This film has succeeded in a big way already regardless of box office. It has people talking from both sides of the fence. And they're talking a lot.
So what is your point? The EXACT same thing happened when Star Trek XI came out.
This film has succeeded in a big way already regardless of box office. It has people talking from both sides of the fence. And they're talking a lot.
In myth, Prometheus makes man from clay, sides with the gods against the titans, and steals fire from the gods and gives it to man, only to be condemned for it. So, I suppose the "Prometheus" we see at the beginning of the film is part of one faction of engineers that creates and guides human life, against the will or law of their race, while the ones we see at the end of the film are part of another faction seeking to destroy their works. Their enemies. If the "good engineers" gave us fire, that is technology 2000 years ago, perhaps the "evil engineers" are out to destroy the perceived threat of us. Or maybe to them, all or them, Earth was just a petri dish that served its purpose, and now goes to decon.
Just a guess.
Oh, and A-. It was great.
That is a reasonable explanation. And I agree this is the best sci-fi flick IMO since Trek XI.
Regarding box office totals the film brought in $50 million in the US.
And, worldwide its brought in $141 million
It cost Fox and estimated $130 million to make the film and as pointed out 1/2 the cost The Avengers did.
However, Avengers is up to over $1 billion in box office receipts worldwide so at this point Prometheus has just barely paid for itself.
It's got (as they say) legs. There will be more - and hopefully better - installments.
Let Cameron do the second one !![]()
I'm actually kind of bummed that they chose "David" for the name of the android. Ash and Bishop both had "SH" in their names, which I always thought stood for "Synthetic Human". Would have been a nice bit of continuity if they followed that pattern, but that's just me...
Spoony, who I often agree with when it comes to movies, hated Prometheus and basically characterized it as the dumbest, most offensive cinematic experience in existence. However, from the comments it appears that many of his complaints were due to him not really paying attention to the film.
Glad you like it. Now go back and watch ALIEN which, according to its writer, had characters that were deliberately not super well-rounded because his only concern was how they reacted to the monster that got thrown at them, and that was the movie Scott shot...and it's considered the seminal movie of the sci-fi-horror genre.
And Prometheus was created in that same vein. It's not perfect, but no way in hell is it worse than Aliens.
The problem is that you can justify the former: They're working-class people who may not be well-educated and certainly aren't in a profession that should have trained them to deal with contact with new life-forms.
But the crew of the Prometheus consisted of highly-educated, well-trained scientists. They should have already been well-trained in how to explore and gather data in a manner that's both rational and safe.
But I'm sure that training didn't include horny snake aliens, horny squid aliens, giant humanoid aliens bent on genocide, oily black multipurpose ooze, two seperate corporate agendas and freak weather on an alien moon. The notion that any non-Vulcan scientist can go through all this and still do his job in a methodical manner is asinine.
I issue the same challenge to you that I issued to Pauln6: I defy you to collect samples in a methodial manner while you're being pursued by rabid pit bulls.
The other thing I've noticed is that Trek fans (or, sci-fi fans in general), at least from what I've experienced on this BBS, don't really subscribe to the "Ancient Alien" theories and seem to have a hard time being tolerant of others who do.
Uhhhggggg! Only if you want a syrupy and insultingly bad love story and major grammatical errors.Let Cameron do the second one !![]()
Really the dumbest thing was removing the helmet. It reeked of: "You know, wearing these things sort of looks silly and isn't cinematicaly interesting. So we need to remove them so people can see our faces!"
Yeah the air may have been breathable and "free of contaminates" but that doesn't mean that you can just breathe it willy-nilly. Hell, some lip-service to them having been given extensive rounds of antibiotics and antivirals would have been enough. But there really should have been a decon chamber between the entry of the ship and it's main habitable volume.
And yes, a montage of them setting up a perimeter and a quarantine suite/mobile lab should have been scene one on the planet. Very silly.
I have doubts as to how many people, beyond Holloway and Shaw (and Vickers and David, of course), that Weyland was even involved in hiring. At the beginning of the briefing, Vickers led off with "For those of you I hired personally, it's good to see you again." Combined with her later line about Weyland wanting "a true believer onboard" (i.e., Holloway and Shaw), I'm thinking Weyland went into cryosleep shortly after approving the expedition, and thus the actual make-up of the team was decided by others.[...] Weyland clearly didn't pick the best and the brightest for this mission.
Good ol' doubleoh wasn't even the first to post it - at least two other people posted it before him too. It's clearly making the rounds!I was coming here to post the above link but doubleohfive beat me to it!
Scott has actually referred to it both ways - as not a prequel, and as a prequel. I believe that his intention was much the same as Lindelof's distinction; Prometheus wasn't intended to be a prequel that would exactly set the table to lead directly into Alien, but rather is a prequel that takes place in the same universe, occurs chronologically prior to the events of the previous films, and has some connections to those films.[...] R. Scott's statement of it not being a prequel.
I'm thinking Weyland went into cryosleep shortly after approving the expedition, and thus the actual make-up of the team was decided by others.
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