Yes! The jungle setting in
Predator is gorgeous, isn't it? It's fun to be vicariously transported there for the hundred minutes or so of the film's running time. With the steroid beefcake thing, I think they wanted that eighties action movie look so they could turn it on its head. You get the ridiculous over-the-top action scene at the start when they attack the rebel camp - and it's all Blaine carrying a gun that would have to be mounted on a helicopter in real life and Arnie spouting bad one-liners (and Blaine's one-liner too) - then the movie turns this action cliche on its head and before you know it, half these guys have been picked off and the remaining ones are in locked in desperate struggle to survive.
I also like the way Silvestri reworked his
Back to the Future score for this film. It may not be overly complex but it's lively and I think it actually makes the movie feel like it's moving at a faster pace. Take that jungle trek after the rebel camp. That could just be a bunch of dudes walking but Silvestri makes it feel really exciting. It's good stuff.
His score for the second movie however was a definite step down though. He brought in new weird themes that were kind of hard to listen to (admittedly used with those parts of the movie that were kind of hard to watch). One new theme for the predators was kind of cool, but for the most part, the only good parts of the score were the ones that he rehashed from the first movie. Now, we can segue into that second movie itself...
I thought Danny Glover was awesome too. Sure, he was overacting, but so was everyone. I also felt as though he and Gary Busey were actually in an overacting contest. Then of course, there's Bill Paxton who decides that if he's going to be hammy, then he's going to be
really hammy. The interaction between a lot of these guys was good fun. I think the problems with the movie mostly come down to the opening half. The shootout at the beginning is poorly staged and it looks like people making a movie as opposed to being in one. There's also a lot more gore this time around and a lot of it's rather gross. The first movie really wasn't that gory. There's just a bit here and there. It shocks effectively and then the camera moves on. In
Predator 2, the camera lingers too long on a lot of it. We also spend far too much time with the various gangs who are have no appeal. No one wants to spend time with these guys. We want to see the cat-and-mouse game with the predator. It's therefore no surprise that once they shift gears and the gang warfare plot gets dropped, the movie picks up considerably. The last fifty minutes or so, one long finale, is a lot of fun. Also, I can buy Lieutenant Harrigan (Glover) beating the predator because he's just so damn aggressive and he's got his attitude of throwing all caution to the wind. He tries to beat up his chief at the start, he threatens to beat
Agent Busey's Agent Keys' head right after the dude's told him that he'll make him disappear if he doesn't watch it, he empties several rounds of ammo into the predator,
chases him on a roof,
cuts his freakin' arm off and then
chases him again! If I were the predator, I'd be running scared from this guy too. What he lacks in physical size, he more than makes up for with attitude. I thought he was fantastic.
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For Alien I prefer the theatrical version but where Aliens is concerned I actually prefer the longer directors cut.
Odd. Many people seem to like that longer cut of
Aliens. Ah well. Each to their own. Thankfully, no one feels that way about the original movie... that Director's Cut is just awful. It's basically the theatrical edition with a bit of vandalism thrown in.
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Well, I would still like to think that it was in the process of dying from one thing or another. So either massive burns or eventually succumbing to being in outer space and losing all body temperature or exploding. Actually, in a lot of scenes its got water/slime dripping off of it all over the place. I wonder if it requires a lot of water so survive. Sorry, I just loathe unkillable and nigh unstopable enemies. They are stupid. At this point they're also so cliche and overused ... so for my own sake of enjoyment - the xeno died from something.
Maybe it eventually got pulled in by the gravity of a star. Poor thing though. You've got to feel a bit sorry for it. It was only an infant. Also, unlike a predator, it wasn't evil or anything. It was just doing what it does, in the same way that a lion or a great white shark just does what it does. Unfortunately, with what it does, it conflicts with what the people it encounters want to do - i.e. survive.
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For Alien, I might've like to see that extra scene. To keep it in or not hmm. As far as movie length goes, I dont have any problem with a movie being long. But like you I do have problems with the stuff that should've just been left out.
It's interesting but although there's some stuff there that isn't mentioned in the movie that could add to the story, it's a meeting - and if it were added to the movie in the appropriate place, it would be a meeting right before another meeting. The scene ends with Parker and Brett going off to make those cattle prods. I think leaving it out was the right move. Still though, when it came to the Director's Cut, it would have been a better scene to include than that stupid cocoon scene. One problem with the meeting scene however, is that I don't think it was filmed well. It might be a test or something because everyone is too far away in the frame. It's a very odd looking shot. Maybe you can find it on the internet if you search for deleted scenes from
Alien. It's on the new DVD if you've got that - the one called
Alien: The Director's Cut (Don't worry. As I've said in this thread, it gives you the choice of both versions in the best quality possible).
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Ripley, you just threatened to take away Burke's chance at making a fortune and getting to live the easy life. Then you threatened to get him in some deep do-do with the company and whatever government exists. Of course he's going to try to kill you. It's a no brainer. You could just lie for the time being and screw up his plans after you're safe you know. So, the first thing Burke tried made sense for him. The second one though, was retarded, and of course he dies for it. The group knew they were more or less surrounded. How on LV-247 does he expect to get out of there, make it to the dropship while unarmed, and pilot the freaking thing (if something might've happened to Bishop)
Yeah. I'm with you on this too. I take Mr. Pye's point that the guy might have panicked but still, that was incredibly dumb. Oh, Mr. Pye, with regards to Ripley telling Burke that she was going to get him into all sorts of trouble when he got back, I think that might have been all right
if she had then gone and immediately told the marines everything that had just happened - about Burke sending the colonists to the derelict, him wanting to take the face huggers back and the fact that he wanted to smuggle them through quarantine. However, telling him what she'll do when she gets back and then just forgetting about it for the time-being seems somewhat strange.
The great thing about Ash's villainy is that it wasn't forced. It was subtle. It was very quiet and behind the scenes... and the payoff is incredible. I nearly jumped out of my skin when the camera pans back from Ripley in that little room and you see him standing there behind her. Incredibly chilling.
Burke however... they desperately wanted to have a traitor in the proceedings to spice them up a bit and emulate some of the greatness of
Alien but unfortunately, it just didn't work.
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Thanks, I don't know why they didn't think of the water bucket (Plus it would be kind of funny/awesome at the same time). I mean, I didn't even have to go to school to find out that water dilutes stuff.
I still love this. It brings a smile to my face just thinking of the team walking around the ship - one member with the motion tracker, one carrying a flame thrower and a third member lugging around a bucket of water. Love it.