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Synopsis
Acclaimed director David Fincher's promising career was lucky to survive this astonishingly wrong-headed, almost universally despised second sequel to Alien (1979). The film careens into oblivion virtually from the beginning, as Lt. Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) is the only survivor of a crash-landing on a hellish, God-forsaken prison planet. Not only does the crash kill little Newt, completely obviating the entire point of the superior Aliens (1986), but Fincher then compounds his betrayal of that film's fans by having Ripley attend the girl's gruesome autopsy and barely bat an eye as the child's chest is bloodily ripped open with a steel bonesaw. Things just go downhill from there, as the rather unthreatening rapists and murderers harass Ripley and curse a great deal before being torn apart by large fans, having their heads crushed by the unconvincing CGI alien, and finally volunteering to be murdered by the beast rather than letting the evil Company get hold of it. Fincher does the best he can with a terrible script, and there are some nice supporting turns by Charles S. Dutton, Charles Dance, and Brian Glover, but nothing could redeem the film's first 15 minutes. By the time Ripley takes a suicidal swan-dive into a vat of molten lead, cradling a baby alien as it explodes from her chest, many viewers will not know whether to reach for the remote control or a warm bath and a razorblade. A loathsome experience by any standard, Alien 3 still made enough money for Weaver to return as a Ripley clone in Alien Resurrection (1997). ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide


Production Crew

James Morahan Art Director
David Worley Camera Operator
Billy Hopkins Casting
Priscilla John Casting
Alex Thomson Cinematographer
Sigourney Weaver Co-producer
Elliot Goldenthal Composer (Music Score)
Jerry Goldsmith Composer (Music Score)
Bob Ringwood Costume Designer
Dave Perry Costume Designer
Amalgamated Dynamics Creature Effects
David Fincher Director
Terry Rawlings Editor
Ezra Swerdlow Executive Producer
David Giler Producer
Gordon Carroll Producer
Walter Hill Producer
Fred Hole Production Designer
Norman Reynolds Production Designer
Vincent Ward Screen Story
Dan O'Bannon Screenwriter
David Giler Screenwriter
David N. Twohy Screenwriter
Eric Red Screenwriter
Greg Pruss Screenwriter
Larry Ferguson Screenwriter
Rex Pickett Screenwriter
Walter Hill Screenwriter
William Gibson Screenwriter
Vincent Ward Short Story Author
Vincent Ward Short Story Author
Alec Gillis Special Effects
George Gibbs Special Effects
Richard Edlund Special Effects
Tom Woodruff, Jr. Special Effects
Mark Newman Stunts
Mark Newman Stunts
Simon Crane Stunts
Year: 1992
Runtime: 114
Country: UK
MPAA Rating: R
for monster violence, and for language
Category: Feature


Color type
Rank Laboratories color

Sound
Dolby

Produced by
20th Century Fox
Brandywine

Release
May 22, 1992 (USA)
by 20th Century Fox