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Alien Resurrection [Blu-ray]
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Genre | Horror/Things That Go Bump/Monsters, Science Fiction & Fantasy |
Format | Multiple Formats, AC-3, Blu-ray, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen |
Contributor | Rod Damer, Brad Dourif, Dan Hedaya, J. E. Freeman, Winona Ryder, Nicole Fellows, J.E. Freeman, Mark Mansfield, Robert Bastens, Raymond Cruz, Walter Hill, Robert Faltisco, Gary Dourdan, Rodney Mitchell, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, David Rowe, Daniel Raymont, Tom Woodruff Jr., Bill Badalato, Rico Bueno, Alex Lorre, Gordon Carroll, Ron Ramessar, Chip Nuzzo, Archie Hahn, David St. James, Joan Labarbara, Marlene Bush, Carolyn Campbell, David Giler, Michael Wincott, Dominique Pinon, Ron Perlman, Garrett House, Steven Gilborn, Leland Orser, Kim Flowers, Sigourney Weaver See more |
Language | English |
Runtime | 2 hours and 17 minutes |
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Product Description
A group of scientists has cloned Lt. Ellen Ripley, along with the alien queen inside her, hoping to breed the ultimate weapon. But the resurrected Ripley is full of surprises for her "creators," as are the aliens they've imprisoned. And soon, a lot more than "all hell" breaks loose. To combat the creatures, Ripley must team up with a band of smugglers, including a mechanic named Call (Ryder), who holds more than a few surprises of her own. (20th Century Fox)
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 7.5 x 0.7 x 5.4 inches; 0.01 ounces
- Item model number : 16881918
- Director : Jean-Pierre Jeunet
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, AC-3, Blu-ray, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
- Run time : 2 hours and 17 minutes
- Release date : May 10, 2011
- Actors : Sigourney Weaver, Winona Ryder, Dominique Pinon, Ron Perlman, Michael Wincott
- Dubbed: : French, Spanish
- Subtitles: : Spanish, French, English
- Producers : Walter Hill, Gordon Carroll, David Giler, Bill Badalato
- Studio : 20th Century Fox
- ASIN : B004RE29SQ
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #33,651 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #12,614 in Blu-ray
- Customer Reviews:
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Alien Resurrection - Ripley is Back... Kinda
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2025Great movie.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2024This film is fabulous!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 20, 2024Yes I am probably the 1% writing this review but I dont care, screw what the audiences say, this show is a good nacho crunching watch and I enjoy all the franchise has to give
- Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2009What people forget when they respond to this film is that Alien 3 shut down the series, very deliberately and very conclusively. Not only did Ripley die, but the driving concerns of the series that were set up in the first film had been addressed. So there was nowhere to go but in a radically new direction, and that's what Jean-Pierre Jeunet did. While the first films used the aliens and the technological context in which they appeared to address the question what makes us specifically human, this new contribution to the series is more interested in the question of a possible "post-human" future.
In Alien the enemy was not really the monster. The monster's unique method of reproduction merely served to highlight the "human condition": that we are vulnerable, that our bodies are ill-equipped for survival except in the most congenial of circumstances, that they are subject to violation by organic and inorganic forces outside of us. The idea of being "violated" through the mouth and "impregnated" by a monster is horrible, but that possibility serves to highlight our dependency upon science and technology in order to stay alive (even her on Earth), and our increasing "alienation" through technology from the natural world and from the evolutionary struggle for survival. Ash (the robot scientist) and Mother (the artificially intelligent computer that kept them alive and gave instructions) and the Company (that treats human life as expendible) were the real enemies of Alien. Ripley was a hero because she didn't think scientific fact and material gain trump human empathy (her concern for a cat) and human interests.
Aliens takes the same ideas and the same basic storyline and expands it: more military, more weapons, a girl and a sensitive soldier instead of a cat, but ends on a familiar note. Ripley ejects the threat out of the airlock and is able to escape with her body and her principles intact. This relatively optimistic resolution of both the first and the second film is what Fincher's third film rejected, by impregnating Ripley and killing off the girl and the boyfriend during the opening credits. This time the issue is raised onto a theological plane and the question is whether we can find meaning in a universe where not only are there alien forces beyond our control that can destroy us but that, as a general rule even if there are exceptions, we humans either can't seem to help ourselves or don't much care as we harm others for our own gain. Ripley seems to find meaning in her final act of destroying the alien and herself, thus saving humanity from the careless greed that would use such a monster without regard to the human consequences. With that act, while not all questions the series raises are completely resolved, the series seems to reach a logical end, having adressed gender, reproduction, humanity, science, technology, war, all in the context of defining the human over and against those alien forces that threaten constantly to overwhelm humanity.
With Alien Resurrection, the series starts again, but in a new direction. Sigourney Weaver is no longer playing Ripley, but an Alien/Human cloned hybrid who somehow remembers something of her former incarnation but no longer possesses the same kind of horror of the alien. In fact what horrifies her most are images of her own creation, visions of the technological process that brought her into being. Whereas the first three films aimed for a certain kind of realism, Alien Resurrection verges on the surrealistic nightmare landscape of Jeunet's The City of Lost Children and Delicatessen. What we see may seem silly or strange or skewed, but I think that is because we are intended to get a skewed, or post-human, vision of the human attempt to control the monster, that would seem strange and absurd through the eyes of the no-longer quite human Ripley and the android Call (Winona Rider).
Admittedly, this is a brief and undeveloped defense of the film - and in this brief form it is probably guilty of over-intellectualizing the films, and "forgetting" that the primary appeal of these films is not "intellectual" but visceral -- but I hope it suggests another perspective: that rather than think Alien Resurrection is a failure because it doesn't live up to the terms of the series as Ridley Scott set them up, we should consider the possibility that a "resurrection" of the series may require a reworking of its basic assumptions and style. I admit to being heavily influenced in my opinions about this film by Stephen Mulhall's excellent little book On Film - while I disagree with some details of his account, I think his general approach to thinking about the Alien series as a whole is quite intelligent and compelling.)
- Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2024Classic and can't be touched
- Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2024Exactly as described. I ordered this digital copy of the movie-because it's the directors cut with extended footage in it.
I actually prefer the extended cuts..
and this digital copy didn't disappoint.it played perfectly and i can watch it anywhere!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2024Nothing beats the original, as in most cases, but this a nice return to Ripley.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 202410 de 10
Top reviews from other countries
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Gilbert FaesReviewed in Belgium on December 27, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Aankoop Alien Ressurrection ( Blu-ray )
100 % OK Goede verzending en besteld item beantwoorde volledig aan de beschrijving
van de verkoper ( uiterst tevreden )
:-):-):-)
- suvesh999Reviewed in India on June 3, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars advanced story line
Alien resurrection has an advanced story line( as compared to previous alien movies).the concept of the movie is very modern! Excellent graphics...!see it to believe it....
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MacGReviewed in Germany on February 5, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars Für mich fast so gut wie Alien 2
Sigourney als gutmütiger Halb-Alien und Winona als Roboter mit Gewissen. Wenn ich's mir genau überlege, macht das die immer gleiche Handlung - Oops Aliens ... nichts wie weg. Mist geht nicht. Also kämpfen - wieder wett. Ich bin eigentlich kein Horror-Freund und Teil 1 ist mir auch deutlich zu grausam. Aber 2 und 4 sind - von wenigen Passagen abgesehen - einfach spannend.
- Sid MathesonReviewed in Canada on October 13, 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars Beyond Alien
Oddly, this is my favourite movie of a franchise which was started off by photographs of HR Giger's macabre paintings in Omni Magazine.
The first three movies are each pretty much the same. It all began with a company prospecter-ship being alerted to a distress signal on some extra-terrestrial asteroid, I think it was. The story was penned by Dan O'brien, whose greatest gift to us was the tongue-in-cheek Return Of The Living Dead after his split with George Romero. The Alien was the 'space jockey' but the focus was on a creature whose reproductive system depended on foreign hosts. John Hurt was this larger-than-life virus' first victim then, in Alien 2, it was a colony of miners, then, in Alien 3 (read cubed), it was an entire penal colony on some prison planet.. and we thought we'd finally seen the end of it along with Sigourney Weaver!
.. And, film-maker Ridley Scott complained they had taken the story in the wrong direction (he liked the first two)...
Then.. something creative happened and Joss Whedon (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) penned the story. Entering a new idea and bringing back Ms. Weaver from the dead -- something I'd think Dan O'brien would have been proud of. Then, along with a slightly international cast, bringing in young hottie, Winona Ryder! With some intriguing plot twists.
1997, and cloning, evil scientists along with the evil corporate empire.. one has to wonder how a United World States would exist. Why would a one-world government need black ops?
Still they manage to create a new 'super-woman' Ripley (Sigourney's character) who is actually part virus (or Alien, if you disagree with me -- the 'space jockey' having seemingly long been forgotten).
And, then (as if you haven't had enough 'Thens') it gets weirder, as the black ops research vessel automatically begins its journey back to earth with fresh, human-hungry virus!
This wasn't an 'Oh! I get it!' on first viewing movie for me. In fact, it took many viewings to really appreciate it. Perfect reason for buying the video in my book.
- BpReviewed in Canada on July 10, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Prompt dely!
Very good movie!