Aesop Rocks
#1 Big Dog
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Not Earth, no, but a good chunk of whatever Country it was in.
I saw that. Yes. I'm a huge fan of the Alien series. I know they're not invincible.
What Ripley meant was that they were unbeatable in the sense that an Xenomorph infestation would be too hard to stop from spreading.
And I think she was mistaken, based on what the movie showed. If they built a hive on an Earth city, for example, then anyone taken to be impregnated can be written off. Drop a bomb- problem solved. Another plot contrivance with the alien getting in the drop ship that the pilots stupidly left wide open stopped them from doing that.
I don't have a problem with a character overreacting, especially if they've been through a traumatic experience. Scott and Cameron seemed not to take character hyperbole as gospel. Paul WS Anderson and the Strauss did, and they made really stupid movies on top of that.
And good point to Schlosser85- but you have to take into account that an infestation on a more populated planet would have a larger defense, and gorman being an idiot was a big part of the story- not to mention that they may have sent a small squad on Burke's recommendation and we know he had ulterior motives.
Earl, you make it seem as if Ripley should have been an expert on a creature she had no prior knowledge of existing.
Not at all, I specifically said a few times that I don't have a problem with her ranting about the Alien being able to kill us all on Earth because she had been through a traumatic experience and I don't think hyperbole from characters is always meant to be taken as gospel.
Now, I know that he held a certain admiration for the Alien, but, considering his expertise in biology, I doubt he was spouting hyperbole there.Ripley: How do we kill it, Ash? There got to be a way of killing it. How how do we do it?
Ash: You can't.
Parker: That's bulls**t.
Ash: You still don't understand what you're dealing with, do you? The perfect organism. Its structural perfection is matched only by its hostility.
Lambert: You admire it.
Ash: I admire its purity. A survivor unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality.
Parker: Well, I don't. I've heard enough of this, and I'm asking you to pull the plug.
Ash: Last words.
Ripley: What?
Ash: I can't lie to you about your chances, but you have my sympathies.
Yes, you can stop them. You shoot them. Did you not read the part where I pointed out they were getting mowed down by the Marines and it was only plot contrivances and Gorman's incompetence that stopped them from wiping them out?
I'm just saying the threat they represent is overstated in later material.
Xenomorph's have a short life cycle?
Wait. They have a short life cycle?
You can't assume they have a short life cycle, considering they survived long enough on LV-426 in Aliens. They don't need to eat or sleep or anything like that. They're like cockroaches.
Thats alot of impregnationConsidering the last Space Jockey apparently died by giving birth to a xenomorph, I'm not sure the xenomorphs come into being intentionally.
I suspect the SP impregnates Shaw, who gives birth to the squid monster, which impregnates/infects others, and somehow the SP himself ends up getting impregnated and through the creatures "borrowing" the DNA of their hosts, a xenomorph ends up bursting out of the SP.


Wasn't it Ridley's original intention that the Xeno was dying near the end of the film, hence it's sluggish movements, and overall docility in the escape pod?
I read somewhere, and I can't for the life of me remember where, that the Alien at the end of the first Movie was already supposed to be dying. Probably as a result of using up too much energy, on morphing humans into additional eggs. At least this was the idea I think. I prefer the idea that Aliens are practically living batteries.
I read somewhere, and I can't for the life of me remember where, that the Alien at the end of the first Movie was already supposed to be dying. Probably as a result of using up too much energy, on morphing humans into additional eggs. At least this was the idea I think. I prefer the idea that Aliens are practically living batteries.