- Studio: Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
- Release Date: Oct 29, 2003
- Critic Score
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Feels like a streamlined improvement on the original.
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100Watching it again reminded me how remarkably the sound engineers did their jobs. Listen to the subtly amplified heartbeat - Ripley's? the ship's? - that pulses under the soundtrack through the last 15 minutes.
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The best thriller of 2003 was made in 1979.
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100This is a five star film because it is one of the most perfect science fiction thrillers of all time.
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100With the visuals and soundtrack given a wax and polish job for the big screen, Scotts masterful use of shadows, framing and sound has never been more terrifying. No matter how many times youve seen this, youll still be hiding behind your fingers at every conceivable juncture.
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100This edition -- clean and tight as Scott would have it -- presents a strong case for Alien as both the greatest horror film and the greatest science-fiction film ever made.
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100Pay attention to the enhanced detail audible in a new six-track sound mix, which may be the most important cleaning job of all; silence and Jerry Goldsmith's score have never twined so hauntingly.
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100I recognize how few horror movies I've seen before or since that ever manage to capture such a tangible feeling of menace.
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100This is the breakout role for Sigourney (née Susan) Weaver, whose iconic presence still propels this ride beyond the scores of substandard imitations that followed. Why see it on the big screen? Because it's bloody brilliant.
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100The scariest movie in history is actually a bit shy. The subtle, romantic score by Jerry Goldsmith is what keeps the tension at a simmer.
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91A landmark film, the unnecessary tinkering has not perceptibly harmed its overall effectiveness and it's a special Halloween treat to see it digitally spruced up and on the big screen for the first time in 25 years.
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90Despite years of imitators, sequels (some great, some not so), and edited-for-television broadcasts, Alien has lost none of its power, and the big screen only intensifies its impact.
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90Twenty-four years later -- digitally spruced up, with some scenes shaved and others padded with previously cut material -- Scott's film still shreds nerves.
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88An old nightmare, made shiny new.
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88Mostly it's worth seeing Alien, which established Scott as an A-list director, in a theater because his brilliant and often expansive visuals have always worked better on a big screen than on video.
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88What's most unusual about the original 24 years later, though, is its elegant minimalism.
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88The most important features of this "new" version are the digital cleaning of the print and the re-mastering of the sound. There are a few added scenes, but they are mostly insignificant and have been previously seen (at least by fans of the movie) on the laserdisc or DVD releases.
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88Alien, even with some scene tinkering that has left this "director's cut" one minute shorter than its original release, is still one of the creepiest, scariest, most shocking films ever.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 57 out of 59
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Mixed: 1 out of 59
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Negative: 1 out of 59
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howieh.10Excellent, stylish, suspenseful flick.
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10