IdleRich

IdleRich
I don’t even really understand the story so don’t listen to me

earth was populated by. engineers something something alien something xenomorph something David something oh no

I lost interest to such an extent I couldn't get much more than that out of it.
 

version

Well-known member
@IdleRich @0bleak

There are loads of actual Alien games too. The one in particular that gets the praise is Alien: Isolation which is more of a survival thing modeled on the first film. You get to explore the derelict on LV-426 in that one.



 

IdleRich

IdleRich
There was a quote from one of them where she says (something like)

We have to go into orbit and blow up the whole planet, it's the only way to be sure

And my friend said "I never knew Ripley was Irish".
 

version

Well-known member
Félicien Rops

Some of his illustrations really remind me of David's from Covenant. I mentioned da Vinci, but maybe there's a Decadent current there too.

137578_03.jpg


 

version

Well-known member
@sus

Something piquing my interest atm's the biomechanical thing. The blurring of the biological-mechanical distinction's obviously the point, but considering the alien in terms of one then the other's intriguing. There's a spectrum from organic parasite to synthetic weapon you can play around with positioning it on. I've mentioned the horror at the thought of nature producing something like that elsewhere, Darwin and his parasitic wasp, but there's also the horror of the perfect machine and that opens up a whole other line of thought where the alien stops being horrifying because it's so different from us and starts being horrifying because it represents the endpoint of a technological trajectory. It's both the wildest of animals and most efficient of machines. As Ash says, "Its structural perfection is matched only by its hostility."
 

sus

Moderator
I'm really annoyed I've spent an hour filling out online forms and wanting to KMS but when I'm sane again I look forward to pondering this with you V
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
@sus

Something piquing my interest atm's the biomechanical thing. The blurring of the biological-mechanical distinction's obviously the point, but considering the alien in terms of one then the other's intriguing. There's a spectrum from organic parasite to synthetic weapon you can play around with positioning it on. I've mentioned the horror in the thought of nature producing something like that elsewhere, Darwin and his parasitic wasp, but there's also the horror of the perfected machine and that opens up a whole other line of thought where the alien stops being horrifying because it's so different from us and starts being horrifying because it represents a culmination of a technological trajectory. It's both the wildest of animals and most efficient of machines. As Ash says, "Its structural perfection is matched only by its hostility."

Going back to Alasdair Reynolds, the basic premise is that the solution to the Fermi Paradox is that an ancient alien race called The Inhibitors wipe out any civilisation that achieves the power of leaving their solar system.

Anyway this is relevant cos these Inhibitors have evolved to the point where they are (or maybe have replaced themselves with) machines, and much is made of their "cold machine intelligence" and how they have become these perfect, remorseless killing machines.

Although there is one weird bit where the narrator says something about how their distant ancestors were more like mammals than any of the other races they annihilate and so there must be a question of if they do perhaps feel the tiniest flicker of regret on wiping out humans rather than many-legged squid beasts or whatever.
 

version

Well-known member
Moebius apparently did some designs for the film which ended up being lost or stolen. There are only a handful of images online. Nowhere near as good as Giger's designs, but interesting to see a different take on the derelict and space jockey.

moebiusderelictexploration.jpg


I didn't know Giger did some work on Prometheus beyond them basing things on his original designs either. There's a blog with a ton of pictures and information about this stuff.

 
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