Alien: Resurrection Movie Review
Alien: Resurrection Review

"Alien: Resurrection" Overview

Rating: R
1997
Cast and Crew
Director : Jean-Pierre JeunetProducer : Gordon Caroll,David Giler,Walter Hill
Screenwiter : Joss Whedon
Starring : Sigourney Weaver,Winona Ryder,Dominique Pinon,Ron Perlman
I'm not entirely sure how to begin a review of the highly-anticipated (at least
for me) fourth installment of the Alien series except to say... what a letdown.
Sigourney Weaver's Ellen Ripley died in Alien3, the movie that was supposed to
put the nail in the Alien coffin, but thanks to the miracles of next-millennium
cloning, she's back, and full of alien DNA to boot (thus making her invincible,
giving her acid for blood, and generally a pretty creepy chick). This new
twist has great potential, as Ripley's alien side gives her a strange kinship
with the creatures... creatures that once again are loosed by idiot scientists
trying to tame them.
But in the end, the desire to spill more Blood! Blood! Blood! (and alien goo)
wins out over plot and thematics. Instead, the picture progresses like a sorry
rehash of the first three movies. Two hours later, I left depressed.
Director Jean-Pierre Jeunet, who made the masterful Delicatessen, has plenty of
fun with creepy set design, creatures galore, clever photography, and propelled
mucous, but other than that, Alien 4 has little to recommend. Even Winona
Ryder as a reluctant comrade is a real disappointment.
In a crowded theater, everyone can hear you groan.
The special edition version of the film adds little more than a few minutes of
extra footage to the film. The original script by Joss Whedon (before he was
big!) is one of the notable extras on the DVD, which includes making-of
featurettes and rehearsal footage.
The Alien Quadrilogy includes a total of nine disks: all four Alien films, each
with a separate disk of extras, and an additional bonus disk complete with a
Q&A with Ridley Scott, a UK documentary on Alien, original theatrical trailers
to all four films, a DVD-ROM “script to screen” comparison feature, an
anthology of 11 issues of the Dark Horse Alien comics, and more. These
materials will give you a whole new appreciation for the Alien films.
Die, bitch!
Reviewer: Christopher Null





