Adam Duncan reviews
Aliens: Special Edition
Distributed by
20th Century Fox
Cert:
Cat.no: 01802DVD
Running time: 148 minutes
Year: 1986
Pressing: 2000
Region(s): 2, PAL
Chapters: 34 plus extras
Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Languages: English
Subtitles: English for the hearing impaired, Polish, Czech, Hungarian
Icelandic, Hebrew, Portuguese, Danish, Swedish, Finnish and Norwegian.
Widescreen: 1.85:1
16:9-Enhanced: Yes
Macrovision: Yes
Disc Format: DVD 9
Price: £19.99
Extras: Original Theatrical Trailer, Interview with James Cameron,
Behind-the-scenes footage, photo gallery
Director:
Producer:
Screenplay:
Music:
Cast:
Ripley: Sigourney Weaver
Corporal Hicks: Michael Biehn
Bishop: Lance Henriksen
Burke: Paul Reiser
Newt: Carrie Henn
Hudson: Bill Paxton
Gorman: William Hope
Vasquez: Jenette Goldstein
Aliens
is a excellent sequel to Ridley Scott 's 1979 sci-fi horror Alien.
Ripley (Sigourney Weaver ) is awoken from hypersleep after 57 years to
discover that the planet where she found the alien has now been colonised.
The problem is that contact with the colonists has been lost and after
hearing of Ripley's experiences, they ask her to accompany a team of
marines who are going to investigate. Naturally, she is reluctant at
first but she later decides to go with them.
They find a young girl called Newt (Carrie Henn ) who is the only survivor of an
attempted attack on the colonists. Then, along come the aliens who pick
off some of the marines. From then on, no-one is safe.
What makes this sequel work so well is that James Cameron has decided
not to mimic Ridley's film and do his own unique version of the Alien
saga. He even puts forward his own ideas on the life-cycle of these
creatures as this had not been presented before to the audience at the
time (Ridley Scott did film a scene which decipted the alien's survival
habits but it was not used). All the main cast do well in their roles
but particulary Sigourney Weaver as Ripley who even received an Oscar
nomination for Best Actress (The film received 7 Oscar Nominations. It
won 2: Best Visual Effects and Best Sound)
This version of the film is the Special Edition first released on video
in 1993. It has an extra 17 minutes of footage which was not included in
the theatrical version.
The film is presented in its original 1.85:1 aspect ratio and is in
widescreen. The picture is very good for a film this age but it is not
quite as good as the transfer for Alien. There is some grain and sprakle
throughout the film but none of it is distracting. Overall,
this is a fine transfer for a 15 year old film
The sound is Dolby Digital 5.1 and is excellent. Gun fire, explosions,
flame throwers and James Horner 's music score come across very well. The
scene where a power suited Ripley has a fight with the Alien Queen
sounds great on a home cinema system. You can really feel the vibrations
as Ripley strides into scene.
Extras:
Chapters/Trailer:
There are 34 chapters spread throughout the film which is very good but
maybe it could have used a couple more (DVDfever Ed : The PAL
laserdisc contained 51 chapters). A theatrical trailer is included.
Languages and Subtitles:
There is only one language on the disc and that is English Dolby Digital
5.1. There are subtitles in English, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish,
Finnish, Portuguese, Hebrew, Polish, Czech, Hungarian and Icelandic.
Interview with James Cameron:
This is a 12 minute item which was filmed at the time of the film's
release. It features the director talking about the film and he reveals
some interesting facts such as that only 6 alien costumes were made for
the film!
Behind-the-scenes footage:
There are 8 video clips which show construction of model sets,
chestbursters and the alien queen. There is also a text explanation for
all the clips. All but two of the clips are silent. The exceptions being
a member of the visual effects team demonstrating the mechanism for the
facehuggers and a testing of the alien queen which was directed by
Cameron. Altogether, the footage lasts nearly 8 minutes.
Photo gallery:
This is a very large gallery which shows stills from the film,
behind-the-scenes and also publicity material. A nice collection.
Menus:
The menus are excellent. They recreate the video cams used by the
marines which takes us down the corridors of LV-426. They include sound
bites from the film and even use the names of some of the marines on the
cams (Vasquez, Apone, Hicks and Hudson) as well as adding interference
to the picture.
This film is a classic of the sci-fi genre and is well represented on
this disc. However, so much more could have been on here. There could
have been a documentary or even a lengthy featurette from the time, an
isolated music score, the choice between the Theatrical and Special
Edition versions, deleted scenes not in the special edition (the scene
between Ripley and a cocooned Burke would have been great to see) and a
commentary from James Cameron but he doesn't appear to like doing
commentaries as none of his other films on DVD have a commentary from
him.
(The R1 version of Terminator 2 doesn't count as it was made up of
interview footage and featured other members of cast and crew.)
Overall, this is the best version you can buy at the moment.
The R1 version is exactly the same so we are not missing anything.
FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS
OVERALL
Review copyright © Adam Duncan, 2001.
E-mail Adam Duncan
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