evo_9 2 hours ago

I always loved Alien and Blade Runner because of this shared aesthetic. It gave the sense that the doomed ship Nostromo departed Blade Runner earth.

  • ggm 33 minutes ago

    Owners of Frank Lloyd Wright homes licked their lips with glee when Bladerunner fans made the bricks-and-mortar movie-famous.

    How Deckerd can afford to live in one post economic meltdown is a bit unclear. And those whisky glasses are worth a mint now too.

    "Enhance" indeed.

sho_hn 2 hours ago

You know, I'm sort of frustrated that all the recent entries in the Alien franchise have been nostalgia bait. At this point I've seen those corridors so often I'm tired of them. A most unwelcome dilution.

  • spankibalt 2 hours ago

    > At this point I've seen those corridors so often I'm tired of them.

    Heh, I can't get enough of them; it's a great visual design template to work from. And visual consistency of properties within a diegetic timeframe has to be taken into account, even if the newer entries' writers' rooms could profit from better talent...

    That said, Alien: Isolation is still the best modern infusion into that universe, and one of the best games in my lifetime.

  • echelon 2 hours ago

    Cameron doubled down on the aesthetic in Aliens, he just changed the genre from horror to action. Both films were "peak 80s" (Alien was '79) and just ooze with what must be the absolute pinnacle of science fiction vibes.

    If you haven't seen these two films, you need to fix that this week. It'll change your life.

    Scott tried to expand the aesthetics with Prometheus and Covenant. I felt the films did a great job of refreshing the look and feel while remaining faithful to the 80's. Unfortunately, the writing was trite and Scott's directing is averaging .200 at bat these days.

    Romulus was not bad, though certainly not a masterpiece. At least it was better written and had better character arcs than Scott's recent films.

    I'd rather have the performance of this series than whatever Jurassic Park or Star Wars have become.

    Predator, oddly enough, has strangely been improving if you don't count Shane Black's entry.

    I'm happy they keep making these, and I hope the writers and directors at the reigns keep experimenting rather than conforming to "safe" or "understandable by a general audience".