Alien (documentary): Difference between revisions

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== Nonfiction cross-reference ==
== Nonfiction cross-reference ==


Victim_of_Nazi_inhumanity_still_rests_in_the_position_in_which_he_died,_attempting_to_rise_and_escape.jpg|link=Man's Inhumanity to Man (nonfiction)|This victim of Nazi inhumanity still rests in the position in which he died, attempting to rise and escape his horrible death.  See [[Man's Inhumanity to Man (nonfiction)|Man's Inhumanity to Man]].
Victim_of_Nazi_inhumanity_still_rests_in_the_position_in_which_he_died,_attempting_to_rise_and_escape.jpg|link=Man's Inhumanity to Man (nonfiction)|This victim of Nazi inhumanity still rests in the position in which he died, attempting to rise and escape his horrible death.  See [[Man's inhumanity to man (nonfiction)|Man's Inhumanity to Man]].





Revision as of 07:20, 12 June 2016

Documentary film maker Ridley Scott doing research for Alien.

Alien is a 1979 documentary film by Ridley Scott.

In the News

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.

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

Victim_of_Nazi_inhumanity_still_rests_in_the_position_in_which_he_died,_attempting_to_rise_and_escape.jpg|link=Man's Inhumanity to Man (nonfiction)|This victim of Nazi inhumanity still rests in the position in which he died, attempting to rise and escape his horrible death. See Man's Inhumanity to Man.