Empire (UK)

MEMORY: THE ORIGINS OF ALIEN

★★★

- John nugent

DIRECTOR Alexandre O. Philippe

cast Tom Skerritt, Veronica Cartwright, Ben Mankiewicz, Roger Corman

PLOT A documentar­y tracking the cultural and mythologic­al foundation stones that led to Alien, the landmark 1979 film that changed sciencefic­tion forever. Memory is hardly the first documentar­y to attempt to get under the obsidian, acid-bleeding skin of the Xenomorph. Practicall­y every dvd and Blu-ray release of ridley scott’s influentia­l sci-fi has come with a doc attached, even the 1987 laserdisc. But this feature-length take from director alexandre O. Philippe has loftier ideas than any studio-mandated featurette.

it begins with a slightly bonkers pre-titles sequence in the Temple of apollo in athens, as three alien witches awaken from a lengthy slumber: these are the Furies, the Greek mythologic­al goddesses of vengeance. it’s a baffling, disorienta­ting set-up, though what follows is ultimately a fairly straightfo­rward talking heads documentar­y format — but the opening gambit clearly hopes to establish one of the film’s key arguments: Alien, Phillipe argues, is the manifestat­ion of all our myths, a nightmare born of centuries of dread found in cultural artefacts and our collective unconsciou­s.

“i didn’t steal from anyone,” insists Alien’s screenwrit­er, dan O’bannon, in archive footage — “i stole from everyone.” The film’s contributo­rs (which include empire contributi­ng editor ian Nathan) invoke a vast, fascinatin­g array of influences that led to the facehugger and friends, including Francis Bacon, hieronymus Bosch, h.p. lovecraft, parasitic insects found in nature, and the Mary Celeste, the ‘ghost ship’.

O’bannon, who died in 2009, plays a surprising­ly large role in the story, with his wife lovingly recalling his curious quirks (he once faked a UFO landing with his father). The writer is not often credited so significan­tly in the retelling of the Alien story, but his script (which had the working title of ‘Memory’, hence the doc’s title) evidently had a feverish mind that struggled to express itself until it found kindred spirits in director ridley scott and designer h.r. Giger. Together, both consciousl­y and unconsciou­sly, they created a dark parable in which almost any interpreta­tion can be applied.

Alien is “more than an allegory”, argues one contributo­r. “it taps into everything.”

it makes for a compelling case, and will undoubtedl­y have you reaching for a rewatch. But it doesn’t entirely feel like the final word on the film. some cast and crew are featured, including Tom skerritt and Veronica Cartwright, but ridley scott and sigourney Weaver are conspicuou­s by their absence. and while Philippe’s last film, the hitchcock documentar­y

78/52, had a clarity of vision in telling the story of Psycho’s shower scene, Memory is more muddled, flitting between thematic analysis and more run-of-the-mill BTS trivia; the blow-byblow of the chestburst­er sequence feels plonked in for contractua­l reasons. as groundbrea­king as Alien was, Memory seems quite tame, its aspiration towards highfaluti­n ‘film essay’ territory stymied by such a convention­al format. Not quite the final report from the commercial starship Nostromo, then — but as an ardent love letter to a classic, it does the job.

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 ??  ?? Loving the Alien: screenwrit­er Dan O’bannon.
Loving the Alien: screenwrit­er Dan O’bannon.

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