I don't think Prometheus is as bad as many make it out to be.
Agreed. It was an enjoyable sci fi flick.
I don't think Prometheus is as bad as many make it out to be.
I'm alittle confused to how a movie about the people who created the xenomorphs and who aparent use ships like the one found in Alien, isn't a prequel to Alien.![]()
I'm alittle confused to how a movie about the people who created the xenomorphs and who aparent use ships like the one found in Alien, isn't a prequel to Alien.![]()
The way I understand the reasoning, it's because the *story* isn't a direct prequel. As in, the events of Prometheus do not directly impact the events of Alien. The ship that crashed in Prometheus wasn't the ship that was found in Alien. The dead Engineer in Alien, isn't the one that was killed at the end of Prometheus.
Of course it doesn't help that that original script was precisely that (hence the over-abundance of correlative plot elements), but there you go.
Put simply: they're part of the same fictional continuity, but not the same narrative. Just as Scott says that both 'Blade Runner' and 'Alien' co-exist in the same universe, 'Prometheus' is simply another instalment, telling it's own story.
Actually, a pretty good analogy just sprung to mind: the View Askewniverse. I don't think anyone would reasonably claim that 'Dogma' is a sequel to 'Chasing Amy'.![]()
I understand the point, which is correct, but the above was invented by fans or possibly production humor - not Scott. If you believe you know otherwise, we'll really need a primary source (direct quote from Scott) on that.Just as Scott says that both 'Blade Runner' and 'Alien' co-exist in the same universe...
I'm alittle confused to how a movie about the people who created the xenomorphs and who aparent use ships like the one found in Alien, isn't a prequel to Alien.![]()
The way I understand the reasoning, it's because the *story* isn't a direct prequel. As in, the events of Prometheus do not directly impact the events of Alien. The ship that crashed in Prometheus wasn't the ship that was found in Alien. The dead Engineer in Alien, isn't the one that was killed at the end of Prometheus.
Of course it doesn't help that that original script was precisely that (hence the over-abundance of correlative plot elements), but there you go.
Put simply: they're part of the same fictional continuity, but not the same narrative. Just as Scott says that both 'Blade Runner' and 'Alien' co-exist in the same universe, 'Prometheus' is simply another instalment, telling it's own story.
Actually, a pretty good analogy just sprung to mind: the View Askewniverse. I don't think anyone would reasonably claim that 'Dogma' is a sequel to 'Chasing Amy'.![]()
That might work if the Engineers hadn't created the xenomorphs in the first place, so obviously the events in Pormetheus leds to Alien.![]()
The alien at the very end was pretty clearly a proto-xenomorph.
I understand the point, which is correct, but the above was invented by fans or possibly production humor - not Scott. If you believe you know otherwise, we'll really need a primary source (direct quote from Scott) on that.Just as Scott says that both 'Blade Runner' and 'Alien' co-exist in the same universe...
For example, this article calls it "cheeky" [production humor].
http://www.slashfilm.com/is-prometheus-set-in-the-blade-runner-universe/
If that counts to tie together the movies into the same universe, then giant space potatoes and Star Fleet vessels exist in the Star Wars universe, as does R2D2 in the Star Trek universe.
I understand the point, which is correct, but the above was invented by fans or possibly production humor - not Scott. If you believe you know otherwise, we'll really need a primary source (direct quote from Scott) on that.Just as Scott says that both 'Blade Runner' and 'Alien' co-exist in the same universe...
For example, this article calls it "cheeky" [production humor].
http://www.slashfilm.com/is-prometheus-set-in-the-blade-runner-universe/
If that counts to tie together the movies into the same universe, then giant space potatoes and Star Fleet vessels exist in the Star Wars universe, as does R2D2 in the Star Trek universe.
I understand the point, which is correct, but the above was invented by fans or possibly production humor - not Scott. If you believe you know otherwise, we'll really need a primary source (direct quote from Scott) on that.Just as Scott says that both 'Blade Runner' and 'Alien' co-exist in the same universe...
For example, this article calls it "cheeky" [production humor].
http://www.slashfilm.com/is-prometheus-set-in-the-blade-runner-universe/
If that counts to tie together the movies into the same universe, then giant space potatoes and Star Fleet vessels exist in the Star Wars universe, as does R2D2 in the Star Trek universe.
...hearsay until a quote from Scott himself saying so is given or a video title or link produced with a time index.So far as I can recall, Scott himself has specifically said (in one of the DVD commentaries I think) he considers them both to be in the same universe. He may not have thought so at the time he made them but going forward it's clearly on his mind.
Of course it doesn't help that that original script was precisely that (hence the over-abundance of correlative plot elements), but there you go.
I didn't think of it that way. I just assumed since it looked quite a bit like a simpler version of the Xenomorph that it was the first step in the development of the Xeno, but I like the idea of it being simply being a similar being too.The way I understand the reasoning, it's because the *story* isn't a direct prequel. As in, the events of Prometheus do not directly impact the events of Alien. The ship that crashed in Prometheus wasn't the ship that was found in Alien. The dead Engineer in Alien, isn't the one that was killed at the end of Prometheus.
Of course it doesn't help that that original script was precisely that (hence the over-abundance of correlative plot elements), but there you go.
Put simply: they're part of the same fictional continuity, but not the same narrative. Just as Scott says that both 'Blade Runner' and 'Alien' co-exist in the same universe, 'Prometheus' is simply another instalment, telling it's own story.
Actually, a pretty good analogy just sprung to mind: the View Askewniverse. I don't think anyone would reasonably claim that 'Dogma' is a sequel to 'Chasing Amy'.![]()
That might work if the Engineers hadn't created the xenomorphs in the first place, so obviously the events in Pormetheus leds to Alien.![]()
It may inform the events of Alien, but it doesn't directly lead to them. In this analogy, The Engineers are sort of the Jay and Silent Bob of the Alien/Blade Runner universe.
Like I said though, since the script originally *was* supposed to lead directly into the events of Alien, it muddies the waters a bit.
I wouldn't call it a proto-xenomorph exactly, just another example of the same base technology. Indeed, the goo may be a more advanced type of weapon they were developing to replace the spore/face hugger lifecycle. On the other hand, it could simply be to the xenomorph what a nuke is to a landmine. Different tool for a different job.
I just assumed since it looked quite a bit like a simpler version of the Xenomorph that it was the first step in the development of the Xeno...
I think that was supposed to be what Scott called the "dragon", a "patient zero" version of the xenomorph based on Engineer-contributed DNA like what was seen at the films ending - what some people refer to as a "protomorph". Same smooth head that was more pointy than the human-version xenomorph that we all know and love. Definitely not the same thing, but distantly related.I just assumed since it looked quite a bit like a simpler version of the Xenomorph that it was the first step in the development of the Xeno...
The only problem with that being, there was already a conventional Xenomorph sculpted into a wall relief in the Engineer's Temple, which is what happens when you have a movie that's designed to be one thing from the outset but then halfway through you decide you don't want it to be about that anymore but do a piss poor job disconnecting it from its origins.
That's my biggest problem with the film other than the terrible characterization and plot logic; the half-assed way they handled the connection to rest of the Alien universe.
We don't want to do a direct prequel to Alien anymore, so to "change" things now LV-426 will be the nearly identical LV-223, and the Facehugger will be a space cobra or a super-sized Facehugger, and the Xenomorph will have a Woody Woodpecker beak, and the shitty punk rock geologist will begin changing into a Xenomorph, and instead of a temple full of Facehugger eggs they'll encounter a temple full of egg-shaped jars and an identical looking ship which crashes on the planet, just like the one on LV-426 did.
If you're trying to avoid doing a direct prequel, then avoid doing a prequel. Don't make a prequel as seen through a funhouse mirror. They could have done an Engineer's movie with no connection to the Xenomorphs or similarity to the events of Alien, but they didn't do that.
Yep. Very true. Even though I despised the film, I loved the dog-based xenomorph in Alien 3. Opened up a whole new concept of the alien using the host body as more than just an incubator, but also a genetic contributor. If evolution or intentional engineering were to determine this, I would say it was to make the xenomorph more readily adaptable and resilient to the host's habitat, allowing it to outlast anything nearby. AVP's "Predalien" was another good one, positively badass, taking on the deadliest traits of both species. The "hybrid" in Alien 4 was, I guess, in a similar vein but, IMO, too ridiculous for words.For example, the giant face hugger wasn't typical of what we're used to seeing. It didn't come out of an egg. It was the result of a crazy pregnancy. Mix it with some human DNA and the healing powers of that super bio-bed, and maybe it mutated.
I just assumed since it looked quite a bit like a simpler version of the Xenomorph that it was the first step in the development of the Xeno...
The only problem with that being, there was already a conventional Xenomorph sculpted into a wall relief in the Engineer's Temple, which is what happens when you have a movie that's designed to be one thing from the outset but then halfway through you decide you don't want it to be about that anymore but do a piss poor job disconnecting it from its origins.
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