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Product Description Astronauts must fight an unknown creature not only for their own survival, but for the survival of all mankind. .co.uk Review By transplanting the classic haunted house scenario into space, Ridley Scott, together with screenwriters Dan O'Bannon and Ronald Shusett, produced a work of genuinely original cinematic sci-fi with Alien that, despite the passage of years and countless inferior imitations, remains shockingly fresh even after repeated viewing. Scott's legendary obsession with detail ensures that the setting is thoroughly conceived, while the Gothic production design and Jerry Goldsmith's wonderfully unsettling score produce a sense of disquiet from the outset: everything about the spaceship Nostromo--from Tupperware to toolboxes-seems oddly familiar yet disconcertingly ... well, alien.Nothing much to speak of happens for at least the first 30 minutes, and that in a way is the secret of the film's success: the audience has been nervously peering round every corner for so long that by the time the eponymous beast claims its first victim, the release of pent-up anxiety is all the more effective. Although Sigourney Weaver ultimately takes centre-stage, the ensemble cast is uniformly excellent. The remarkably low-tech effects still look good (better in many places than the CGI of the sequels), while the nightmarish quality of H.R. Giger's bio-mechanical creature and set design is enhanced by camerawork that tantalises by what it doesn't reveal.On the DVD: The director, audibly pausing to puff on his cigar at regular intervals, provides an insightful commentary which, in tandem with superior sound and picture, sheds light into some previously unexplored dark recesses of this much-analysed, much-discussed movie (why the crew eat muesli, for example, or where the "rain" in the engine room is coming from). Deleted scenes include the famous "cocoon" sequence, the completion of the creature's insect-like life-cycle for which cinema audiences had to wait until 1986 and James Cameron's Aliens. Isolated audio tracks, a picture gallery of production artwork and a "making of" documentary complete a highly attractive DVD package. --Mark Walker
M**S
👍
👍
D**!
Masterpiece
Having been obsessed with Aliens for my entire life I'd neglected the first film for far too long. One sick day off work and I thought I'd give it a spin. Immediately I was completely absorbed by the incredible set design, tense atmosphere, likable and believable cast of scruffy, rag-tag, regular Joe characters and the ever looming threat from the titular creature. Sure, there were a few, slightly dated monster design moments but once the credits rolled I was determined to place the original Ridley Scott film on an absolute equal footing with James Cameron's roller coaster sequel. Genuine classic and a landmark cinema moment.
S**N
Adds to the experience.
One particular scene in the Director's cut adds to the bleak inevitability of the fate of the crew. Well worth seeing alongside the original Cinema release.
H**N
What’s not to like about them
I do love all the Alien films. Wish they could make some more on the books. Seeing is beelieving.
M**1
Not the best version.
Ok this`ll upset a few but i prefer the original over the directors cut as you see too much of the alien in this one and in places you can kinda make out where it looks as though its a guy in a alien suit but in the original more is left to your imagination creating in my opinion a more terrifying experience, but the picture quality is awesome and i cant believe its as old as it is.
J**Y
Great classic
A great film to watch, just amazing
P**N
Thriller and a bit gory
If you like alien films,excellent 👽.
S**S
They don't make them like they used to!
AMAZING!!!!
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