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The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises

James Clayton


James wants the new Ridley Scott movie to tell us the truth about the real monster in the Alien franchise - 'The Company'...

Published on Aug 7, 2009

As far as things go, the recent confirmation that the Alien series is to be extended by prequel not sequel and that Ridley Scott himself will be at the helm is just about the best news that film fans could hear. With this prospect on the far horizon, there's more chance that the next movie in the sci-fi franchise will be a worthwhile, really good movie and not a tanking pile of intergalactic garbage.

Firstly, having Scott attached to the next Alien feature is a boon - especially considering that the flick is a prequel - as he directed the original first instalment back in 1979. He already has the kudos and is wired into the world of Alien having played a key part in visualising and defining it from the off. By getting a respected veteran filmmaker as opposed to roping in a gun for hire, the studio has already reassured anxious fans and cut off the kind of criticism witnessed, for example, in the case of McG and Terminator Salvation.

Add to that the fact that it's Ridley Scott's return to sci-fi and not only is fanboy excitement and huge hype guaranteed, but a stylish feature of epic grandeur and vision is the most likely outcome.

Secondly, the powers-that-be at Fox studios have made a smart move by opting to chronologically backpeddle and make a prequel. The world can do without any Alien V effort that keeps the series - already far beyond a ‘logical conclusion' point - clunking on with another unconvincing explanation as to Ripley's continuing existence. I'm more interested in seeing an ‘origins' tale that goes back before the voyage of the Nostromo and - for the sake of giving the poor woman a break from being perpetually pestered by the xenomorph - doesn't shoehorn in Sigourney Weaver's Ripley.

Nevertheless, as was painfully proved by the Star Wars prequels, taking the narrative backwards in time doesn't necessarily safeguard a series from severe missteps. Because human beings can only take so much heartbreak and disappointment, care must be taken with the new Alien flick to avoid any Jar Jar Binks-style abomination that stains the series' legacy.

Despite the numerous possible problems of keeping the prequel clanger-free and in sync with continuity, I trust that Jon Spaihts's reboot script and Ridley Scott's sure hand are up to the mark. I don't think we need to worry about this one. In fact, I'm willing to bet that it will be absolutely ace.

Maybe I'm excited and extremely optimistic about the Alien reboot because it offers the prospect of a bigger on-screen role for the real villain of the franchise. If you thought that the xenomorphic alien was the big baddie in all the Alien movies, you'd be wrong. That prestigious position is occupied by the phantom menace that lurks malevolently in the background and sits as possibly the most sinister fictional enterprise in film history. The ultimate evil, of course, is the Weyland-Yutani organisation.

It's true that behind every good sci-fi story and speculative vision of a dystopian future, there's a gloriously wicked corporation pulling the strings. This is the case in the RoboCop with the Omni Consumer Products mega-corporation, in Blade Runner with the replicant-crafting Tyrell Corporation and in the Terminator franchise in the form of Cyberdyne, to name a select view. It's Weyland-Yutani, though, that stands head and shoulders amongst the other cruel commercial titans of the movie marketplace and reigns supreme.

Metaphorically speaking, on The Apprentice Weyland-Yutani would be the Sir Allan Sugar figure. All other blackhearted fictional businesses look like weedy schoolboy bullies next to the universal power and perverse influence of the evil empire in the Alien series.

So "The bitch is back", to quote the publicity of Alien3. Is "the bitch" Ripley or the eponymous parasite? I'd say it's neither and that the truth is "the bitch" never went away: Weyland-Yutani is the true big nasty in the franchise and functions as an ominous, faceless entity.

Through the entire Alien series, there is no hint or trace that there's anything like a heart or conscience at the core of the company. No redeeming features or reason to believe that the organisation has an ethics remit or philanthropic streak are offered up. This is a callous corporation that repeatedly puts its employees in extreme peril and exposes the entire human race to interstellar danger in order to further its own selfish agenda. As Alien's heart of darkness, I desire to know more about the insidious enterprise. I say that the prequel should put Weyland-Yutani as the foremost focal concern.

It's all too often the case, I feel, that the fictional companies in blockbuster flicks aren't fleshed out and function too simplistically as plot filler. Take, for example, Stark Industries in Iron Man. After his holiday as a hostage in Afghanistan, Tony Stark decides to do the decent thing and turn his weapons manufacturing operations around after witnessing the true atrocities facilitated by his products. That this total u-turn is done and dusted pretty much after one press briefing is astounding; in the real world, it would involve significant infrastructure shifting, meetings, assessments, retraining programmes and a variety of other types of red tape.

Likewise, the Empire in Star Wars is a pretty non-descript outfit. It occupies an immense amount of space with its Death Star base and has legions of stormtroopers and grey-suited men on the books, but what does it do? You'd be forgiven for thinking that it was just an empty symbol of ‘evil' instead of a working power-structure.

I want to know a bit more about the inner mechanisms, political wranglings and internal ideologies of these malicious megacorporations. How did they get so evil? What sort of backstabbing and backhanding activity goes on in the boardroom? What percent of revenue is siphoned off into evil schemes research and development instead of staff pastoral care? Can we possibly, in the style of OCP in RoboCop, see some bitingly satirical commercials?

A prequel offers the perfect chance to dig up the dirt and delve into the despicable backstory of Weyland-Yutani. They knew about the alien before the last voyage of the Nostromo and we viewers want to know how. In the current climate of economic catastrophe, a Ridley Scott prequel peering into the omnipotent background villain of the Alien world would be most welcome...

James' previous column can be found here.

 

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Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By Rangeboy 1 August 7, 2009 11:03:36 AM

I totally agree about the prequel concentrating on the motives behind WY Corp. In the Alien directors commentary Scott discusses how he believed that was depicting how society would come to be dominated by faceless corporations. A theme he of course went on to explore in more detail in Bladerunner. This seems to be a subject close to the director's heart (he worked in the advertising industry after all!) The plot would point to some collaboration between an alien race (space-jocky?)(perhaps dating back 100's/1000's of years)and in return for some favour or consession, they have agreed to 'design' the corporation the ultimate weapon. Scott agreed with the notion that the eggs were some kind of cargo of a destructive biological nature...Also, setting the prequels largely on Earth or colonies with human characters means it would be easier to make a TV spin-off, and with the new Star Wars series rumoured to be coming in 2011, would be a great time to launch the film and a TV show.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By cordas 1 August 7, 2009 12:02:18 PM

I dunno I wouldn't go to far into the Company, or try and tie them to the space jockey... I really hate it when they do things that try to tie everything together, its like having Anakin building C3-PO its just s#!t! Personally I would make the company out to be a soulless, heartless, morality deprived entity that is only interested in the bottom line. I would have them starting a colony up on some planet/moon in the arse end of nowhere doing secret/banned research. I would have the planet be a rich source of alien life and have the aliens take their form from them (going back to the idea that the alien copies some of its shape from its host that was mooted back in the good ole days). Of course some scientist finds an egg and get face hugged, everything starts to go wrong and some company exec seeing the potential starts sending info back to earth, anyway things go wrong someone takes off and nukes the planet from orbit and the company back at earth is left with just a bit of data about the aliens.... co-incidentally around the time that someone deciphers the transmission from the SJ ship. I would have the closing scene being some corporate shill telling his boss that the closest ship is the Nostromo. I would base things going wrong on the colony off a scenario similar to what played out in Legacy of Herrot, life on the planet had found a balance with the 'Alien' but that human intervention destroyed that balance causing smelly stuff to hit the fan.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By SCY385 1 August 7, 2009 08:27:39 PM

I have always said that the real villain in the Alien franchise was Weyland-Yutani.The crews of the various ships were doing what they were supposed to do.If you really think about it the xenomorph was doing what it was supposed to do.The question then becomes why would a company do the things Weyland-Yutani did.I don't know, but it would be fascinating to find out.I agree that great care needs to be taken in how this detail is handled.It is at the heart of the story.I think it's safe to say that the Nostromo would never have had any contact with this Alien had it not been for the company.I am very interested in how this is revealed.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By Dierk 1 August 8, 2009 09:21:05 AM

The smart move, and a very courageous one, would be to scrap humans from the prequel in any form. Not a hint of W-Y, no Ripley, no scientists. There's at least three different backstories in Alien around the monsters. Why not boldly go where film rarely has gone, and let us see the two original non-human species? True, it's a hard sell, it needs a very good writer and director to make us care for any of the creatures. This is possible, I am sure of it, children's literature has done it from time to time [humans are often just observers, like in Alice in Wonderland or the original Oz books].

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By cress 1 August 8, 2009 04:29:57 PM

I am really amped(and surprised) that Scott is doing this film. ALIEN was dead..RESURRECTION and the AVP films were AWFUL. But this has film fans(and series fans) excited about ALIEN again. Weyland-Yutani seems to have a history w/ the alien. Although some comments have said a new ALIEN film w/ no humans actors would be the brave thing to do, it would not be the smart thing. The human element HAS to be there. Whatever the story is, I am sure Scott will make it compelling. Although part of me fears he may back out of this project.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By Makimura 1 August 9, 2009 04:35:00 PM

"You don't see them f*cking each other over for a goddamned percentage." Ripley's line from Aliens - and I'm paraphrasing here - seems to be a good place for any writer to start with an Alien reboot.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By Johnnn78 1 August 12, 2009 04:58:59 PM

The theme of the bad Company is a bit obsolete. It would be more original to use the opportunity to create a new saga where humans are not implied. The Space Jockey starship disaster would be the link between the Alien Saga and the prequel Saga. These prequels could narrate the war betwwen ancient alien societies, and the role of alien would be secondary because they are just biological weapons.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By Johnnn78 1 August 12, 2009 05:06:23 PM

..and this time use all the Giger's imagination!

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By kags 1 August 15, 2009 06:03:30 PM

please please correct me if i am wrong, but i always thought that that scene from alien 1, where ripley is talking to mother about that directive to ash (597 or summat) was refering in general to ANY aliens that were found, meaning that they may not have had prior knowledge of THE ALIEN, but just wanted to capture ANY alien creature that may be stumbled upon ??

Re: The James Clayton Column: Alien Enterprises
Posted By kags 1 August 15, 2009 06:06:20 PM

although i do realise that in AVP the alien would have been known about in alien 1. tho' the writers of alien wouldnt know that in the future, avp would be made.... hmmm
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