Alien (1979) Close Encounters - Extended Scene (2018) Lambert Calls © ctc
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
- Communication breakdown. Very fun and intense moment to work with, as I made best with "working print" footage available in my precision edit. It was years before I found this deleted footage. 87K views! Nice.
Love the original theatrical sequence, and dared extending this long masterpiece take -- once finding the rare Lambert deleted scene (1:42 through 2:09) Red flash = Danger. Classic camera work.
After many attempts, this feels right in tone, without over-exaggeration. I wanted the new "27 seconds" edited in for the first time, to feel very natural and almost unnoticeable -- thereby breaking a long scene, showing more great footage worth meaningful arc.
I see this as a "monumental cut" waiting decades to be made. So, thank you Sir Ridley Scott and 20th Century Fox for letting me entertain fan audiences professionally. We have milestones to achieve. _c.
Edit time = 12 hours. Enjoy this new take, my fellow ALIEN geeks!
#ridleyscott #christhompsoncorley #alien #americanfilminstitute #20thcenturyfox #ctc
"It's a robot, Ash is a goddamn robot!" Best line ever
"Drop the Taco. Get in the Spaceship" Lol.
Ian Holm should have had an Oscar for that part. Simply amazing performance.
This was probably, for me, the most disturbing/frightening scene in the film.
When I first saw this as a kid I was wondering what made him go bad and why he's bleeding white. This film scared me as a kid. Now this is one of my personal favorites. The best film ever. There's not gonna be another great Alien film after Aliens.
Did you see the part with the Chestburster ? ! The Xeno birth ? Equally disturbing I'd say given that both had been unseen before.
@@levitaggart5943 yes that was disturbing. But I think the Ash scene is more so, because it was much more UNEXPECTED. You EXPECT danger & horror from the alien. You DON’T EXPECT the danger & horror to suddenly come from one of the crew.
This might be the greatest twist in the movie. This, or the "crew expendable" snippet eventually uncovered by Ripley particularly.
One of the greatest SciFi movies ever made!
To be honest I think it falls short of Blade Runner and Empire Strikes Back
And also one of the greatest horror movies ever; quite possibly the greatest sci-fi/horror movie ever, as well. What a fascinating, interesting, and intriguing combination of styles of movie this one is.
@@gregholman2431 my friend hello there anyway The Thing (1982) directed by John Carpenter and Alien (1979) directed by Ridley Scott are both the greatest sci-fi horror movies ever created as well:).
@@WilliamTheUnkownShoutout Yea, The Thing (1982) is pretty good. That one is also sci-fi/horror, indeed. It is also suspense, and perhaps even mystery, in good part, too.
@@gregholman2431 my friend awesome anyway I saw both Alien (1979) directed by Ridley Scott and The Thing (1982) directed by John Carpenter as a little kid in the 1990s and they are both my favorite sci-fi horror movies and the first time I saw both of them as a little kid I gave both of them different high scores Alien (1979) a 9.7/10 and The Thing (1982) a 10/10 but I still consider both of them the greatest sci-fi horror movies ever created as well:).
The A2s always were a bit twitchy.
Bishop rocks!
yeah, and when you see a dude with white liquid trickling the side of his temple...get very suspicious about him....
@@MrEslenderjizz
F yeah brother.
Great cast. Had a total blast working on this wonderful classic piece and figuring things out. Tough editing choice, but honored. Had to get more Lambert in there, especially when a deleted performance is worthy.
Did you do this for your own satisfaction? Great edit.
@@2degucitas I did it for personal and professional means, with great love for ALIEN (1979) material.
@@chriscorley6478
Is your edit going to be used in any future DVD release?
@@2degucitas Hopefully so. It takes time to be accepted professionally into Studios and Union Guilds. So, I figured I will get the work done first for Guild submission, and remain patient. 🎥😷
Yes, i agree. I saw it first run in ‘79. Everyone of the audience’s nerves were frayed at this point in the movie. So many disturbing scenes up until this point. And then WTF, the guy’s head is hanging there and he is spitting oatmeal. It took a while to process that he was a “robot”. Within the context of its time, this movie was the most horrifying thing ever put out there. Maybe The Exorcist rivals it though. Not much really compares now because we have “seen it all” now. This was something entirely new- next level nightmare stuff.
I must vote ALIENS (1986) by James Cameron as beyond worthy and equally terrifying = an excellent excellent masterpiece sequel. 🎥👏
@@chriscorley6478 Disagree. Element of surprise was better in Alien - 1979. We didn't know what the alien looked liked until the very end, only got quick glimpses, the kills weren't seen and left to the imagination, soundtrack was in minor keys making the emotion of the script much more darker.
The sequel was spectacular visually .........but the realism of the bleak, adult landscape, made the first film more impactful and valid.......the human experiencial polygony,is a tired,meditative thing..,the optimism of the marines in the second film,denied the psychological callousness of, violence as a profession.....life is a vagarous ,anomalous ,seditious thing.....nobody sits you down and explains anything,you are on your own to figure it out......god is not sentient,the first film echoed that; ,the crew were caught in a morally rotten trick, by the company ,;they had to improvise and survive a situation (like life), that they did not request ; it is a poem to the existential question, **why was I born?**; when life is so painful and pointless......
Every decade or so has a film that takes the genre to a new level, 50's, 60's, 70's, 80's etc, all had one or two. Have we gotten to the point we have seen it all, probably........until the next movie comes out that shows us something new:)
@@ELECTRICEYEMEDIA hello anyway The Thing (1982) directed by John Carpenter is my number 1 favorite sci-fi horror movie and Alien (1979) directed by Ridley Scott is my 2nd favorite sci-fi horror movie but I consider both of them the greatest sci-fi horror movies ever created as well:).
Ian Holm played the part of Ash brilliantly, but the scariest part of Alien for me was the THING bursting out of John Hurts chest.👨🚀🚀🛸
I was 17 and went to the cinema with two school mates after class. I remember I almost soiled my pants at this scene! Ian Holmes was scary as shit and so weird. Who would try to kill somebody using a fucking rolled magazine? 😂
Warning: AI is not your friend.
"Not bad, for a human". -- Bishop
👹 Might Satan be lurking at your chamber door? 👹
It would be David 08 or Ash, certainly. 🤖
@@chriscorley6478 Yes, they are both monsters, created by humans, but who superseded their creators.
Like she couldn't simply swat the rolled up magazine off her mouth
"Swat swat that Android away..." 🎤
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is an example of why we called him SIR Ian Holm, CBE. May he rest in peace.
He will certainly be missed.
Ian Holm was great as Ash. He was a very good actor. R.I.P.
Notice Her nose bleed in comparison to his temple losing fluid
Great job by Ian Holm as this nasty bugger. RIP.
Yes, the entire cast was top notch.
Ian Holmes was frighteningly superb as Ash...
Also as Mr. Baggins.
@@DanielLopez-zt4ig And Vito Cornelius in the Fifth Element.
Holm, not Holmes
Once he starts leaking you know shit gets real, lol.
Great moment. 👏 Very rare and unique, when the "white droplet" of Android liquid (Ash's blood) runs down his head's temple.
Excellent scene contrast.
Those 120-A/2 can be very twitchy.
Excellent work! I never thought there could be more additional footage from a 1979 movie. Alien is one of my favorite films ever!
Thank you. I felt the same way in discovering more outtakes, but had to discern with great focus what could be used properly. 🎥
Unlike the Working Joes Ash was a clandestine android designed to work undetected amongst humans.
This meant his 'kill switch' wasn't a simple on/off button with an eye color change, it required a high level of changes to his higher functions.
Consequently he kind of 'freaks out' when it became engaged..
"...always a bit twitchy", and quite the surprise to audiences in 1979.
Hence his weird facial expressions, whimpers and groans, lengthy hesitations, etc. before really "going to work" on Ripley. Thought that it might have been already due to the (slight) damage he had suffered to his forehead. But your explanation is better!
Poor Ian, he wants to be whether in control of a ring or of a space ship, and never succeeds.
Well, that's because both are EVIL.
Exceptional performances. Great actor.
That little robot laugh 😂
Ash picked a strange way to kill Ripley. He could have just strangled her instead.
Perhaps. But, I believe this "unique scene" was meant to be more about aggression, madness, and personal violation.
@@chriscorley6478 Yes, all of those.
Yeah he definitely got very creative lol
@@chriscorley6478
I was there in the theatre in 1979, seeing it all. I had no idea what was going on. Everything was very scary for me.
You are right : The whole "Alien" idea was about being invaded from within. This included the Space Jockey, who was also invaded from within by this horrible Alien thing, and who had sent out a warning signal. Then it was Kane who was invaded from within by a facehugger and then from without when that thing came out of his chest.
Then it was Ripley being invaded from without, by Ash, who was sweating milk.
Ripley survived the whole thing, despite the cleverness of the Alien monster.
Perhaps the ol' Behavioral Inhibitors had something to do with it....
He was an android unbelievable
I was a kid when I saw this in the theaters. The face grabber scene and the chest burst scene freaked me out. However, The Excorcist in the late 70's as a kid was the scariest movie any kid could watch. Slept with lights on in my room for months after seeing that one back in '78.
That's just natural selection. Your parents failed you
THEY DO NOT KNOW HOW TO MAKE THESE TYPE OF MOVIES TODAY ! THIS WAS MADE FROM 2 MOVIES FROM THE 50's AND 60's . THE THING FROM SPACE AND THE VAMPIRE PLANET .
John Carpenter's DARK STAR (1974) was the original production catalyst. ☕
they do have caps lock buttons though
Lol,when Ash gives Parker a Purple Nurple
Lol... Certainly the most painful twist of all time. 😱
We use those flesh grabbing techniques to throw and grapple in bujutsu, really hurts. Slightly off topic but did anyone notice that before the struggle began Ripley and Ash were already bleeding?Did they have a pre scuffle that got cut from the movie?
@@glenlittle2740 I believe Ripley's nosebleed came from a deleted/half filmed scene where the crew lure the xeno into some kind of airlock(?). It nearly worked! As Parker hits the button to close the door the aliens arm gets in the way and is severed/injured. The resulting acid blood spray chews through part of the hull and results in a localised decompression. Alien gets away, and Ripley has to rescue Parker. That's why the nosebleed. Would've made a great scene, having the remaining crew just watching the alien from a distance...creepy as hell!!