Alien: Resurrection
Alien: Resurrection (1997)

Alien: Resurrection

1/5
(22 votes)
6.2IMDb63Metascore

Details

Cast

Goofs

The blood disappears from the newborn's hand between shots when it caresses Ripley's face.

Ripley retains an inherited genetic memory, even though she's a newborn in some sense.

When the alien reaches up through the grating and they show Elgyn getting pulled down, there is a big hole burned into the grate in front of him that was not there just a second before.

The figure 8 on Ripley's arm is missing in some scenes.

In the nest, when the scientist says"First everything was normal.

", the movements of his lips clearly doesn't match the spoken words.

The look of the legs does not correspond between the practical and computer-generated Aliens; the CG ones have an extra joint at the ankle, while the practical Alien shot by Vriess is shown with human looking ankles (i.

without an extra joint) as it is seen crouched on the grate from below.

Also, it lacks the long toes of the CG Aliens, instead having more human-like feet.

As Vriess hangs from the ladder with Christie on his back you can see the harness tying him to the ladder.

When Christie draws his guns behind his back, the following shot shows his arms by his sides hanging casually with no guns.

When the guards discover metal on Johner, Call is looking up/down between shots.

When Ripley undergoes surgery, Gediman cuts her chest below her breasts.

Later, Wren checks the scar which appears in the upper section of the chest, between her breasts.

When Call gets into Ripley's cell, she takes a stiletto from her left boot with her left hand.

In the next shot, as she walks towards Ripley, she's holding it with her right hand.

The barbell Christie swings at Ripley is bent, revealing it to be rubber (it's straight in the previous shot, where he punches it in her face).

In the first three films, it takes an extremely long time (long enough to require freezing of the passengers) to get between populated places in space.

In this film, the ship is able to travel from "unregulated space" to Earth itself in as little as three hours.

However, we have no idea what "unregulated space" is (it could be very near Earth for all we know) and there have been two hundred years of technological development since the first three films anyway.

After the operation, Ripley is held in a "staging area" in what looks like a thin sleeping bag.

In the first scene her legs and her head clearly stick out.

In the next scene, she is inside the bag and has to slice it open with her fingernails.

In the fight in the gym, Ripley hits Christie with the basketball, knocking him to the floor.

As he falls, he is no longer holding the barbell, but there is no sound of it hitting the floor.

After Ripley falls into the Queen's nest, a pan out shot shows the Auriga heading towards Earth, however, as seen by the visible landmasses, the image is transposed (East Africa, Red Sea, and Arabian Peninsula have been flipped across a vertical axis).

The size of the blood splatter Ripley tosses to the floor of the gym changes between shots.

When Call is about to be shot, the doctor says "You really are way too trusting" but the movements of his mouth suggest he is saying something completely different.

When Ripley awakens in the Alien nest, the shot opens with one of the scientists speaking about evolution.

Despite the speech delivered in his voice, the actor seems to just be making random movements with his mouth, as if he is literally saying "Blah blah blah".

Shock waves travel very far in water.

In the underwater scene, every human would have been killed instantly from the grenade launcher shot at the alien.

Near the end just before when the newborn is sucked out into space, the hole in the window is just too small to create a suction of that strength as seen in the film, and one atmosphere of air pressure would be too little to squeeze the alien out of the ship regardless.

With the release of this film, the Alien Trilogy VHS set became the Alien Saga.

However on DVD, it was renamed to the Alien "Quadrilogy".

Quadrilogy is not a real word.

There is already a word for a series of four"Tetralogy".

In the scene, where Ripley's blood breaches the window in the Betty's cargo hold and the Newborn is sucked out, judging by size of the ship, a cargo hold of that size should've been decompressed in mere seconds.

The time it takes for the ship to fully enter Earth's atmosphere would've been more than enough to decompress the entire ship, let alone the cargo hold.

When Ripley drives Call's knife through her wrist it does not get damaged by the acid in her blood even though it's soaked in it.

In other scenes just a few drops of Ripley's blood burn through thick metal, which would suggest that the knife's blade should also get burnt.

However, Call's knife may be made by some alloy, not just simple steel, but added with cadmium/vanadium/iridium that make it unassailable by acids.

In the shot just before the clone lab scene, nine people walk past the camera.

At that point in the movie there are only eight people.

Near the end of the film after the human/alien hybrid had just been sucked out of the hull breach, the ship is shown to be entering Earth's atmosphere.

Even though the entire ship is awash with flames reaching 3000 degrees, the only effect in the room with the breach is sparks and flame coming from the hole.

In reality, the interior of the hull would have begun to melt, and the increase in drag from the breach would have thrown the ship wildly off course, or even into a spin.

Doctor Gediman and Ripley both refer to the planet on which the original Ripley died as "Fury Sixteen".

However, the planet they are referring to, from _Alien³ (1992)_ (qv), was actually "Fury 161".

In the first view of Earth from space, the image is reversed.

The horn of Africa, with the Red Sea above it, is pointing west instead of east.

After Ripley falls into the Alien's Den and taken to the Queen, that is when she finds out her gift to the alien creature is a human reproductive system.

The Queen gives birth to the new hybrid.

However, if that alien was given a human reproductive system, how was the queen impregnated? The Aliens reproduce in an asexual way.

The Queen fertilized herself and gave birth to the hybrid.

If Ripley's gift to the Alien Queen is a human reproductive system, why is she laying eggs? As a human female develops one ovum an a cycle, the Queen Alien does herself; the Eggs were the first cycle, the Newborn hybrid was the second.

In some scenes just a few drops of Ripley's blood burns through thick metal.

When Ripley undergoes surgery, the alien is removed with forceps and in a deleted scene Gediman holds open her chest with spreaders, her blood should also burn the surgical tools.

Awards

Blockbuster Entertainment Awards 1998


Blockbuster Entertainment Award
Favorite Actress - Sci-Fi
Favorite Supporting Actress - Sci-Fi

DVD Exclusive Awards 2003


DVDX Award
Best Behind-the-Scenes Program (New for DVD)
Best Menu Design
Best New Movie Scenes (Finished-Edited Into Movie or Stand-Alone)

Golden Schmoes Awards 2003


Golden Schmoes
Best DVD/Blu-Ray of the Year

Las Vegas Film Critics Society Awards 2010


Sierra Award
Best DVD

Online Film & Television Association 1998


OFTA Film Award
Best Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Horror Actress

Satellite Awards 2004


Golden Satellite Award
Best DVD Extras
Best Overall DVD

The Stinkers Bad Movie Awards 1997


Stinker Award
Worst Actress
Worst Supporting Actress

Box Office

DateAreaGross
15 February 1998 USA USD 47,748,610
8 February 1998 USA USD 47,654,416
1 February 1998 USA USD 47,474,377
25 January 1998 USA USD 47,263,778
19 January 1998 USA USD 47,055,595
11 January 1998 USA USD 46,619,841
4 January 1998 USA USD 46,092,778
1 January 1998 USA USD 47,795,658
28 December 1997 USA USD 45,191,836
21 December 1997 USA USD 43,996,448
14 December 1997 USA USD 41,506,438
7 December 1997 USA USD 36,247,479
30 November 1997 USA USD 25,789,455
11 January 1998 UK GBP 7,208,262
4 January 1998 UK GBP 7,046,985
28 November 1997 UK USD 12,119,076
17 May 1998 Worldwide USD 105,300,000
10 May 1998 Worldwide USD 103,300,000
3 May 1998 Worldwide USD 98,900,000
26 April 1998 Worldwide USD 94,400,000
12 April 1998 Worldwide USD 88,100,000
15 March 1998 Worldwide USD 85,700,000
1 March 1998 Worldwide USD 80,900,000
22 February 1998 Worldwide USD 78,200,000
1 February 1998 Worldwide USD 71,000,000
25 January 1998 Worldwide USD 67,000,000
11 January 1998 Worldwide USD 61,800,000
4 January 1998 Worldwide USD 58,300,000
14 December 1997 Worldwide USD 46,700,000
30 November 1997 Worldwide USD 26,000,000
23 November 1997 Worldwide USD 10,130,000
16 November 1997 Worldwide USD 5,955,000
Worldwide USD 161,376,068
9 September 2012 worldwide USD 161,382,889
8 October 1998 Non-USA USD 113,580,410
7 October 1998 Egypt USD 28,214
12 November 1997 France USD 16,383,923
5 January 1998 Germany DEM 20,884,816
29 December 1997 Germany DEM 19,471,916
15 December 1997 Germany DEM 16,068,793
8 December 1997 Germany DEM 12,458,064
27 November 1997 Germany USD 12,266,389
25 April 1998 Japan USD 16,192,178
31 August 2002 Spain EUR 5,498,953
28 November 1997 Spain USD 6,578,802
DateAreaGrossScreens
2 August 2012 USA USD 16,474,092 2415
28 November 1997 USA USD 25,789,455 2415
2 January 1998 UK GBP 172,220 141
DateAreaGrossScreens
11 January 1998 UK GBP 69,422 90
4 January 1998 UK GBP 172,220 141

Keywords

Reviews

Alien: Resurrection starts with beautifully disgusting pictures and John Frizzell's mesmerising music during the opening credits. These alone made me realise instantly that it was going be a unique experience.

If ever a franchise needed a new direction, it was the Alien series. With Ellen Ripley gone, there was an opportunity to do something totally new and original.

After watching again Alien, Aliens, Alien3 and Alien Resurrection in a row my personal preference has changed. Now, I prefer Alien 3 over Resurrection.

Now just what in space is this carry-on? It's a good bit of fun, if you can excuse the abysmal script and acting from the majority of the cast, particularly Razzie dodger Winona Ryder.

Well, I did not want to watch this title even being an Alien/Predator franchise lover and also Jean-Pierre Jeunet devoted fan since third Alien movie by David Fincher was awful and this one has low ratings.So I pulled myself together, pressed 'Play' button and what do you think happened?

"ALIEN: RESURRECTION" (1997, Jeunet) continues where "ALIEN3" (1992, Fincher) left off...But is completely different in just about every way imaginable.

I love the Alien series.I love Jeunet films.

Alien was incredible. Aliens was even better.

After a very disappointing Alien III, the forth offering to the Alien saga, by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, promised to bring redemption. Could an alien movie supersede Cameron's Aliens?

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