Home Forums Chat Forum Prometheus

Viewing 24 posts - 361 through 384 (of 384 total)
  • Prometheus
  • Cougar
    Full Member

    So how religious is Ridley Scott or indeed the Lost writer?

    From what I’ve read, RS is anti-religion (he’s suggested it’s “the root of all evil” or some such before now). I’ve seen him described both as atheist and agnostic in various places; which is most accurate I’m not sure.

    Lindelof, I’ve no idea.

    Ro5ey
    Free Member

    Yeah, have now read that myself about RS

    He was once a altar boy…. It has apparently left a “guilty mark” on him, which has kept him on the straight and narrow but he believes Religion is the biggest cause of evil.

    And for Damon Lindelof … he relates to Dr Shaw… but as a writer wants the “final judgment to be in the hands of the audience and in the eye of the beholder”… interesting interview with him here.

    http://www.examiner.com/article/damon-lindelof-q-a-lost-co-creator-talks-origins-of-prometheus-more

    Drac
    Full Member

    Seen it today and loved, the tie in with the previous and open ended ready for another. Great entertainment.

    bobbyatwork
    Free Member

    Blimey I’ve birthed a monster…. Was no-one just entertained like I was?

    Kit
    Free Member

    Heh 🙂

    deluded
    Free Member

    I see that the Blu-ray / DVD release is to have a different beginning and ending with deleted scenes being restored to shore up a poorly edited theatrical release.

    Questions Will Be Answered.

    sofaking
    Free Member

    ……….. and a few months later they will release the directors cut
    🙁

    mikey74
    Free Member

    Ridley Scott has said that there won’t be a director’s cut, but that trailer kinda suggests that one is in the pipeline.

    I see that the Blu-ray / DVD release is to have a different beginning and ending with deleted scenes being restored to shore up a poorly edited theatrical release.

    If that is true, it suggests that even someone as powerful as RS has limited control over the theatrical versions of their own films that get released.

    sofaking
    Free Member

    i read that at 1st he said no and now he is saying yes. so wait and see i suppose

    PrinceJohn
    Full Member

    I see that the Blu-ray / DVD release is to have a different beginning and ending with deleted scenes being restored to shore up a poorly edited theatrical release.

    I think it’s only the Blu-ray that has the alternative beginning/ending according to the small print. I won’t be watching it for a while as it’s not on the lovefilm list yet.. grrrr….

    chewkw
    Free Member

    Okay, I watched it nearly a month ago on the long haul flight back …

    errmmm … okay-ish with blurring storyline and not enough actions. Oh and take out that zombie character (the one that got infected) who is knocking at the entrance of their spaceship because there should not be zombie around … 7/10 🙄

    seavers
    Free Member

    Mostly I liked it…I am interested to see where he decides to take it in the next 2. Mostly.

    hels
    Free Member

    2 more films !!!

    By Toutatis Obelix, that’s a terrible thought.

    They might as well have filmed The Fonz waterski-ing over a shark in the closing credits of the last one.

    seavers
    Free Member

    I might be mistaken but I think the Fonz is scared of waterski’s.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    I might be mistaken but I think the Fonz is scared of waterski’s.

    No, he’s afraid of sharks… 😉

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Mostly

    I see what you did there. (-:

    Irish_AL
    Free Member

    TESCO’S ARE SELLING IT TODAY !!! 😀

    Drac
    Full Member

    Oh and take out that zombie character (the one that got infected) who is knocking at the entrance of their spaceship because there should not be zombie around ..

    Why? In the original Alien and the others when got infected it looked like they were dead and then they all seem to recover. They were infected as was the ‘zombie’ you refer to.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    SFX’s reviews (of the DVD / BD release and of the extras) are up.

    Disc review[/url].

    Extras[/url].

    deluded
    Free Member

    Good link Cougar – cheers.

    I found this interesting –

    While none of these scenes are outstanding as scenes, they’re revelatory in demonstrating how the director and writers grappled with the film: how much to say, how much to explain, and how much human interest to sprinkle on the cast. Even if Prometheus failed, the Blu-ray says much about how it failed. This story of a disappointing film is stronger and more thought-provoking than Prometheus itself.

    I’m still deciding if I want it in my collection.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Indeed.

    I do wonder about a Director’s Cut, y’know. Whilst Scott has always been against such things, it does seem to have been a problematic movie that might benefit from a bit of time and thought outside of studio pressures.

    I’m all for a complex film that takes a couple of viewings to unravel. But Prometheus struck me as confused rather than confusing.

    deluded
    Free Member

    Prometheus for me was a film that had such grand designs that it forgot the basics – one of which is a cohesive story! I don’t mind depth and intricacy in a narrative or one that evolves over a series but I do ask that the dots join up.

    It seems ridiculous to say given RS’s undoubted ability and experience, but I hope he pulls his socks up for future productions. Perhaps it’s harsh to lay it all at his door – I dunno? I’ve said it before – I’ll be mightily hacked off if he doesn’t learn from this, and any Blade Runner follow-up gets a similarly inept re-rendering / addition to the line. I hear Hampton Fancher the original screenplay writer will be involved, which is reassuring.

    superfli
    Free Member

    Watched it Fri night and thought it was superb! Loved it, Alien buldges, Alien creation, great stuff 🙂

    PrinceJohn
    Full Member

    Saw this on Empire online earlier –

    One particularly eye-opening revelation was the possible appearance of facehuggers, a xenomorphic beastie now so beloved you can even buy plushie versions to sling at unsuspecting housemates/fellow bus passengers/strangers at Prometheus screenings.

    “I did have facehuggers in my original draft,” says Spaights. “David, as he began to get fascinated by the science of the Engineers, doesn’t deliberately contaminate Holloway with a drop of black liquid. Instead, Holloway hubristically removes his helmet in the chamber, is knocked unconscious, facehugged and wakes up not knowing what had been done to him, and stumbles back into the ship.”

    “In my draft, he returns to his cabin, is embraced by Shaw, who is delighted to see him having feared that he had died, and the two of them make love,” he goes on to say. “And it’s while they’re making love that he bursts and dies. So that lovemaking sequence echoed my original lovemaking sequence where he explodes! It was messy.”

    That said, David, as it turns out in Spaihts’ vision, is much more malevolent than in the final cinematic cut – but in a very precise, scientific way.

    “David, fascinated by these creatures, begins delaying the mission and going off the reservation on his own, essentially because he thinks he really belongs with the Engineers,” Spaihts explains.

    “They’re smart enough and sophisticated enough, great enough, to be his peers. He’s harboring a deep-seated contempt for his human makers. So at one point Shaw goes to stop him and David ties her up and deliberately exposes her to a facehugger. He caresses an egg open and out comes a facehugger.”

    “David doesn’t smell like a person – his breath isn’t moist – so he can handle the thing like a kitten. It doesn’t want him; it’s not interested. But then he exposes it to her and it goes for her like a shot. He toys with her for a bit and then lets it take her. That, in my draft, was how Shaw was implanted with the parasite that she had to remove with the medpod sequence.”

    That’s right, David would ostensibly be playing with a facehugger like a little kitten, toying with Shaw as he lets it clamp around her mouth. Elsewhere in the interview, Spaihts goes on to describe the different incarnations of xenomorph badness that were considered during the film’s production, including one alien with a crab-like shell.

    I like that version better.

Viewing 24 posts - 361 through 384 (of 384 total)

The topic ‘Prometheus’ is closed to new replies.