And yet you like Aliens, strange.![]()
Not strange at all seeing as Aliens had all those things where Alien 3 lacked all of them.
Cliches?
I AM a Voyager fan, actually.
Wow.
That actually explains a lot.
And yet you like Aliens, strange.![]()
Not strange at all seeing as Aliens had all those things where Alien 3 lacked all of them.
Cliches?
I AM a Voyager fan, actually.
And yet you like Aliens, strange.![]()
Not strange at all seeing as Aliens had all those things where Alien 3 lacked all of them.
Cliches?
I AM a Voyager fan, actually.
And the style of filming (which IIRC was, on some level, pretty new at the time) really supported that, with the aliens scaling the tunnels for what they're worth and not just sticking to the floors.
And the style of filming (which IIRC was, on some level, pretty new at the time) really supported that, with the aliens scaling the tunnels for what they're worth and not just sticking to the floors.
You mean just like they did in Aliens, in just about every scene we saw the Xenos in?![]()
Except it looked much better in "Aliens" because they were actually there on set, rather than in A3 in which they used a matted in rod puppet().
Even Richard Edlund admits on the quadrilogy documentary that it didn't work.
And the style of filming (which IIRC was, on some level, pretty new at the time) really supported that, with the aliens scaling the tunnels for what they're worth and not just sticking to the floors.
You mean just like they did in Aliens, in just about every scene we saw the Xenos in?![]()
Ah, but what Alien 3 succeeded in (and what I was getting at) is making it feel dynamic in a way Aliens was never able to (this image of a big, sluggish alien zoo / circus heading towards the camera will forever be stuck in my head, I think). The aliens in Alien 3 actually felt fast and vicious. Whereas, in my view, Aliens hid the lack of dynamism through the sheer number of foes (which fits very well with what Aliens did in general, i.e. being bigger and louder overall than its predecessor).
Except it looked much better in "Aliens" because they were actually there on set, rather than in A3 in which they used a matted in rod puppet().
Even Richard Edlund admits on the quadrilogy documentary that it didn't work.
I'm sorry to hear he feels that way. But frankly I disagree with his opinion. It may not be perfect but it certainly worked very well for me.
All they did there was just the same thing they did in the first movie by keeping it dark and stuff. Or cop-outs like just turning the camera feed upside down.
In A3 they showed a much more maneuverable alien REALLY moving,
the techniques required weren't even finished film technology (the rod puppet). FOX didn't give them enough time to make it fit in right in post-production.
I
DO
NOT
CARE.
Granted, over time I have seen SOME redeeming features in A3 but the rod puppet creature effects are something that any person with two eyes can see are NOT one of them!
Again, I will grant you that there ARE some things about the film I can respect. I will begrudgingly say I respect the fact they went COMPLETELY nihilistic and made a TOTALLY different film, thus making the first three films all separate sub-genres but I also expect you, if only to yourself, to acknowledge that, by defending this film as staunchly as you have done, are entering the territory of wannabe counter culture film elitist.
Certainly this argument cements that.
I
DO
NOT
CARE.
Well, that's your problem then. At least you didn't start blathering on about it's "horrid CGI!" like most dimwit haters who don't do their homework.
And anyways, if the same thing happened to Cameron you'd be the one making the excuses saying that the effects would be good if they had the right time, etc.
What, it's okay to only like mainstream stuff? Because that's what you're basically saying.![]()
If you think the documentary with Alien 3 was harsh on the studio, just remember that it was supposed to be worse; the studio gutted the Alien 3 documentary.When I saw the film at the cinema in 1993, I assumed it was CGI. The tech was new at the time and I think a lot of people assumed they were using this new fangled thing to recreate the alien.
All one has to do now is watch the documentary to know they didn't. Oh and btw, I find all four "Making of" docs for the alien films to be OUTSTANDING. The A3 one is incredible if only for the fact that it's basically a two hour, "This is how we fucked up" confession.
Not throwing a cheap shot, just a, "WOW - I cannot believe you ACTUALLy took THAT approach!" kinda deal!
Eh, A3 is pretty much the prototype for all his other works. His "signature" is pretty clear throughout the movie.
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