DVD
Upcoming Release Calendar
Film Awards & Top 10s By Year
All-Time High Scores
All-Time Low Scores
Best / Worst of the Decade
Recent DVD/Video Releases
60
9
xx
Across the Hall
56
Adam
37
Amelia
73
Amreeka
35
Babysitters, The
70
Big Fan
57
Boys Are Back, The
81
Bright Star![]()
71
Bronson
60
Brothers at War
55
Brothers Bloom, The
45
Burning Plain, The
xx
Carriers
64
Che
57
Chelsea on the Rocks
66
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs
23
Couples Retreat
54
Dare
68
Departures
19
Downloading Nancy
55
Endgame
39
Fame
30
Final Destination, The
27
Gamer
50
Give Me Your Hand
46
Halloween II
73
House of the Devil, The
94
Hurt Locker, The![]()
55
I Can Do Bad All By Myself
17
I Hate Valentine's Day
26
I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell
83
In the Loop![]()
58
Invention of Lying, The
47
Jennifer's Body
41
Little Ashes
80
Lorna's Silence
33
Love Happens
67
Michael Jackson's This Is It
xx
Ministers, The
67
Moon
59
More Than a Game
49
New York, I Love You
66
No Impact Man
47
Ong Bak 2: The Beginning
28
Pandorum
68
Paranormal Activity
85
Passing Strange![]()
63
Perfect Getaway, A
44
Peter and Vandy
54
Pontypool
35
Post Grad
30
Saw VI
79
Serious Man, A
36
Serious Moonlight
76
Soul Power
40
Spiral
39
St. Trinian's
33
Stepfather, The
45
Surrogates
47
Time Traveler's Wife
43
Tru Loved
61
Trucker
47
Weather Girl
67
Whip It
28
Whiteout
73
Zombieland
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
Alien: Resurrection

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 21 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 18 votes
Read user comments
Rate this movie >
Movie Info
Genre(s): Action | Horror | Sci-fi | Suspense/Thriller
Written by:
Joss Whedon
Dan O'Bannon (characters)
Ronald Shusett (characters)
Directed by: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Release Date:
Theatrical: November 26, 1997
DVD: June 1, 1999
Running Time: 109 minutes, Color
Origin: USA
Summary
RATING: R for strong sci-fi violence and gore, some grotesque images, and for language
Starring Sigourney Weaver, Winona Ryder, Dominique Pinon, Ron Perlman, Gary Dourdan, Brad Dourif, Kim Flowers, and Dan Hedaya
Ellen Ripley (Weaver) died fighting the perfect predator. Two hundred years and eight horrific experiments later, she's back. A group of scientists has cloned her-along with the alien queen inside her-hoping to breed the ultimate weapon. But the resurrected Ripley must team up with a band of smugglers, including a mechanic named Call (Ryder), who holds more than a few surprises of her own. (20th Century Fox)
Also On Metacritic
FILM: A Very Long Engagement Amélie Delicatessen The City of Lost Children
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database Official Studio Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
By rocketing ahead 200 years from the previous film and jiggering the story cleverly (with a script by Toy Story coscreenwriter Joss Whedon as late-'90s wiseacreish as Alien3 was early-'90s portentous) to create a Ripley reconstructed through a mix of human and alien DNA, Alien Resurrection power-kicks the whole definition of the Horrifying Other into a fresh, deep, exhilaratingly thoughtful, millennium-sensitive direction. [5 Dec 1997, p. 47]
Salon.com Laura Miller
Weaver obviously relishes playing this feral, sarcastic new Ripley, and her pleasure is infectious.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Desson Thomson
Recycles the great surprises that made the first movie so powerful. And most significantly, it makes a big hoot of the whole business.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Stephen Hunter
So drippy and slippery you'll feel that you're hiding in Kevin Costner's nasal passages during the filming of "Waterworld."
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
Jeunet manages a terrific pass in an extended underwater sequence, but, beyond that, he runs out of ideas as we run out of patience.
Read Full Review >Newsweek David Ansen
Under the reins of Jean-Pierre Jeunet ("Delicatessen"), the Alien franchise has lost none of its taste for acid-spewing, flesh-impaling, entrail-dripping gore.
Read Full Review >The New York Times Elvis Mitchell
Tauntingly flirtatious scenes between Ms. Ryder and Ms. Weaver give this film a sexual boldness that the others' action-adventure spirit lacked.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club) Keith Phipps
Perfectly in keeping with a series that began by simply putting a monster on a spaceship, then gave itself the creative freedom to explore what that monster and that spaceship really meant. [Quadrilogy]
Read Full Review >Dallas Observer Peter Rainer
Weaver is able to take a schlock conception and turn it into a tour de force. Sky-high and straight-backed, she's imperiously graceful in this film; at times she resembles Martha Graham in the swooping, lyrical severity of her movements.
Read Full Review >Film.com John Hartl
So campy that it almost plays like a sendup of the series. It is to Alien what "The Bride of Frankenstein" was to other 1930s Frankenstein movies, and it even shares some of the same themes.
Time Richard Schickel
On the whole, the eek-for-yuks trade-off is more than fair--hip without being campy or condescending to one of the better movie franchises. [1 Dec 1997, p. 84]
Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
Weaver essays the new hotmama Ripley with wry, good humor -- you can tell she's having a ball playing this unstoppable die-cast she-wolf.
Read Full Review >ReelViews James Berardinelli
Has a bold, inventive style that occasionally compensates for story weaknesses. And, admittedly, there's a certain visceral appeal to the action sequences.
Read Full Review >Slate David Edelstein
Even with her stinko lines, Weaver has never been as flabbergastingly gorgeous and charismatic. She's tall and lean and meteor-hard, and you can almost believe there's really acid in her blood, and that no alien in its right mind would mess with her.
Read Full Review >Variety Derek Elley
As a series of action set pieces, the movie is frequently gripping and always highly watchable. However, when the movie strays into weirder territory --- where, one feels, Jeunet's heart really lies --- there's a growing feeling of inadequacy.
Read Full Review >TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
The plot is more of the same old running and screaming, but Weaver is worth the price of admission all by herself, which is just as well in light of the less-than-fleshed out characters by whom she's surrounded.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Tom Meek
Sigourney gets some good "Rambo" lines, but about halfway through the film her alien super powers go dormant.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Peter Stack
The cluttered, surreal, claustrophobic sets and gooey alien creatures look intriguing, sometimes shocking. But the story tries so hard to be imaginative that it congeals and sinks like lead.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt
Heavy on violence and special effects, light on everything else.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader Lisa Alspector
Whedon and director Jean-Pierre Jeunet ("Delicatessen") bend over so far backward to make Weaver's and Ryder's roles beefy that they end up mocking the characters' bravura.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
It's a nine days' wonder, a geek show designed to win a weekend or two at the box office and then fade from memory.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 6.2 (out of 10) based on 18 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Alex R. gave it a3:
Alien & Aliens were outright classics. Alien 3 was pretty average. This is just plain bad... Which is a shame, because the first half hour is ace, as is the films highlight scene of the aliens underwater / ladder battle.
Ray W. gave it a1:
Stupid and gross. Not worth the time.
Jimmi H. gave it a7:
Alien 3 was so bad that they had to resurrect Ripley and the alien to give the series a worthy ending, and this definetely accomplishes that - although it lacks the phenomenal final battle that the first 2 had.
Aaron A. gave it a3:
How the hell did this score higher than AvP? if any film drags up old stories and money mad wrenched up scenes its this one. Aliens 1,2 and 3 all had something new and great about them but this film brings you a slow, none scary, overly gory piece of crap with the most anoying monster ever created - the newborn.
Bill S. gave it a 2:
The two points I give this film are for a moderate attempt by the actors involved to lend some credibility to a lukewarm storyline and wholly worthless directing... But why Dan Hedaya is even in this film is a mystery. His performance lends an unwelcome and 'alien' comic tone to something that ought to have been tense, suspenseful and dark. The plot is contrived, so painfully that you empathize with the twisted Ripley clones, which almost seem to characterize the overpresence of Sigourney Weaver in this film - and indeed, the series itself. Like an unwelcome guest, Weaver returns from a dramatic death (one of the few elements that lent the tepid Alien3 some emotional weight) and becomes the covergirl for convenient plot devices to bring back dead characters. Brad Dourif upstages the aliens themselves with his overblown mad scientist schtick, although Ron Perlman always brings heavy credibility to his toughguy bruiser roles. The real tragedy here is the inconsistency of the parts. The pacing is all over the place, casting spotty at best, variable tone, poor script and a climax that takes whatever wind out of the film's sails (and sales) with a laughable and just plain stupid alien mutation creature that simply stumbles about. Absolutely the weakest of the four ALIEN films - that is, until we're treated to the incredibly-rushed, even-more-contrived ALIEN VS. PREDATOR in a few days...
John F. gave it a 9:
It's a great movie.
