Prometheus (2012)
*viewed in 3D*
Starring Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Logan Marshall-Green, Idris Elba, and Guy Pearce
Directed by Ridley Scott
**There will be some spoilers ahead here...the film's been out a month now, so I feel no qualms about that.**
**There will be some spoilers ahead here...the film's been out a month now, so I feel no qualms about that.**
Prometheus - the "not-a-prequel, but really-is-a-prequel" to Alien - has its share of problems most courtesy of a script from Jon Spaihts and Lost alum Damon Lindelof, but despite what are warranted criticisms, I couldn't help but like what I saw onscreen. I've always been a fan of Ridley Scott's Alien and James Cameron's Aliens (see my Alien Week coverage here), and what Scott does here is further the backstory behind the sci-fi series while, at the same time, creating a stand-alone film that works quite well despite a few faults.
Those delving into Prometheus thinking that they're going to see something in the same vein of any of the previous four Alien incarnations are in for a surprise. Instead, Prometheus is one archeologist's quest to discover the reason for human existence. We meet Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) in the late 2080s as she and her team are exploring the rocky cliffs of Ireland. There, they discover cave paintings that closely resemble similar paintings found all across the earth all of which seem to be pointing to the notion that something from space came to earth tens of thousands of years ago. With the help of the Weyland Corporation (a name familiar to those who've seen other Alien flicks), Shaw and her partner Charlie (Logan Marshall-Green) are funded for an expedition to a far-off planet that seems to have the same capability as Earth for human existence with the hopes that this planet may hold some of the answers to these cave drawings. When they land on the planet, Shaw, Charlie, and the crew of the ship Prometheus, including the captain (Idris Elba), Weyland overseer Meredith Vickers (Charlize Theron), and android David (Michael Fassbender), set out to explore and uncover some interesting finds leading us both into familiar territory for this series and quite unfamiliar territory in the overarching religious and spiritual questions it attempts to pose.
Surprisingly, the biggest problem in the film tends to be with the alien side of things. These people just seem to act plain stupid around them. Here you've landed on a foreign planet with unknown creatures and you're just going to go right up to these "things" and try to pet them? I mean, really? The characters just end up losing all credibility in these scenes and it hurts the movie in the long run. I think that's what makes the first two Alien films so successful -- even if the characters weren't fully realized (I'm looking at you, Aliens), they still acted "truthfully" and realistically based off of their personal characteristics. You didn't really get a sense of that here with some of the characters presented.
However, there are two really solid performances from Noomi Rapace and Michael Fassbender. Rapace is quite good, embodying a completely different female here than Sigourney Weaver's kick-ass Ripley. Rapace's Elizabeth Shaw is mellow and slightly timid -- two characteristics that could never apply to Ripley. Shaw's mission isn't to kill, but to try and understand all that she can about human existence and her place (and the place of spirituality and faith) in this world. Fassbender also continues his excellent streak of work with the robotic David. Even lacking the ability to show emotions, Fassbender still manages to draw your eye to him in every single scene thanks to this sense of underlying (and sometimes not so underlying) menace his character exudes in nearly scene.
I actually got a very "last episode of Lost" vibe from Prometheus thanks to the similarities in tone resulting from their exploratory dives into faith, and given that Damon Lindelof co-wrote the last episode of the series, that shouldn't be all that surprising. However, also like Lost, Prometheus doesn't provide all the answers and while some would complain about that, I'm actually okay with the open-endedness. To me, we can't have all the answers when we're discussing something as esoteric as faith and to expect them is almost ludicrous. I'd be more than open for a sequel that delves a bit deeper.
The film looks beautiful visually and I give much credit to director Ridley Scott for taking things in a different direction with this flick. Yes, there are still some excellent action sequences and some great set pieces (that "computerized surgery machine" came in quite handy, didn't it?) which show that Scott still has quite a knack at filming tense action. But we also discover that he is quite adept at the quieter moments of which this film certainly has plenty. If only he could've convinced the writers to give him more fully-realized secondary characters than I would've been a much happier camper. But as it stands now, Prometheus is a solid addition to the Alien saga landing right in the middle in terms of quality for the series.
Those delving into Prometheus thinking that they're going to see something in the same vein of any of the previous four Alien incarnations are in for a surprise. Instead, Prometheus is one archeologist's quest to discover the reason for human existence. We meet Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) in the late 2080s as she and her team are exploring the rocky cliffs of Ireland. There, they discover cave paintings that closely resemble similar paintings found all across the earth all of which seem to be pointing to the notion that something from space came to earth tens of thousands of years ago. With the help of the Weyland Corporation (a name familiar to those who've seen other Alien flicks), Shaw and her partner Charlie (Logan Marshall-Green) are funded for an expedition to a far-off planet that seems to have the same capability as Earth for human existence with the hopes that this planet may hold some of the answers to these cave drawings. When they land on the planet, Shaw, Charlie, and the crew of the ship Prometheus, including the captain (Idris Elba), Weyland overseer Meredith Vickers (Charlize Theron), and android David (Michael Fassbender), set out to explore and uncover some interesting finds leading us both into familiar territory for this series and quite unfamiliar territory in the overarching religious and spiritual questions it attempts to pose.
Surprisingly, the biggest problem in the film tends to be with the alien side of things. These people just seem to act plain stupid around them. Here you've landed on a foreign planet with unknown creatures and you're just going to go right up to these "things" and try to pet them? I mean, really? The characters just end up losing all credibility in these scenes and it hurts the movie in the long run. I think that's what makes the first two Alien films so successful -- even if the characters weren't fully realized (I'm looking at you, Aliens), they still acted "truthfully" and realistically based off of their personal characteristics. You didn't really get a sense of that here with some of the characters presented.
However, there are two really solid performances from Noomi Rapace and Michael Fassbender. Rapace is quite good, embodying a completely different female here than Sigourney Weaver's kick-ass Ripley. Rapace's Elizabeth Shaw is mellow and slightly timid -- two characteristics that could never apply to Ripley. Shaw's mission isn't to kill, but to try and understand all that she can about human existence and her place (and the place of spirituality and faith) in this world. Fassbender also continues his excellent streak of work with the robotic David. Even lacking the ability to show emotions, Fassbender still manages to draw your eye to him in every single scene thanks to this sense of underlying (and sometimes not so underlying) menace his character exudes in nearly scene.
I actually got a very "last episode of Lost" vibe from Prometheus thanks to the similarities in tone resulting from their exploratory dives into faith, and given that Damon Lindelof co-wrote the last episode of the series, that shouldn't be all that surprising. However, also like Lost, Prometheus doesn't provide all the answers and while some would complain about that, I'm actually okay with the open-endedness. To me, we can't have all the answers when we're discussing something as esoteric as faith and to expect them is almost ludicrous. I'd be more than open for a sequel that delves a bit deeper.
The film looks beautiful visually and I give much credit to director Ridley Scott for taking things in a different direction with this flick. Yes, there are still some excellent action sequences and some great set pieces (that "computerized surgery machine" came in quite handy, didn't it?) which show that Scott still has quite a knack at filming tense action. But we also discover that he is quite adept at the quieter moments of which this film certainly has plenty. If only he could've convinced the writers to give him more fully-realized secondary characters than I would've been a much happier camper. But as it stands now, Prometheus is a solid addition to the Alien saga landing right in the middle in terms of quality for the series.
The RyMickey Rating: B
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yFYmv6t_Xyg&feature=player_embedded
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The former is just funny and the latter is probably the only good thing to come from livejournal in like a decade.
...still haven't gotten around to reading that livejournal opus...
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