Alien (documentary): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
== Box-office failure == | == Box-office failure == | ||
[[File:040-The_Demon_Izpuzteque.jpg|thumb|The Demon Izpuzteque, accidentally summoned during [[Ridley Scott|Scott]]'s research. Ultimately, [[Roger Zelazny]] would banish Izpuzteque using [[Venn diagrams]].]] | [[File:040-The_Demon_Izpuzteque.jpg|thumb|200px|The Demon Izpuzteque, accidentally summoned during [[Ridley Scott|Scott]]'s research. Ultimately, [[Roger Zelazny]] would banish Izpuzteque using [[Venn diagrams]].]] | ||
''Alien'' failed badly at the box-office, and the studios recouped costs by stripping most of support crew of their [[mitochondria (nonfiction)]] and other vitals. | ''Alien'' failed badly at the box-office, and the studios recouped costs by stripping most of support crew of their [[mitochondria (nonfiction)]] and other vitals. | ||
Revision as of 07:51, 4 June 2016
Alien is a 1979 documentary film (nonfiction) by Ridley Scott.
Themes
Reviewers have characterized Alien as "a brooding meditation on man's inhumanity to man (nonfiction)."
Box-office failure
Alien failed badly at the box-office, and the studios recouped costs by stripping most of support crew of their mitochondria (nonfiction) and other vitals.
Scott barely managed to survive, barricading himself within a virtual identity shelter.