EPISODE · May 31, 2012 · 1H 9M
Alien 3
from The Next Reel Film Podcast · host TruStory FM
David Fincher's "Alien 3" (1992) drops Ripley—Sigourney Weaver—onto a maximum-security foundry planet populated by double-Y chromosome prisoners who found religion at the edge of space. She's the sole survivor of the EEV crash that opens the film, and something came down with her. The production behind the film is nearly as dramatic as the story: at least four major script versions over three-plus years, a studio-set release date with no finished screenplay, and Fincher hired to execute someone else's vision—then refusing to do so. The resulting conflict drove the budget from its already-high starting point to approximately $63 million, more than the combined cost of "Alien" and "Aliens."Pete and Andy dig into the full script history—William Gibson's space station draft, Eric Red's Earth-set version, David Twohy's prison planet take, and Vincent Ward's beloved wooden monastery concept, before Hill and Giler rewrote it themselves page by page while cameras rolled. They trace Fincher's battles with Fox and with his own producers, and make the case that what he managed to get on screen despite all of it—the lighting, the smoke, the controlled atmospheric dread—is unmistakably his. Pete's rewatch was a near-total reversal: he'd dismissed the film in 1992 as "too MTV," avoided it for years, conflated large portions of it with "Alien Resurrection," and rewatched the Assembly Cut to find a film he genuinely loves.The conversation covers the 2003 Assembly Cut versus the theatrical version—including the Golic subplot Andy considers the single most significant restoration—the MoMotion rod puppet technique behind the alien creature and why it hasn't aged well, and Elliot Goldenthal's deliberately difficult atmospheric score. Plus: Andy's disclosure from the special features that the skull seen in the opening credits face scan belongs not to Sigourney Weaver, whose scan wasn't available, but to Meryl Streep—apparently without her knowledge.🔓 The movie ends. The conversation goes further. Become a member of The Next Reel family.Full episode resources here.The Next Reel Family of Film Shows:Cinema Scope: Bridging Genres, Subgenres, and Movements | The Film Board | Movies We Like | The Next Reel | Sitting in the DarkConnect With Us:Web | Letterboxd | Flickchart | Instagram | Bluesky | YouTube | DiscordYour Hosts: Andy | PeteMerch Store | Audible
What this episode covers
David Fincher's "Alien 3" (1992) drops Ripley—Sigourney Weaver—onto a maximum-security foundry planet populated by double-Y chromosome prisoners who found religion at the edge of space. She's the sole survivor of the EEV crash that opens the film, and something came down with her. The production behind the film is nearly as dramatic as the story: at least four major script versions over three-plus years, a studio-set release date with no finished screenplay, and Fincher hired to execute someone else's vision—then refusing to do so. The resulting conflict drove the budget from its already-high starting point to approximately $63 million, more than the combined cost of "Alien" and "Aliens."Pete and Andy dig into the full script history—William Gibson's space station draft, Eric Red's Earth-set version, David Twohy's prison planet take, and Vincent Ward's beloved wooden monastery concept, before Hill and Giler rewrote it themselves page by page while cameras rolled. They trace Fincher's battles with Fox and with his own producers, and make the case that what he managed to get on screen despite all of it—the lighting, the smoke, the controlled atmospheric dread—is unmistakably his. Pete's rewatch was a near-total reversal: he'd dismissed the film in 1992 as "too MTV," avoided it for years, conflated large portions of it with "Alien Resurrection," and rewatched the Assembly Cut to find a film he genuinely loves.The conversation covers the 2003 Assembly Cut versus the theatrical version—including the Golic subplot Andy considers the single most significant restoration—the MoMotion rod puppet technique behind the alien creature and why it hasn't aged well, and Elliot Goldenthal's deliberately difficult atmospheric score. Plus: Andy's disclosure from the special features that the skull seen in the opening credits face scan belongs not to Sigourney Weaver, whose scan wasn't available, but to Meryl Streep—apparently without her knowledge.🔓 The movie ends. The conversation goes further. Become a member of The Next Reel family.Full episode resources here.The Next Reel Family of Film Shows:Cinema Scope: Bridging Genres, Subgenres, and Movements | The Film Board | Movies We Like | The Next Reel | Sitting in the DarkConnect With Us:Web | Letterboxd | Flickchart | Instagram | Bluesky | YouTube | DiscordYour Hosts: <a href="https://trustory.fm/host/andy-nelson/"...
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Alien 3
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