living in glass houses is appropriate here.) But I think you know what I mean though, that after Jurassic Park, major movie studios tended to lean more toward CGI with their effects as opposed to traditional effects for reasons of cost or safety... But it' snot always effective.
I remember watching Spawn, that horrible movie based on the comic in the 90s, and I remember people bragging about how great the special effects were, and even at the time I was thinking "I've played Tomb Raider games better than this!" And the entire, I kept imagining how much better the movie would have been if all the monsters were stop-motion in the old Harryhausen style.
I think I said it before. I'm not sure how fake looking CGI is better than fake looking stop motion. But if you don't got the budget, and it's gonna look fake no matter what... I'd go for broke and try for something stylishly fake.
I always enjoyed the film because I saw it for what it was from day one, as opposed to what I was expecting. For me the special edition of Alien 3 really shines & is one of the very few films that have actually benefited from having a new cut.
I've still not seen the Special Edition. I really need to sometime, because you're not the first person to tell me that it improves the movie greatly.
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