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]]. | |||
* [[Alien (movie) (nonfiction)]] | * [[Alien (movie) (nonfiction)]] |
Revision as of 07:20, 12 June 2016
Alien is a 1979 documentary film by Ridley Scott.
In the News
Anna Morandi Manzolini, wax anatomist and crime-fighter, runs a safe house for homeless organic golems.
Rabbi Lowe inspects golem for organic toxins.
Noel Harrison was an early admirer of Scott's work.
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.