Do you count yourÂself in that group of cinephiles who have spent years and years patientÂly waitÂing for RidÂley Scott to get back in the sadÂdle? We thrilled to Alien, where priÂmal closed-in panÂic colÂlidÂed with a cast furÂrowed by seemÂingÂly unmarÂketable space-weariÂness, and to Blade RunÂner, whose perÂvaÂsive uncleanÂliÂness and linÂgerÂing ambiÂguÂiÂty simÂiÂlarÂly raised it above its futurÂisÂtic genre trapÂpings. When we couldÂn’t catch a screenÂing of BarÂry LynÂdon, we even revÂeled in the NapoleonÂic glisÂten of The DuelÂlists. But alas, as cerÂtain critÂiÂcal opinÂions hold, the psyÂchic tautÂness groundÂing the elabÂoÂrate proÂducÂtion of those first few films evenÂtuÂalÂly meltÂed away, injectÂing pockÂets of disÂcomÂfitÂing emptiÂness into a White Squall, or of bloatÂed grandeur into a GladÂiÂaÂtor. We don’t comÂplain that Scott has stopped workÂing; we comÂplain that he’s stopped workÂing to our exactÂing (and probÂaÂbly unfair) specÂiÂfiÂcaÂtions.
But rumors of a disÂtant Blade RunÂner sequel have surÂfaced, and the June release looms of Prometheus, a preÂquel to Alien. Could Scott have found his way back to whatÂevÂer creÂative well nourÂished him so richÂly in the late sevÂenÂties and earÂly eightÂies? Either way, he’ll ride what looks like a groundswell of renewed interÂest in the Alien uniÂverse. In recent weeks, I saw enough midÂnight-movie types wearÂing T‑shirts adverÂtisÂing an entiÂty called “WeyÂland-Yutani” that, with assisÂtance from Google, I rememÂbered its place as the Alien’s preÂsidÂing force of corÂpoÂrate amoralÂiÂty. Things have come along for the comÂpaÂny; where once its brand existÂed only as a recurÂring crate stamp in Alien’s backÂdrop, now its CEO is givÂing a draÂmatÂiÂcalÂly shot TED talk on the state of mankind.
Could this be a two-in-one shot in the arm for both Scott and TED, an interÂminÂgling of realÂiÂty and fanÂtaÂsy that reviÂtalÂizes both the direcÂtor’s and the conÂferÂence enterÂprise’s sense of creÂative risk-takÂing? CEO Peter WeyÂland, as played by Guy Pearce, stirs up his crowd with the bold claim that, what with the intelÂliÂgence humanÂiÂty can now creÂate, perÂhaps we’ve become the gods. But WeyÂland’s talk comes courÂtesy of the future, which is also Alien’s past: “now” means 2023, 62 years before the events of Prometheus. As for how, preÂciseÂly, WeyÂland’s prophetÂic grandÂstandÂing — a behavÂior not unknown at TED’s events, though at least we now see they’re in on the joke — conÂnects with Prometheus and the estabÂlished canon of Alien movies we won’t know for a few months. Until then, you can watch the new film’s trailÂer and specÂuÂlate for yourÂself about whether it can posÂsiÂbly recapÂture that essence of paraÂnoid isoÂlaÂtion that made the origÂiÂnal such an endurÂing cinÂeÂmatÂic expeÂriÂence.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
The MakÂing of Blade RunÂner
875 TEDTalks in a Neat SpreadÂsheet
ColÂin MarÂshall hosts and proÂduces NoteÂbook on Cities and CulÂture. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.