Chicago Sun-Times

IN SPACE, HEAR THE SILENCES

- FROM THE EBERT ARCHIVE

“Prometheus” ( 2012) and its new sequel, “Alien: Covenant,” are prequels to the film that started it all: “Alien” in 1979. Roger Ebert contemplat­ed the original in this entry in his Great Movies series:

At its most fundamenta­l level, “Alien” is a movie about things that can jump out of the dark and kill you. It shares a kinship with the shark in “Jaws,” Michael Myers in “Halloween,” and assorted spiders, snakes, tarantulas and stalkers. Its most obvious influence is Howard Hawks’ “The Thing” ( 1951), which was also about a team in an isolated outpost who discover a long- dormant alien, bring it inside, and are picked off one by one as it haunts the corridors. Look at that movie, and you see “Alien” in embryo.

In another way, Ridley Scott’s 1979 movie is a great original. It builds on the seminal opening shot of “Star Wars” ( 1977), with its vast ship in lonely interstell­ar space, and sidesteps Lucas’ space opera to tell a story in the genre of traditiona­l “hard” science fiction; with its tough- talking crew members and their mercenary motives, the story would have found a home in John W. Campbell’s Astounding Science Fiction during its nutsand- bolts period in the 1940s. Campbell loved stories in which engineers and scientists, not space jockeys and ray- gun blasters, dealt with outer space in logical ways.

Certainly the character of Ripley, played by Sigourney Weaver, would have appealed to readers in the Golden Age of Science Fiction. She has little interest in the romance of finding the alien, and still less in her employer’s orders that it be brought back home as a potential weapon. After she sees what it can do, her response to “Special Order 24” (“Return alien lifeform, all other priorities rescinded”) is succinct: “How do we kill it?”

One of the great strengths of “Alien” is its pacing. It takes its time. It waits. It allows silences ( the majestic opening shots are underscore­d by Jerry Goldsmith with scarcely audible, far- off metallic chattering­s). It suggests the enormity of the crew’s discovery by building up to it with small steps: The intercepti­on of a signal ( is it a warning or an SOS?). The descent to the extraterre­strial surface. The bitching by Brett and Parker, who are concerned only about collecting their shares. The masterstro­ke of the surface murk through which the crew members move, their helmet lights hardly penetratin­g the soup. The shadowy outline of the alien ship. The sight of the alien pilot, frozen in his command chair. The enormity of the discovery inside the ship (“It’s full of ... leathery eggs ...”).

A recent version of this story would have hurtled toward the part where the alien jumps on the crew members. Today’s slasher movies, in the sci- fi genre and elsewhere, are all payoff and no buildup.

“Alien” uses a tricky device to keep the alien fresh throughout the movie: It evolves the nature and appearance of the creature, so we never know quite what it looks like or what it can do. We assume at first the eggs will produce a humanoid, because that’s the form of the petrified pilot on the long- lost alien ship. But of course we don’t even know if the pilot is of the same race as his cargo of leathery eggs. Maybe he also considers them as a weapon. The first time we get a good look at the alien, as it bursts from the chest of poor Kane ( John Hurt). It is unmistakab­ly phallic in shape, and the critic Tim Dirks mentions its “open, dripping vaginal mouth.”

Yes, but later, as we glimpse it during a series of attacks, it no longer assumes this shape at all, but looks octopod, reptilian or arachnoid. And then it uncorks another secret; the fluid dripping from its body is a “universal solvent,” and there is a sequence both frightenin­g and delightful as it eats its way through one deck of the ship after another. As the sequels (“Aliens,” “Alien 3,” “Alien Resurrecti­on”) will make all too abundantly clear, the alien is capable of being just about any monster the story requires. Because it doesn’t play by any rules of appearance or behavior, it becomes an amorphous menace, haunting the ship with the specter of shape- shifting evil. Ash ( Ian Holm), the science officer, calls it a “perfect organism. Its structural perfection is matched only by its hostility,” and admits: “I admire its purity, its sense of survival; unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality.”

A peculiarit­y of most of the actors is that none of them were particular­ly young. Tom Skerritt, the captain, was 46, Hurt was 39 but looked older, Holm was 48, Harry Dean Stanton was 53, Yaphet Kotto was 42, and only Veronica Cartwright at 29 and Weaver at 30 were in the age range of the usual thriller cast. Many recent action pictures have improbably young actors cast as key roles or sidekicks, but by skewing older, “Alien” achieves a certain texture without even making a point of it: These are not adventurer­s but workers, hired by a company to return 20 million tons of ore to Earth ( the vast size of the ship is indicated in a deleted scene, included on the DVD, which takes nearly a minute just to show it passing).

The screenplay by Dan O’Bannon, based on a story he wrote with Ronald Shusett, allows these characters to speak in distinctiv­e voices. Brett and Parker ( Kotto and Stanton), who work in the engine room, complain about delays and worry about their cut of the profits.

“Alien” has been called the most influentia­l of modern action pictures, and so it is, although “Halloween” also belongs on the list. Unfortunat­ely, the films it influenced studied its thrills but not its thinking. We have now descended into a bog of Gotcha! movies in which various horrible beings spring on a series of victims, usually teenagers. The ultimate extension of the genre is the Geek Movie, illustrate­d by the remake of “Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” which essentiall­y sets the audience the same test as an old- time carnival geek show: Now that you’ve paid your money, can you keep your eyes open while we disgust you? A few more ambitious and serious sci- fi films have also followed in the footsteps of “Alien,” notably the well- made “Aliens” ( 1986) and “Dark City” ( 1998). But the original still vibrates with a dark and frightenin­g intensity.

 ?? | 20TH CENTURY FOX ?? Sigourney Weaver stars in “Alien” with more mature actors including Harry Dean Stanton ( center) and Yaphet Kotto.
| 20TH CENTURY FOX Sigourney Weaver stars in “Alien” with more mature actors including Harry Dean Stanton ( center) and Yaphet Kotto.
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