Film alien Essays

  • Alien (1979): Alien: Feminism In The Film Alien

    1901 Words  | 4 Pages

    Alien (1979): Feminism In the thirty years since its release, Alien has become a film of various debates amongst film theorists. Academic analyses of the film draw attention to many differing themes, most popularly with feminism. Most critiques, academic and otherwise, ultimately conclude that Alien is a feminist film because of its representation of the workplace as a home to equality and a place where traditional gender roles have been obliterated. What is ultimately revealed by Alien is the anxiety

  • Women and Religion in the Film Alien and Frankenstein

    942 Words  | 2 Pages

    Women and Religion in the Movie Alien and Shelly's Frankenstein The issue of religion in women's horror is much like the issue of class. In most major organized religions there is a definite patriarchal structure of male dominance. The Father, the Son, the Pope, bishops and priests are all part of this structure that mostly lack woman influences. The religious structure reflects the male dominated society as a whole. As one would expect, women are frightful and perhaps horrified at this exclusionary

  • Star Dreck: Paranoia & Patriotism in Alien Invasion Films

    2311 Words  | 5 Pages

    Paranoia & Patriotism in Alien Invasion Films My premise is really quite simple: aliens are among us.And they're bad.But they're not the aliens you think they are, and they're not bad for the reasons you might imagine.In order to understand who these aliens are and why they're bad I want to begin by reaching back into the dark heart of the McCarthy era, when American paranoia in its most popular incarnation as American patriotism was at its peak.The year is 1951 and the film is Howard Hawkes' The

  • How Films Create A Long-Lasting Trend In Ridley Scott's Alien

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the history of film art, there was a range of films that created long-lasting trends and resulted in a number of subsequent films. Similar to the Star Wars that caused a revolution in the film industry, the Alien that was released in 1979 and directed by Ridley Scott experienced immense success. This film reaches its main aim of appealing to the viewers in terms of the content, the created tension, and the cinematographic techniques applied for the creation of the movie. The movie cannot leave

  • Hegemonic Masculinity In The Film Alien

    681 Words  | 2 Pages

    objectification of women. Women in many different films are known for being subjugated by men. Some women are able to overcome being subjugated and are able to have control and dominance when it comes gaining power. Women are able to achieve this through both manhood acts and their own actions. In

  • 'Alien' Through The Lens Of Jeffery Cohen's Monster Culture

    1083 Words  | 3 Pages

    An Analysis of “Alien” through the Lens of Jeffery Cohen’s “Monster Culture” The constraints of normality within today’s society often determine what or who does not fit the designated mold of behavior and character traits. Discrimination towards difference is seen throughout cinema, portraying characters that differ as dangerous and malicious in their actions, unethically predetermining their demeanor despite society’s implementation of provocation and selfish pursuits. Likewise, the antagonist

  • Gender And Sexual Politics In Ridley Scott's Film Alien

    680 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Ridley Scott’s film Alien, I observed how the film for its time was unique, in the sense that it comprehensively dealt with gender and sexual politics in a direct manner through its content and text which in contemporary films still remains rare. One of the most obvious way Ridley Scott dealt with gender was by having a strong lead female character. Ellen Ripley, the protagonist of the film, who still currently stands out as a top action hero as her character refrains from falling under the cliched

  • The Roswell Incident

    1745 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Roswell Incident The Roswell Incident, which enlightened our minds to the capacity of excepting all, has remained one of the most controversial issues today. In Roswell, New Mexico, 1947, a strange occurrence arises. An alien craft from outer space crashed in an open field. The issue lay still for almost thirty years, until the thought of a government cover-up arose. SocietyÆs opinions have changed over the years. Previous to the 1990Æs, people have despised the thought of sharing the universe

  • Alien Invasion Film: 5th Wave By Rick Yancey

    699 Words  | 2 Pages

    There have been many alien invasion movies, but this one in particular is a little different called the 5th Wave. The thing about the movie is that it has the same type of overrated idea; Aliens invading. Every alien invasion movie has surprising ending, or it is the same idea as the others. 5th Wave is based on the book by Rick Yancey and I am sure that like every movie based on a book this film missed many many things.The movie is aliens trying to take over the earth and people are trying to

  • Definition of Science Fiction

    1222 Words  | 3 Pages

    Perhaps one of the most versatile genres in films, television, books, artwork and any number of things today is science fiction. Many times I have seen a sci-fi movie filed under comedy or drama. That is one of the major things that has led to my love for science fiction, the simple fact that it can be so much more than just science fiction. I would like to present a definition of what science fiction is in this paper. My definition will not be exact, because so many people have a different idea

  • Why Modern Monsters Have Become Alien to Us

    2985 Words  | 6 Pages

    Why Modern Monsters Have Become Alien to Us Late autumn has arrived and with it comes the dark magic of Halloween--and, of course, the murky thrill of monsters. Yet our appetite for a good monster knows no season. Ever since ancient times we have been fascinated with all sorts of tales about monsters and intrigued by myths and legends about those wild half-human beasts who haunt the edges of our forests and lurk in the recesses of our oceans. The sphinxes, minotaurs, and sirens of early

  • Analysis Of The Film 'Crossing The Line: Border Stories'

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    of the topics discussed in the film, “Crossing the Line: Border Stories,” were ones that the everyday media deals with, and challenges many politicians to comment on. Many of the topics that were brought into light by the film were politically charged and would be fueled by the strong opinions of certain political party extremist. Topics such as the economy, healthcare, job security, illegal immigration, and the ability to grant citizenship were discussed in the film. Illegal immigrants come into

  • Ridley Scott's Use of Mise-en-Scene to Convey Atmosphere in the Opening Sequence of the Film, Gladiator

    1001 Words  | 3 Pages

    so fragile.” The film ‘Gladiator’ was released in 2000. A thrilling action film, it was a huge success, scooping five Oscars and earning over $427 million dollars. Sir Ridley Scott- who directed the film-already had many great films to his name, such as ‘Alien’, ‘Blade Runner’ and ‘American Gangster’, so it was no surprise when this film became one of the highest earners of the year 2000. The mise-en-scene used throughout was, perhaps, behind the genius that made this film as much of a success

  • Controversial Advertising

    3067 Words  | 7 Pages

    working-definition of subversion, a notion that has been used in very different senses, before two example-cases of controversial advertising can be investigated. The integration of ad-alien contents within the Benetton-campaign then will be analysed as a form of aesthetic subversion to subsequently question exactly the image’s ad-alien and supposed subversive form and content. Thus, it will be shown that Benetton’s subversive potentials are overshadowed by their functions as advertisements. This works second

  • Movie the Matrix and Octavia Butler's Dawn

    1552 Words  | 4 Pages

    might seem to be addressing different topics, but the books have a common theme, and when the two works are analyzed in-depth, the parallels become readily apparent. The Matrix is about the clash between machines and humanity, while Dawn is about an alien race that decides to trade the survival of humanity for the genetic traits they can use from the human species. But at the heart of both struggles, there is a main character set between two startlingly different Matrices, or patterns of existing,

  • Rebecca Cammisa's Documentary, Which Way Home

    2227 Words  | 5 Pages

    very dangerous and sometimes life threatening. It is understandable when adults are trying to risk their life in search of a better life but when minors take the same attempt and risk their life what are we supposed to do as parents or family? In the film Which Way Home director Rebecca Cammisa shows the journey that many unaccompanied minors attempt with the hope of migrating across the Mexican-U.S. border for a better life is actually a potentially fatal passage. “Each year, the Border Patrol apprehends

  • Change In Heart Of Darkness

    2233 Words  | 5 Pages

    Each journey up the tropical river is symbolic of a voyage of discovery into the dark heart of man, and an encounter with his capacity for evil. In such a voyage the characters regress to their basic instincts as they assimilate themselves into an alien world with its primeval dangers. In Heart of Darkness, going up the river is described to be like: “travelling back to the earliest beginnings of the world, when vegetation rioted on the earth and the big trees were kings. An empty stream, a

  • Passionate Learning

    1843 Words  | 4 Pages

    love or indifference.....It is the phenomenon sometimes called 'alienation from self.' In it's advanced stage, we no longer answer the telephone, because someone might want something; that we could say no without drowning in self-reproach is an idea alien to this game. -Joan Didion, "On Self-Respect" Last Spring, as part of a senior project, I took Tai Chi classes and researched how meditation is used in mind/body medicine. I read several books by doctors who use meditation as a form of healing

  • The Representation of Women in Some Like It Hot and Alien 3

    829 Words  | 2 Pages

    It Hot and Alien 3 This essay will be about how women are and have been represented in films in the past and how they are represented nowadays. I will be looking at the roles and representations of women in 'Some Like It Hot' and 'Alien 3'. 'Some Like It Hot' was made in 1958. Marilyn Monroe starts in the comedy as Sugar Cane who is a very feminine musician. 'Alien 3' on the other hand was made 40 years after and is a sci-fi horror. Sigourney Weaver is the star of the film and plays the

  • Third World Short Story as National Allegory

    3197 Words  | 7 Pages

    allegory; the story of the private individual destiny is always an allegory of the embattled situation of the public third world culture and society. Jameson also speculates that the disproportionate ratio of the political to the personal makes such texts alien to western readers. Click here to return to the Author's homepage As a Marxist critic, Jameson is actually investing a positive value in the literatures of the Third World and chastizing the First World readers and writers on account of their literary