- Type
- Film
- Status
- Released
- Release
- November 12, 1997 (27 years ago)
- Alias
- Alien 4
- Language
- English
- Origin
- United States
- Genres
- Sci-Fi Horror
- Runtime
- 1h 49m
Alien: Resurrection
Where to watch (United States)
Cast
Sigourney WeaverRipley 8
Winona RyderAnnalee Call
Michael WincottFrank Elgyn
Ron PerlmanRon Johner
Dominique PinonDom Vriess
Gary DourdanGary Christie
Kim FlowersSabra Hillard
Dan HedayaGen. Martin Allahandro Carlos Perez
J.E. FreemanDr. Mason Wren
Brad DourifDr. Jonathan Gediman
Raymond CruzPvt. Vincent Distephano
Leland OrserLarry Purvis
Carolyn CampbellAnesthesiologist
Marlene BushScientist
David St. JamesSurgeon
Rodney MitchellSoldier with Glove
Robert FaltiscoSoldier Shot Through Helmet
David RoweFrozen Soldier
Garrett HouseSoldier
Rod DamerSoldier
Mark MansfieldSoldier
Daniel RaymontSoldier
Cris D'AnnunzioSoldier
Steven GilbornFather (voice)
Robert BastensSleeper
Rico BuenoSleeper
Alex LorreSleeper
Ronald RamessarSleeper
Nicole FellowsYoung Ripley
Tom Woodruff Jr.Lead Alien
Joan La BarbaraNewborn Vocal #1 (voice)
Archie HahnNewborn Vocal #2 (voice)
Eddie YansickSoldier Who Stuns Ripley
Crew
Collections
Reviews
Alien Resurrection Clipping found in The Independent published in London, Greater London, England on 11/29/1997. Alien Resurrection
Alien: Resurrection Clipping found in Daily News published in New York, New York on 11/26/1997. Alien: Resurrection
Alien Resurrection Clipping found in The Sydney Morning Herald published in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia on 1/1/1998. Alien Resurrection
Alien: Resurrection (1/2) Clipping found in The Baltimore Sun published in Baltimore, Maryland on 11/26/1997. Alien: Resurrection (1/2): Part 2: https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-baltimore-sun-alien-resurrection-2/149228670/
Alien: Resurrection / Telling Lies in America Clipping found in St. Louis Post-Dispatch published in St. Louis, Missouri on 11/26/1997. Alien: Resurrection / Telling Lies in America
Alien: Resurrection (1/2) Clipping found in Arizona Republic published in Phoenix, Arizona on 11/27/1997. Alien: Resurrection (1/2): Part 2: https://www.newspapers.com/article/arizona-republic-alien-resurrection-2/149228315/
Alien: Resurrection (1/2) Clipping found in The Boston Globe published in Boston, Massachusetts on 11/26/1997. Alien: Resurrection (1/2): Part 2: https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-boston-globe-alien-resurrection-2/149228907/
Alien Resurrection Clipping found in The Guardian published in London, Greater London, England on 11/28/1997. Alien Resurrection: Richard Williams
Alien: Resurrection Clipping found in Newsday (Suffolk Edition) published in Melville, New York on 11/26/1997. Alien: Resurrection
Alien Resurrection Clipping found in Evening Standard published in London, Greater London, England on 11/27/1997. Alien Resurrection: 1 star in London Evening Standard during this era denoted a positive grade, based on their rating legend.
Alien Resurrection movie review (1997) Between "Alien" and "Aliens," 57 years passed, with Ellen Ripley in suspended animation. Between "Aliens" and "Alien3," she drifted through space in a lifeboat, before landing on a prison planet. In all three films she did battle with vile alien creatures constructed out of teeth, green sinew, and goo. In "Alien3" she told this life form: "I've known you so long I can't remember a time when you weren't in my life." I'm telling the aliens the same thing. This is a series whose inspiration has come, gone, and been forgotten. I'm aliened out. The fourth movie, depends on a frayed shoestring of a plot, barely enough to give them something to talk about between the action scenes. A "Boo Movie," Pauline Kael called the second one, because it all came down to aliens popping up and going "boo!" and being destroyed.I found that second film dark and depressing, but skillfully directed by James Cameron ("Terminator II"). I lost interest with the third, when I realized that the aliens could at all times outrun and outleap the humans, so all the chase scenes were contrivances.Now here is "Alien Resurrection." Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) is still the heroine, even though 200 years have passed since "Alien3." She has been cloned out of a drop of her own blood, and is being used as a brood mare: The movie opens with surgeons removing a baby alien from her womb. How the baby got in there is not fully explained, for which we should perhaps be grateful.The birth takes place on a vast space ship. The interstellar human government hopes to breed more aliens, and use them for--oh, developing vaccines, medicines, a gene pool, stuff like that. The aliens have a remarkable body chemistry. Ripley's genes are all right, too: They allow her reconstituted form to retain all of her old memories, as if cookie dough could remember what a gingerbread man looked like.Ripley is first on a giant government science ship, then on a tramp freighter run by a vagabond crew. The monsters are at first held inside glass cells, but of course they escape (their blood is a powerful solvent that can eat through the decks of the ship). The movie's a little vague about Ripley: Is she all human, or does she have a little alien mixed in? For awhile we wonder which side she's on. She laughs at mankind's hopes of exploiting the creatures: "She's a queen," she says of the new monster. "She'll breed. You'll die." When the tramp freighter comes into play, we get a fresh crew, including Call (Winona Ryder), who has been flown all the way from Earth to provide appeal for the younger members of the audience. Ryder is a wonderful actress, one of the most gifted of her generation, but wrong for this movie. She lacks the heft and presence to stand alongside Ripley and the grizzled old space dogs played by Ron Perlman, Dominique Pinon, Dan Hedeya and Brad Dourif. She seems uncertain of her purpose in the movie, her speeches lack conviction, and when her secret is revealed, it raises more questions than it answers. Ryder pales in comparison with Jenette Goldstein, the muscular Marine who was the female sidekick in "Aliens." Weaver, on the other hand, is splendid: Strong, weary, resourceful, grim. I would gladly see a fifth "Alien" movie if they created something for her to do, and dialog beyond the terse sound bites that play well in commercials. Ripley has some good scenes. She plays basketball with a crew man (Perlman) and slams him around. When she bleeds, her blood fizzes interestingly on the floor--as if it's not quite human. She can smell an alien presence. And be smelled: Her baby recognizes her mother and sticks out a tongue to lick her.These aliens have a lot of stuff in their mouths; not only the tongue and their famous teeth, but another little head on a stalk, with smaller teeth. Still to be determined is whether the littler head has a still tinier head inside of it, and so on. Like the bugs in "Starship Troopers," these aliens are an example of specialization. They have evolved over the eons into creatures adapted for one purpose only: To star in horror movies.Mankind wants them for their genes? I can think of a more valuable attribute: They're apparently able to generate bio-mass out of thin air. The baby born at the beginning of the film weighs maybe five pounds. In a few weeks the ship's cargo includes generous tons of aliens. What do they feed on? How do they fuel their growth and reproduction? It's no good saying they eat the ship's stores, because they thrive even on the second ship--and in previous movies have grown like crazy on desolate prison planets and in abandoned space stations. They're like perpetual motion machines; they don't need input.The "Alien" movies always have expert production design. "Alien Resurrection" was directed by the French visionary Jean-Pierre Jeunet ("City of Lost Children"), who with his designers has placed it in what looks like a large, empty hangar filled with prefabricated steel warehouse parts. There is not a single shot in the movie to fill one with wonder--nothing like the abandoned planetary station in "Aliens." Even the standard shots of vast spaceships, moving against a backdrop of stars, are murky here, and perfunctory.What impact will "Alien Resurrection" have on the careers of Weaver and Ryder? Financially, it will help: Weaver remains the only woman who can open an action picture. Artistically, the film will have no impact at all. It's a nine days' wonder, a geek show designed to win a weekend or two at the box office and then fade from memory. Try this test: It's been five months since "Jurassic Park: The Lost World" opened. How often do you think about it?
Film Clips ALIEN RESURRECTION It started out, under Ridley Scott, as a horror film in space. James Cameron, in the sequel, turned it into an apocalyptic war movie. The David Fincher version was a rather arty
Alien Resurrection - Movie Review The franchise's fourth outing
Alien: Resurrection Sigourney Weaver's Ripley looks pretty frisky for someone who killed herself to save humanity from the demon seed in her belly in Alien3. There is more to Ripley's rise from the ashes than Weaver's rise in salary from $33,000 for the first Alien to $11 million for Chapter 4.
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