EPISODE · May 17, 2012 · 1H 13M
Alien
from The Next Reel Film Podcast · host TruStory FM
Ridley Scott's "Alien" arrived in 1979 as the anti-Star Wars: grimy, claustrophobic, and rooted in biological dread rather than adventure. The film follows the seven-member crew of the Nostromo—led by warrant officer Ripley, played by Sigourney Weaver in her breakout role, alongside Tom Skerritt as the ship's captain Dallas and John Hurt as the crew member who makes the film's most unforgettable exit—as they investigate a distress signal that leads them to something no one aboard is equipped to survive. What Scott and his team built around that premise, from H.R. Giger's biomechanical creature design to Jerry Goldsmith's unsettling score, redefined both science fiction and horror.Pete and Andy dig into the full production history: how screenwriter Dan O'Bannon discovered H.R. Giger's artwork at a European art show during a failed Dune adaptation and brought the artist into the production, and how that discovery shaped everything from the xenomorph's design to the derelict ship's construction. They trace the screenplay credit dispute—O'Bannon and Ronald Shusett versus producers David Giler and Walter Hill, settled by Writers Guild arbitration—and the pivotal contribution Giler and Hill made by adding the android character Ash, played by Ian Holm. They also cover the John Hurt casting story: John Finch was originally cast as Kane, fell ill on the first day of shooting, and Hurt stepped in after being refused entry to apartheid-era South Africa.The conversation gets into the chestburster dinner scene—its position at the exact halfway point of the film, and the cast's unrehearsed reactions when the gore was far beyond what they'd been told to expect. Andy breaks down Goldsmith's score in detail: the Echoplex echo device, the serpent, didgeridoo, and conch shells, and the behind-the-scenes conflict with the editor over how the cues were used. Pete and Andy also weigh in on the 2003 director's cut versus the 1979 original—and why Scott himself considers the theatrical version the real director's cut. This is the first episode of The Next Reel's Alien series—when the movie ends, our conversation begins!Want more from The Next Reel? Become a member of the TruStory FM family and get early access to ad-free episodes, monthly bonus episodes, exclusive Discord channels, and voting rights on future member picks. Join at trustory.fm/join.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
Ridley Scott's "Alien" arrived in 1979 as the anti-Star Wars: grimy, claustrophobic, and rooted in biological dread rather than adventure. The film follows the seven-member crew of the Nostromo—led by warrant officer Ripley, played by Sigourney Weaver in her breakout role, alongside Tom Skerritt as the ship's captain Dallas and John Hurt as the crew member who makes the film's most unforgettable exit—as they investigate a distress signal that leads them to something no one aboard is equipped to survive. What Scott and his team built around that premise, from H.R. Giger's biomechanical creature design to Jerry Goldsmith's unsettling score, redefined both science fiction and horror.Pete and Andy dig into the full production history: how screenwriter Dan O'Bannon discovered H.R. Giger's artwork at a European art show during a failed Dune adaptation and brought the artist into the production, and how that discovery shaped everything from the xenomorph's design to the derelict ship's construction. They trace the screenplay credit dispute—O'Bannon and Ronald Shusett versus producers David Giler and Walter Hill, settled by Writers Guild arbitration—and the pivotal contribution Giler and Hill made by adding the android character Ash, played by Ian Holm. They also cover the John Hurt casting story: John Finch was originally cast as Kane, fell ill on the first day of shooting, and Hurt stepped in after being refused entry to apartheid-era South Africa.The conversation gets into the chestburster dinner scene—its position at the exact halfway point of the film, and the cast's unrehearsed reactions when the gore was far beyond what they'd been told to expect. Andy breaks down Goldsmith's score in detail: the Echoplex echo device, the serpent, didgeridoo, and conch shells, and the behind-the-scenes conflict with the editor over how the cues were used. Pete and Andy also weigh in on the 2003 director's cut versus the 1979 original—and why Scott himself considers the theatrical version the real director's cut. This is the first episode of The Next Reel's Alien series—when the movie ends, our conversation begins!Want more from The Next Reel? Become a member of the TruStory FM family and get early access to ad-free episodes, monthly bonus episodes, exclusive Discord channels, and voting rights on future member picks. Join at trustory.fm/join.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 | <a href="https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLO6MWAz0fVslXPz8xLBNP9tr6NOMMI_FL"...
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Alien
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