Hi, Burl here with a review of a brand-new movie! It’s a
prequel to Alien, which is a movie
ol’ Burl is pretty fond of, and it addresses what to me was always one of the
central questions of the original film: just who was that big guy in the chair,
and what was his story? Ha ha! He was known as the Space Jockey, and it was
always assumed that he and his race were just another bunch of hapless
arrivistes on that desolate planet where the green eggs roamed! But there’s
more to his story, or so Mister Ridley Scott would have us believe!
It seems that a couple of scientists have discovered some
cave-painting indications that we ought to go to a certain planet and check it
out! They happen to land exactly where the action is on this planet – don’t ask
me how – and the next thing you know they’re checking out some caves as though
they were characters in an early-80s Alien
rip-off, like Horror Planet or Galaxy of Terror or something of that
nature! Boy, they sure do spend a lot of time in those caves!
All of this takes place in a world that’s just as grey and
bottle-green as you might imagine, so drained of colour that even the Rubik’s
Cubes are monochromatic! The scientists and spaceship crew are not very interesting
people on the whole, with none of the “we’re just doing a job” resignation seen
in the Alien or even Aliens crew members - even though several times in Prometheus the characters explicitly talk about how they're just on the ship doing a job for the paycheque! What they need is Harry Dean Stanton and Yaphet Kotto on board, grousing to beat the band!
I couldn’t even figure out if the people of this future time (the year 2093, that is) had ever yet met aliens, or if their encounters with them in this movie represented a big first! Remember in Aliens when Hudson asks “Ha ha, is this just another bug hunt?” Right there in one line you knew that they were already familiar with aliens, but that humans were just a bunch of imperialistic jerks who would sooner fire their plasma rifles at an E.T. than get to know it!
I couldn’t even figure out if the people of this future time (the year 2093, that is) had ever yet met aliens, or if their encounters with them in this movie represented a big first! Remember in Aliens when Hudson asks “Ha ha, is this just another bug hunt?” Right there in one line you knew that they were already familiar with aliens, but that humans were just a bunch of imperialistic jerks who would sooner fire their plasma rifles at an E.T. than get to know it!
But here we haven’t really got a clue how incredible this is
all supposed to be! It's treated as pretty routine for the most part! There’s an old man along for the ride, or maybe a young man
with putty all over his face, it was hard to tell; but he at least seemed pretty
impressed with the alien contact! And there are a few different
aliens who show up, some humanoid and others more tentacle-based! I won’t give
too much away, but we do indeed see some thrashing tentacles in this picture! Ha ha, a part I didn’t
quite understand was why the one fellow became a psycho zombie! That just
happened so there could be an extra action scene I think, and also so we could get
rid of some of these characters whose names we never even heard! In Aliens, even Wierzbowski was named for us before his untimely demise!
I will say this: I liked the robot in Prometheus! The robot was a good
actor, and his love of Lawrence of Arabia
was a nice touch! The captain was a pretty good guy too! Ha ha, I would have
done just like him and straight up asked that Charlize Theron if she was a
robot too or what! I won’t give away the answer here though, ha ha!
The movie reminded me of Forbidden World in many ways if you want the truth, and you can take that however you
like! But I will say that, in spite of the unbelievably sketchy
characterizations, no matter that the thing falls apart logically at the
slightest rational thought (the Space Jockey doesn’t even end up in the spot
where he’s later found by the Alien
crew, ha ha!), and forget about the fact that the musical score keeps
threatening to become the Star Trek
fanfare, this picture has some really enjoyable aspects!
It looks great, it sounds great and it has a gloomy
atmosphere I thought was nicely antithetical to blockbuster summer success! I
like that it tries to philosophize a bit, even if nonsensically! It’s a
thinking man’s movie as made by morons, but at least it tries to be something
other than An Efficient Thrill Machine! It’s a funny movie: the more I think
about it, the more I liked it! It’s no Alien,
but it doesn’t embarrass its host either, and when it comes bursting out from
the 1979 picture’s gut this summer, everyone involved can stand tall and proud!
I give Prometheus two and a half alien bongos!
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