What a fun sequel! Let me know your thoughts below. 👽 KL FREE Patreon Reactions: kaiielle.com/free + Links & FAQ: kaiielle.com/links + My Reaction Library: bit.ly/3uyllWK + Movie Suggestion Form: forms.gle/XZVvZhfhwFzsDpRU9
The way that Newt says “Ah-fermative”, has a callback in Terminator 2. When John Conner is teaching Arnold how to talk more like a person, he says “you don’t say “ah-fermative” man, you say, no problemo.” He says “ah-fermative” exactly like Newt. It could be unrelated, but I like to think it was purposeful since they’re both James Cameron.
Do yourself two favors: 1. Don’t watch Alien 3. You won’t like where they take things. 2. Do watch the extended version of Aliens. You’ll love the added character development. 👽
FINALLY!!! Someone recognizes Michael Biehn as Kyle Reese. It is dumbfounding how many reactors immediately recognize Bill Paxton AND Lance Henrikson (granted he’s pretty recognizable) but completely miss Biehn. I’ve always wondered if he was such a great actor that people just see the character and not the actor, or if he was such a forgettable actor that people just don’t remember him from film to film.
My favorite bit in this film, is the tone shift in how the marines treat Ripley after they see how dangerous the aliens are, and after she rams a combat vehicle through a wall to get them out. It was just so satisfying to me 🤣 When she's explaining the threat at first, they scoff and laugh at her, even roll their eyes at the civvie. Then they see the threat first hand, and they're like "yep! ok lady, we will listen INTENTLY to what you have to say about them, with no sarcasm or scoffing." It was a great bit of subtle storytelling in my opinion. They went from "pssh, this bitch is a joke." To "this bitch survived those fuckers?! Ok so she's our resident expert, I will listen to ALL her advice on how to NOT DIE to these things."
It's the moment when the movie stops being "Nobody Listens to the Smart Lady, Part 2". Which isn't to say it isn't great before that, but it is *incredibly* frustrating, as it's meant to be. Hicks is in charge; shit's gonna get done right. Which means Ripley's in charge.
In the Director's Cut there's a scene where Burke tells Ripley about Amanda. Since Ripley was frozen in cryosleep floating in space for 57 years, Amanda grew up, grew old, and died at 60+ years of age due to health issues. So Ripley's shown dealing with the guilt of having "abandoned" Amanda even if it was by accident, and that's also why she latched on to Newt so quickly and so intensely.
Well, the company TELLS Ripley that Amanda died of old age, but can we trust them? If Amanda spent a lot of time in hypersleep too, she could actually still be alive and they could be reunited - the company obviously didn’t tell ripley about Amanda’s adventure on Sevastopol…
@@Tensen01 What's "self insert" about it? And IMO five minutes of what you consider fan fiction trump the entirety of the travesties that came after Alien 3. The game's the trilogy's only worthy successor I've encountered so far. But yeah, although everything with the franchise's name is technically canon, tastes differ on what one individually considers canon. My canon consists of Alien, Aliens, Alien 3 and Isolation, and I'm still sad that Neil Blomkamp's sequel with Ripley, Newt and Hicks never got made because Ridley Scott wanted his Prometheus crap to hog the spotlight.
Yes, this is one movie where the director’s cut adds a lot to the movie. It’s not always the case, but this film is made even better with the added scenes.
@@Zorros2ndCousinTwiceRemoved Actually, going by a few of Ridley Scott's interviews, it was FOX itself rather than Ridley Scott. Scott was actually interested in producing it; of course, Scott had also stated that he intends to retain creative control of the franchise until he dies. Blomkamp's film was put on hold pending Alien: Covenant, and Blomkamp himself moved on to other projects. Blomkamp's project never developed beyond a simple outline before FOX pulled the plug. So, I guess you can be the judge on who's at fault for Blomkamp's project not seeing the light of day.
I got to meet Jenette Goldstein (who played Vasquez) at a 50mm screening of Aliens and The Abyss, where James Cameron spoke between the films. She was sitting right in front of me for the whole film! And during intermission, I got to speak with her and told her how much I loved her character. She was surprised that I recognized her and was apparently the only one who did.
Kool...... She has a record for looking different in movies..... Vasquez - Aliens, Janelle - Terminator 2, Patty Jean - The Presido, A Detective in Lethal Weapon 2 (she gets blown up on diving Board), and a mother with kids in Titanic.......
Jeanette Goldstein is an absolute chameleon of an actor, and whenever she shows up in a movie, it's a mark in that movie's favor. She's also gone on to do great things outside of Hollywood, but I'd love to see her return to acting in a big way!
I remember a good ten or so years ago there was a screening of this movie at an Alamo Drafthouse. They handed out cap guns to everyone with instructions that we could only fire them "when there's a monster on screen." And of course some people fired their cap guns at the aliens, but most of us fired our cap guns at Burke
Ripley's "Get away from her you BITCH!" is one of the most badass lines in moviedom. Carrie Henn (Newt) left acting to become a teacher. She did a really great job, but she followed her dream.
If I recall the casting director was visiting US Air Force bases in the UK where the film was to be shot looking for a young American girl and discovered Carrie at a school linked to RAFLakenheath where her father was based. One of the things that landed her the role was the strength of her scream !
@@okeefe757 that’s right re the accent, it was another point in her favour, since she didn’t have a recognisable accent it was more futuristic - also because she was new to acting she didn’t smile after every line, but the kids who’d done commercials did smile
Nominated for 7 Oscars: Best Actress, Sigourney Weaver Best Sound Editing Best Sound Mixing Best Film Editing, Ray Lovejoy Best Original Score, James Horner Best Production Design, Peter Lamont Best Visual Effects, Stan Winston, Robert Skotak and John Richardson. It won Best Visual Effects and Sound Editing. It was a box office and critical success, making $193 million dollars ($740 million dollars today) against an $18 million dollar budget. It's now considered to be the best Sci-fi Action movie ever made.
While I agree that this is one of the best, if not the best, sci-fi action movies ever made, I think The Matrix would be in the conversation also. Unlike The Matrix, this movie is definitely more substance over style, and the complete absence of CGI in Aliens may make it always take the top spot. The fact that it is a sequel is just icing on the cake. The Matrix would be a stronger contender if it had no sequels.
I don't think you can criticise the Matrix for it's sequels. Aliens has a bunch of sequels and they are all trash. Also saying that the Matrix is style over substance is absolutely wrong. Aliens had a military boot camp, the Matrix had a philosophy reading list.
@@fallofcamelot I really don’t mind the Matrix sequels, I just feel that the first movie as a standalone would be stronger. It really ends perfectly IMO. Also, I think the Matrix is MORE substance than style, it’s just that it has so much style that it can sometimes distract from the amazing philosophy. It’s like trying a pick a favorite child for me, I love both. I stand by my practical FX argument though, it just speaks to me better.
It should have got an award for the costumes and design and armour it was so far ahead of its time and the military in space motif has never been done better than in any other movie
Aliens feels like having a perfect five course dinner. By the end credits I am completely full up and totally satisfied and also ready for a good nap. I am thankful I got to feast on such a movie as Aliens.
Your reaction when they were trying to leave in the apc and that alien sticks his nose into the door. Your anxiety just sorta noped you outta there for a second. Lol
This was by far the best sequel ever made to a movie, I'm dating myself but i remember skipping school to go see this movie a few times. Ripley is the original badass when it comes to action stars, i loved her in these movies, she was put in situations where she did not want to be, but stepped up and took care of business when it was needed. One of my fav lines in the movie is when Bishop called them all in to tell them about the bad news about the reactor going critical and Hudson's reaction was "that's a switch" for bad news was funny. but in the end with all of Hudson's BS being afraid and not wanting to do anything he stood up and went down flighting. Truly one of the best movies ever made period........ a quick trivia question easy for Sci Fi Fans, what actor was the only one to get killed by a Predator, Alien, Terminator, easy peasy
The director's cut is worth a watch now that you've seen the theatrical version. It has more scenes about Ripley learning about her daughter, Hicks and Ripley interacting more with each other (i.e. flirting), more scenes about the colony and families, etc. Nothing that makes it better than the theatre release. Just fan service.
Yes, I think the theatrical version is the better cut and I'm glad she started with it, but the directors cut is interesting. The scenes at the colony play very differently, for example, because of the before-and-after effect you get from seeing it pre-invasion.
@@kaiielle I think they did his character perfectly. Ripley being sceptic about him, he looks more untrustworthy after a marine gives him tools to disect a facehugger (with no emotion, BECAUSE he is an android but the movie wants us to think bad of him), then he instantly redeemes himself when he tells on Burke's plan. You can see the instant trust of Ripley, then at the end we all know he saved them.
This was a great reaction. The Burke and Bishop misdirects both worked on you (and that's not great BECAUSE it fooled you, it's great that the director's intended misdirect worked and you weren't overanalyzing it looking for the twists). And pretty much every jump scare got you. 🤣 I like Aliens better, but that's just cause I like action better than horror. Both are really good films.
As a veteran I can tell you that a leader doesn’t have to give reasons for their orders, all that is required is that they execute them. Having said that, it’s also important for the troops to have all the right information before they deploy.
A leader doesn't have to, but a good one does. If you haven't time, that's one thing, and there's infosec, but otherwise it's a sign of respect. You keep your people as informed as you can.
There's a sliding scale where more information causes sensory overload where too much thinking paralyzes people in high stress situations like combat. Trust the people giving orders to know what you need to and are relaying what you actually need to know.
Cameron has said that this film in an analogy of the Vietnam War. You have the Marines representing the Americans - overconfident in their technology and firepower, convinced this mission will be over quickly and they will easily win. Once they get to the planet (representing Vietnam) they are quickly overwhelmed by the aliens (representing the Viet Cong) who are not as technologically advanced as the Marines but they are stronger and tougher then the Marines thought, and they have the home-field advantage. They quickly make the marines realize that they were not prepared for this.
Loved your reaction Kaiielle! ❤ Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) is definitely a badass in a cast of badasses. It sux to see any of the heroes die but Vasquez's death bums me out the most. Michael Biehn (Hicks) is great in any movie he's in. The best part of the movie for me is the badass mom battle at the end 👽
Couple things about this movie. Pvt. Vasquez was played by Jenette Goldstein, the foster mom in Terminator 2. Bill Paxton was one of the punks in the beginning of T1 and Bishop (Lance Henriksen) plays the one of the detectives. Reese, you obviously know. The actor who played Burke, his mother cheered in the theater when his character got wasted. In the directors cut, Ripley had a daughter, who aged and died. While cut for the film, it really enhances the relationship Ripley has with Newt. The Halo video game series (especially the first) was heavily inspired by this movie. I don't know if you are into comics but there is an Aliens vs Predator vs Terminator crossover comic book that's worth checking out. Last, don't watch Aliens 3. Aliens, Like T2 is a perfect wrap of for the series. However, if you want to watch Aliens vs Predator, either reaction or on your own time, go ahead because it doesn't really ruin the canon of the series (think of it like a "what if" which is fun)
This is my favorite movie of all time. Vasquez is the ultimate bad a** Her gun says Adidos. Lets Rock definition of 80s but awesome. The late great Bill Paxton has one of the best death scenes, he went out as a trooper. Also when Hicks tells Vasquez forget him he is gone, she does the same thing for Hicks when Hudson is dying. Vasquez (Jennette Goldstein) it is John Conners adoptive mother in Terminator 2. Also. When the computer says 15 minutes it is exactly 15 minutes till the explosion. Yes I timed it.
About Ripley's motivation for "going back out there", it can be summed up as- The "nightmare" will never be over for Ripley until she knows every last one of those creatures is dead.
I love Paul Reiser's performance as Burke. One of the best corporate sleaze bags ever. At the time this movie came out Paul Reiser was only known as a likeable guy in comedy movies, so this part was an amazing case of casting against type. People watching this for the first time back then didn't realize he was a villain.
@@chrisdavis408 Yes, but it makes it all the sadder that Newt and Hicks don’t survive the crash in A3. I just wanted Ripley to have a little bit of rest, romance and family, but nope. 😢
Thank goodness for you. You're one of the first and only reactors that has talked about what "Alien" is, as opposed to what "Aliens" is. One is not better than the other. They are two different genres!
Great reaction, found your channel from this one but I'm definitely subscribing. So glad you included my very favorite little moment, maybe one of the absolute best bits of wordless acting of all time. At 36:44, you can see Ripley give herself one brief moment to feel all the insane fear she rightfully feels, walking into this nightmare after everything she's already been through. Then you see her take a deep breath, clench her jaw, and put all that fear aside so she can give everything she's got to save Newt. Goddamn, Sigourney, what a performance.
"It looks like a glitter bomb went off in here" -- sometimes you get in sync with someone so well that they notice glitter like you do Kaiielle understands me. That slow zoom when incorrectly making a prediction about Burke shows your good editing skill, good humor, good humility... chef's kiss all around. Solid casual self-roast. I notice when people over-edit, and what I notice here was very chill mature professional editing. You're getting very good at this! "I'm already feeling goosebumps" -- and that was a miniature model of the base. All analog special effects. An art form and expertise we might lose due to lack of demand... yet one so potent that it can elicit a biochemical response in the host organism. The moment of combat that became too intense and forced you away from your computer -- I haven't seen you do that in a reaction before, and you're tough, so that's very telling. The power of old fashioned filmmaking - just guys in suits with fast camera cuts - can be more intense than a modern CG battle with more details. Size (number of characters, number of guns, area of the battlefield) isn't everything. Talent and luck come first! The purity of a TOTALLY UNSPOILED reaction is a sight to behold. Concurrently, this is your kind of movie, so you're really into it, enjoying it, and having all the reactions you're meant to have. It's like we get to look in the mirror and see ourselves enjoying something beloved the way it was meant to be enjoyed. I needed to note this observation because it's positive feedback that your plan to stay strictly unspoiled is working. Teaser: the extras of this movie reveal a behind-the-scenes detail that I think about EVERY time I see this movie. Teaser: the special edition of this movie is optional just like the T2 one was, BUT they both reveal important plot details that I now think about EVERY time I see any edition of the movies. Teaser: again like with T2, James Cameron didn't retain ownership of this franchise that he is largely responsible for capitalizing, so the rest of the movies are randomly incoherent visions. You've already heard that, but I'm bringing it up because I believe in reactions, not not-reactions, so I still say to watch all of the movies in due time. I concede that more popular movies do get more views on reaction channels, so I support skipping things for business purposes, but if you ever FEEL like watching these sequels, they ARE watchable despite what the superfan sentiment might be, so go for it. Bonus note: compare the unorganized sequels of the 80s and 90s to the financial behemoth that is the MCU -- long-term investment into central planning clearly pays off. Nobody wants a TV show that's totally incoherent between episodes, either. I love your observation that Bishop was presented to be scary, yet never actually did anything scary, so why were we scared? Not only does the movie convince us, it exploits our baser instincts. Fear of past trauma, stereotyping, prejudice, ignoring evidence... we're told that the old android's dangerous bugs were fixed, it's 50 years later and every ship has an android, they're incapable of hurting people, there is no evidence to the contrary... and yet we don't believe it until the last 5 minutes. I love your crush on Michael Biehn because he has clearly been underappreciated, so he more than deserves some 2023 crushes. The YT algorithm is funneling Michael Biehn interviews to me on the right side of the screen as I type. Let's get that Michael Biehn hit counter up. Michael Biehn. Michael Biehn. Biehn, Michael. #MichaelBiehn Here's your alien emoji! 👽 I don't entirely love following commands, but I fully support your end-of-video mini game, and I think this is providing interesting and useful data to you. I would be curious to see what % of comments meet this highest bar of dedication among the academy of viewers, and what other trends follow along. I worked on this comment through the night as I started and stopped the reaction while multitasking. Thank you for reading and hearting so many comments. I'm still on the #Kaiielle150kSubscribers2024 train! 👽
Good job putting together that Michael Biehn who played Dwayne Hicks here was from The Terminator but did you also realize that 2 other actors in Aliens were also in The Terminator? Bill Paxton (Hudson) played one of the 3 gang members Arnold first approached fully naked who pulled switch blades on him when he demanded one of the guy's clothes. The actor who played the Android Bishop is Lance Henriksen who was one of the police officers at the station Reese was interrogated.
@kaiielle It's strange people have trouble identifying Michael Biehn but I think it's because Reese had a mullet and Hicks hair is short and spiked plus his voice is a bit deeper here most likely due to being a solider not a resistance fighter just winging it.
@Mike Swisher Yes James Cameron reuses actors he is familiar with from previous films. He brought in Bill Paxton again for his role in Titanic. Writer, producer director John Hughes did the same with Molly Ringwald and Anthony Michael Hall reusing them in multiple films. Same with John Carpenter.
Fun trivia! Bill Paxton was also one of the punks that Arnold kills in the beginning of Terminator (the one with the mohawk) - and Vasquez was John Connor's foster mom in Terminator 2 (She was also in Cameron's Titanic! Fun little family that Cameron cultivated in the 80s. On a side note, Paul Reiser's (Burke) mother cheered his death at the screening because she hated his character so much. BTW - the director's cut has a scene where Burke tells Ripley about her daughter, and she breaks down saying RIpley promised to be back for her birthday. Which gives more weight (at least for me) how Ripley interacts and connects with Newt. Sorry, I'm geeking.
This was such an awesome react. Thank you for sharing! Yeah, I loved that Ripley was a badass in the first movie and she got to be equally badass here and walks away with a chosen-family; a badass daughter, a loyal and gorgeous partner and a trustworthy uncle-android-friend! Love the chemistry between all of them. (Which is also why I LOATHED Alien3...)
I love the intensity of this movie. I remember seeing it in the theater with a female friend of mine who swore she could handle it. She didn't, and I ended up with several puncture holes in my arm. 😅👽👽
The pacing of this movie is absolutely impeccable. And every action is motivated. I love how Hicks doubles back to grab the fire extinguisher on his way to the medlab. Or how it's not just coincidence that the colony is wiped out right after Ripley recounts the events to the company. Or how they find the colonists using PDT's. Everything in the story flows naturally. Nothing seems forced or contrived.
In a deleted scene, Ripley encounters Burke, cocooned, on her way to finding Newt. He says, "Please help me!" and after a few seconds pause she hands him a grenade. It is hilarious in a morbid sort of way, perhaps unintentionally. Maybe that's why it was cut. Not sure.
I seem to remember that Carrie Henn (Newt) made them repeat that "falling down the slide" scene, at 34:55, like four or five times because she was having so much fun. I love this frickin' movie.
👽Great reaction KL! Enjoyed how into it you got and the epic jumpscares in this (with even some pushing back from the desk! 😆👍) . The use of practical FX and miniatures has always amazed me. Believe it or not, the powerloader exoskeleton (that Ripley wears to defeat the Xeno Queen) is actually a DUDE IN A SUIT (with Sigourney harnessed to his chest) in some shots!!! And the Xeno Queen is a lifesized puppet with 2 people laying on their sides back-to-back in her torso controlling her arms!! SO COOL! Anyway, thanks for the fun time :) 👽
I don't know if anyone has mentioned it yet and I don't know if you realized it but there are two people in this movie who were in the first Terminator movie. Hicks of course and Bishop. Bishop was the cop in the police station who was trying to get ahold of Sarah Connor in the first Terminator movie.
Love this movie and the directors cut is the version I enjoy the most. More backstory for Ripley about her daughter, more marines interaction, a d the final fight is more personal because it is two mothers battling for their children. One to protect her, one for revenge... if you believe a xenomorph can have such feelings, if any. 👽
The director's cut / special edition is just the original version of the film before the studio made them cut it down so cinemas could get an extra screening in each day. It's my favourite version by far, too.
@@Xoferif Technically it's the Special Edition. Both versions are director's cuts. All movies are cut down to fit a time slot. There are always scenes cut that were great, but either didn't fit the movie's pace, or made it run long. Cutting it down to under 2.5 hrs was as much Cameron's decision as it was the studio's. In fact a 2h17m runtime was considered long for movies. Most movies were around the 2 hour mark. The same is true for The Abyss. Unfortunately, Cameron decided to cut an entire subplot out of that movie, which made a huge impact on the movie overall. In retrospect Cameron admits he could've kept the subplot in there if he had tried.
Great reaction video. The next time you watch this film check out the extended version. Several important scenes (one should particularly be of interest to you). Enjoy!
Others will likely have mentioned this already, but in the Special Edition of Aliens, near the start, Burke tells Ellen Ripley that her daughter Amanda passed away while Ripley was in hypersleep.
👍 Right on, good job. Thanks for doing this movie justice because this is the best reaction to this movie out of all the ones I’ve seen and I’ve seen a few lol. I’d watch a movie with you anytime!
Fun fact: James Cameron was a college dropout working as a truck driver and making scifi models in his basement. And then he saw Star Wars and realized that was what he was made to do. He got his start in Hollywood working for Roger Corman thanks to a 10-minute VFX demo of a woman in an exoskeleton fighting a robot, with it seeming that elements of that idea became parts of his first two big movies. He's a sfx genius with a background in B movies where he had to make the most of what he had. He used a lot of less detailed alien suits to allow more movement, cutting in closeups for the details. And clever techniques like the jumping facehugger actually having been pulled away fast and the film reversed, or a scene of an alien running through a AC duct thats actually the actor bing lowered down thecstructure and only pretending to be running which makes it look like it is unnaturally fast and sgile. He is also the "man most directly responsible" for the movie industry embracing 3D, which he helped invent pushed the adoption of so he could use the tech to make Avatar.
I'm sure someone said this already but when Paul Reiser(Burke)'s mom watched it with him in the theater she stood up and cheered when his character was killed since Burke was such a tool in the movie. :)
Saw at the theater and still say Aliens was the most exciting movie I ever saw at the theater! Saw Alien at the Drive In when it came out, that’s where it was showing in my small Texas town, anyway thanks I’m glad I discovered your channel!
In the Director's Cut, they showed that Ripley had a daughter who died of old age before her return. It was no dream; Ripley was really lost for 57 years.
This has high re-watchability! Aliens came out a LONG time ago, but still holds up! Memorable characters, simple, but compelling plot, etc etc. I think Aliens, moreso than Alien, really launched a franchise. Cameron, of course, was the visionary, but Gale Ann Hurd (producer) did a ton of work to make his vision happen, I think she deserves a load of credit. Great reaction, you caught all the right notes, figured out a lot of plot points, and enjoyed the ride! If you ever get the chance to see any cut scenes, or other extras, they are fun to see! Thanks KL for a great review!!! 👽
I'm happy I got to watch this one in the cinema. No other sci-fi action movie I can think of have replicated the gritty look, and feeling of dread, of Aliens. It's such a unique and awesome film. ..But I do wish they had included the scene where Ripley got the news about her daughter. It would've given the scenes where she's taking care of Newt even more meaning.
Not sure if you knew this or not, but the video game character Samus Aren from the series Metroid is based off of Ellen Ripley partially. This movie probably had a lot to do with that. Her arch nemesis in the games is called "Ridley" like Ridley Scott (the creator of Alien)
Check out the vampire movie, NEAR DARK (1987), three of the ALIENS actors went on to do that flick (Bill Paxton, Jenette Goldstein and Lance Henriksen).
I forgot to mention, Vasquez was actually in Terminator 2 as well. She played Johns foster mother. She's also been in a number of other well known movies as well.
And Vasquez was a cop in Lethal Weapon and John's foster mom in Terminator 2. I'd wager Drake and Vasquez are carrying something in the 50 cal range. Did you watch all the way to the end? Did you hear the skittering of little alien feet? And the 57 years was not a dream. Looks like you saw the theatrical version, which cut the part about her learning the fate of her daughter, among other things. The soldiers laughing at Ripley in the power loader was all good. Their facial expressions leading up to it were obviously of instant admiration, as if to say, "Well look at this." That laugh was "Damn she's cool." Totally not what they were expecting. I know, because it's exactly what I remember thinking when I saw it. Remember, it was another female that called her Snow White. Frost got burned and fell down to a lower level. He was carrying the ammo bag that also was burning, and dropped when the flames hit him. You are right in that the technology was better. The lessons learned from the first went directly into the second. Still, it's amazing what they were doing with practical effects.
Great Reaction and congrats on watching all the Alien movies, the game Alien Isolation's main character is Ellen Ripley'd Daughter, and she is mentioned in the Director's cut
You are right about this film being Terminator esk. Vasquez if you recall was the foster mother to John Connor in T-2. She was the one who stabbed Todd through the head when he was drinking out of the milk carton. Lol. I had a feeling that you would enjoy this film and seeing all of the familiar faces. Keep up the great work. 👽
Other Terminator (one) Alumni....... She Mentioned Michael Biehn = Reese Bill Paxton was one of the punks by the telescope..... Lance Hendrickson was one of the Detectives.....
Love this movie and your reaction it was great. I too love that Hicks and Newt survived so she wasn't alone this time :). Shame they didn't make any more Alien movies after this one...
at 9:02 they are laughing because they underestimated her, she took them by surprise. They probably saw her as being just another tag along corporate advisor but then she wanted to get dirty and do work. When women do that intentionally it tends to impress because its not something a lot of women want to do, volunteer to do grunt work. I say this as someone who was in a combat unit in the Army for many years and it always surprised me when women insisted on going to the shooting range with us or go on brutal ruck marches through the countryside because most just don't do that.
As one of the producers David Giler (sp?) would say, Alien was the Haunted House, and Aliens was the Roller Coaster. And you'd love the director's cut of this one. More character development and you get more info on Ripley as well as other things. A great watch. And in this at the end, when Newt grabs Ripley after the queen is shot into space and calls her Mommy - I lose it every time. Oh, if you like Michael Biehn, he's great in the movie Tombstone with Kurt Russell AND Bill Paxton.
I never realized it before, but Jenette Goldstein's very first film role was in this movie. She absolutely knocked it out of the park. 31:52 I imagine she probably wanted to make sure he stood trial for it, and maybe use that to expose the company.
The story is that Paul Riser went to the debut of the film with his mother. When the alien killed him. She stood up and clapped. That's good acting! I was such an a**hole that my mother cheered my death.
Credit to Ferro: as soon as she saw the Alien behind her, she immediately went for her pistol. Not that it helped her, but you have to respect her defiance.
I've just realised it was god damn Vasquez all along - She started shooting in the nest and encouraged others - Bam, the nuclear reactor ruptured, we have four hours. Then she got hurt and Gorman had to come back for her - Bam, the grenade goes off, Newt falls in, we meet a Queen (who whould've died in an explosion anyway). So, yeah. God damn you, Vaquez! ;)
Nice reaction, as usual. I'm glad you enjoyed the film. 👽 5:50 "Burke probably has good intentions." Yeah, I'm--sure he does... 😏 8:00 Fun fact--the actress who plays Vasquez, here, also played Janelle Voight, John's foster mother in _Terminator 2: Judgment Day._ The actress' name is Jenette Goldstein. James Cameron had a short list of actors and actresses he liked to put into as many of his movies as possible, and considering how they turn out, I can't see how anyone could complain. 🙂 8:55 A small detail I think Cameron may have gotten right purely on accident--most members of the military I'm aware of, particularly the Marines, here--consider your value to the team to be judged by how useful you are. If you _do_ something, you're good. Grab some boxes and help move them to storage. Grab some trash cans and help dump them. Whatever. The initial placid response to Ripley's inquiry if there was anything she could do of repeating that right back to her, then treating her in a much warmer and more friendly manner once she shows she can help, that's pretty true-to-life as far as I know. She expressed an interest in helping, which is the absolute best thing a civilian can do, and followed through on that by showing she was capable as well as willing. So, to answer your wondering-aloud, the laughing was a good kind of laughing. She showed she was willing and capable of helping out, had no qualms about getting her hands dirty, and took the initiative to ask rather than having to be asked. She became their best friend after that, and you notice who pretty much the only person who gave her crap after that moment was Hudson, who was just a putz anyway. They stopped treating her with disrespect. Later, when Ripley directs them by headphone, they don't complain or sound exasperated or anything. She'd earned their respect. Something to remember if you're ever surrounded by military people--help out. You might not be able to help with "the mission", but you can grab stuff and get it out of the way. You can help set up chairs. Whatever. On a whole 'nother topic, the power loader is my favorite effect from the movie. I don't mean any others are "bad"; I just like the elegance of it. How the Queen was brought to life is simply staggering, and I love that as much as anyone. I just like the simple elegance of the power loader a little more. It's a suit being worn by a bodybuilder, and Sigourney Weaver is standing on his feet. Much of the time it was supported by overhead rigs, and they had to practice quite a bit to get in sync enough to make it look like Weaver was actually in control. 33:30 Whatever else could be said about Hudson, he wasn't a coward. He was scared, of course, as any rational person would be, but whenever he was needed he didn't hesitate. That's one thing I like about how Cameron portrayed the Marines. No matter what else, they didn't hesitate. They weren't cowards. Even Gorman. He may have been pompous and have an over-inflated sense of self-importance, but he wasn't a coward. He refused to leave a Marine behind; if he couldn't get Vasquez out, he was going to go out right alongside her. 38:30 I always liked that part; Ripley and the Queen developed a truce. Each knew that the other was quite capable, and quite willing, to decimate them, so to protect themselves and their brood, they agreed to a cease-fire. Theeeennnnn the Queen went against it and tried to have a facehugger go after Ripley, but still. 🙂 41:20 You thought Ripley was going to die, and that isn't an uncommon reaction from reactors these days, even knowing the rest of the sequels are things. Imagine, then, how it was back in the day when this had just come out, and for all anyone knew this would be the last movie. And in an era when "movie franchises" wasn't really a thing, so there was no expectation of any more movies, thus it being perfectly reasonable that Ripley and Newt were about to bite it on that catwalk. 🙂 45:20 I definitely agree that this movie is wholly different in tone and "feel" than the first one. I really have to give James Cameron credit for that. He knew he wasn't Ridley Scott. He knew he could never recapture what Scott had done, so he didn't try. He made his own movie, with his own sensibilities. I think that was the best choice, and if there's one light-switch-moment that made this movie as good on its own as the first, that was it. 49:20 Carrie Henn played Newt, and I think she was the absolute best choice. She could have had a top-tier career if she'd wanted to, but shortly after this movie she retired. Cameron never had a single problem with her. Her acting skill was phenomenal, and she was never scared by the actual alien puppets or the sets. She took direction well, and by all accounts was a great addition to the cast. She was the clear exception to the rule about never working with kids. I contrast that with the character Danny Torrence in _The Shining,_ played by Danny Lloyd. The young boy who was around Henn's age when he filmed that movie. To Kubrick's credit, he did everything he could to make the young boy have a good time, to the point he didn't know he was filming a horror movie until later in life. I do appreciate Kubrick for that, but Cameron never had to worry about that with Henn. She understood it was all fake, and never had an issue. The closest thing Cameron had to a "problem" with Henn was the scene of her sliding down the thing away from Hicks and Ripley. Henn purposefully messed up the takes so she could keep sliding down the thing. When Cameron realized, he promised her she could play on the thing all she wanted after finishing the scene.
My first visit to your channel (anything with Alien/s gets my attention) Great reaction vid and vicariously enjoyed your jump scare moments as Ive seen (and still enjoy) this movie Sooooo many times that I know the script well. Its a classic movie that puts modern movies in the shade James Cameron, (and all the creatives involved HR Giger, Syd mead Ron Cobb etc) all masters coming together created a perfectly balanced movie that has remained unsurpassed by modern alternatives (ps there is a directors cut which I prefer and has alot more footage that Cameron had to leave out for reason of brevity). I enjoyed Alien3 but its not everyone's cuppa the only other film that is on the same level and has parallel elements is ......Predator which if you haven't viewed is seriously suggest you do its a blast! Anyway looking forward to viewing the rest of your vids.
I'm glad you watched the theatrical version instead of the extended version. The extended version is fine, and reveals some additional information about Ripley, but for a _FIRST_ viewing I always recommend this version and then the extended version at a later time. The girl that plays Newt, Carrie Henn, never made another movie and is now a school teacher, which is very fitting.
What a fun sequel! Let me know your thoughts below. 👽 KL
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The way that Newt says “Ah-fermative”, has a callback in Terminator 2. When John Conner is teaching Arnold how to talk more like a person, he says
“you don’t say “ah-fermative” man, you say, no problemo.”
He says “ah-fermative” exactly like Newt. It could be unrelated, but I like to think it was purposeful since they’re both James Cameron.
Do yourself two favors:
1. Don’t watch Alien 3. You won’t like where they take things.
2. Do watch the extended version of Aliens. You’ll love the added character development.
👽
@namelessjedi2242 I agree on both points. For me, the Alien series ends here.
FINALLY!!! Someone recognizes Michael Biehn as Kyle Reese. It is dumbfounding how many reactors immediately recognize Bill Paxton AND Lance Henrikson (granted he’s pretty recognizable) but completely miss Biehn. I’ve always wondered if he was such a great actor that people just see the character and not the actor, or if he was such a forgettable actor that people just don’t remember him from film to film.
My favorite bit in this film, is the tone shift in how the marines treat Ripley after they see how dangerous the aliens are, and after she rams a combat vehicle through a wall to get them out. It was just so satisfying to me 🤣 When she's explaining the threat at first, they scoff and laugh at her, even roll their eyes at the civvie. Then they see the threat first hand, and they're like "yep! ok lady, we will listen INTENTLY to what you have to say about them, with no sarcasm or scoffing." It was a great bit of subtle storytelling in my opinion. They went from "pssh, this bitch is a joke." To "this bitch survived those fuckers?! Ok so she's our resident expert, I will listen to ALL her advice on how to NOT DIE to these things."
The most terrifying monster imaginable: a mid-level executive.
You can see by the way Hicks looks at Ripley when they first get on the drop ship that he's the only one who read her report.
I think he’s prayin she’s crazy but suspects she isn’t.
“I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit, it’s the only way to be sure” is my favourite moment, great exchange between Ripley and Hicks
There's also another nice exchange between Ripley and Hicks after he's wounded , but it's in the extended version.
My friend: I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
Me: Dude, it was one tiny little spider.
It's the moment when the movie stops being "Nobody Listens to the Smart Lady, Part 2". Which isn't to say it isn't great before that, but it is *incredibly* frustrating, as it's meant to be. Hicks is in charge; shit's gonna get done right. Which means Ripley's in charge.
In the Director's Cut there's a scene where Burke tells Ripley about Amanda. Since Ripley was frozen in cryosleep floating in space for 57 years, Amanda grew up, grew old, and died at 60+ years of age due to health issues. So Ripley's shown dealing with the guilt of having "abandoned" Amanda even if it was by accident, and that's also why she latched on to Newt so quickly and so intensely.
Well, the company TELLS Ripley that Amanda died of old age, but can we trust them? If Amanda spent a lot of time in hypersleep too, she could actually still be alive and they could be reunited - the company obviously didn’t tell ripley about Amanda’s adventure on Sevastopol…
@@HistoritorJimaldus Because it never happened. Good game or not it's basically glorified self-insert fan fiction.
@@Tensen01 What's "self insert" about it? And IMO five minutes of what you consider fan fiction trump the entirety of the travesties that came after Alien 3. The game's the trilogy's only worthy successor I've encountered so far.
But yeah, although everything with the franchise's name is technically canon, tastes differ on what one individually considers canon. My canon consists of Alien, Aliens, Alien 3 and Isolation, and I'm still sad that Neil Blomkamp's sequel with Ripley, Newt and Hicks never got made because Ridley Scott wanted his Prometheus crap to hog the spotlight.
Yes, this is one movie where the director’s cut adds a lot to the movie. It’s not always the case, but this film is made even better with the added scenes.
@@Zorros2ndCousinTwiceRemoved Actually, going by a few of Ridley Scott's interviews, it was FOX itself rather than Ridley Scott. Scott was actually interested in producing it; of course, Scott had also stated that he intends to retain creative control of the franchise until he dies. Blomkamp's film was put on hold pending Alien: Covenant, and Blomkamp himself moved on to other projects. Blomkamp's project never developed beyond a simple outline before FOX pulled the plug.
So, I guess you can be the judge on who's at fault for Blomkamp's project not seeing the light of day.
I got to meet Jenette Goldstein (who played Vasquez) at a 50mm screening of Aliens and The Abyss, where James Cameron spoke between the films. She was sitting right in front of me for the whole film! And during intermission, I got to speak with her and told her how much I loved her character. She was surprised that I recognized her and was apparently the only one who did.
That's cool!
Kool...... She has a record for looking different in movies.....
Vasquez - Aliens, Janelle - Terminator 2, Patty Jean - The Presido, A Detective in Lethal Weapon 2 (she gets blown up on diving Board), and a mother with kids in Titanic.......
@@CoastalNomad She's also a blonde vampire in "Near Dark" with Aliens co-stars Bill Paxton and Lance Henrisken.
Jeanette Goldstein is an absolute chameleon of an actor, and whenever she shows up in a movie, it's a mark in that movie's favor. She's also gone on to do great things outside of Hollywood, but I'd love to see her return to acting in a big way!
@@Madbandit77 I swear I thought I was the only one who remembered "Near Dark". Great movie.....deserves a bigger cult following.
I remember a good ten or so years ago there was a screening of this movie at an Alamo Drafthouse. They handed out cap guns to everyone with instructions that we could only fire them "when there's a monster on screen." And of course some people fired their cap guns at the aliens, but most of us fired our cap guns at Burke
Ripley's "Get away from her you BITCH!" is one of the most badass lines in moviedom.
Carrie Henn (Newt) left acting to become a teacher. She did a really great job, but she followed her dream.
If I recall the casting director was visiting US Air Force bases in the UK where the film was to be shot looking for a young American girl and discovered Carrie at a school linked to RAFLakenheath where her father was based. One of the things that landed her the role was the strength of her scream !
@@dabe1971 I wonder if her living in the UK caused her slight British accent especially when she says mostly, mostly.
I saw this in a smaller theater in '86 and everybody cheered after the bitch line. It was fun.
@@dabe1971 Correct. My weapons load crew chief's daughter was actually one of their top picks, but she decided not to do it.
@@okeefe757 that’s right re the accent, it was another point in her favour, since she didn’t have a recognisable accent it was more futuristic - also because she was new to acting she didn’t smile after every line, but the kids who’d done commercials did smile
Nominated for 7 Oscars:
Best Actress, Sigourney Weaver
Best Sound Editing
Best Sound Mixing
Best Film Editing, Ray Lovejoy
Best Original Score, James Horner
Best Production Design, Peter Lamont
Best Visual Effects, Stan Winston, Robert Skotak and John Richardson.
It won Best Visual Effects and Sound Editing.
It was a box office and critical success, making $193 million dollars ($740 million dollars today) against an $18 million dollar budget.
It's now considered to be the best Sci-fi Action movie ever made.
I don't remember the other movies that year, but I thought Sigourney Weaver for best actress would have been great!
While I agree that this is one of the best, if not the best, sci-fi action movies ever made, I think The Matrix would be in the conversation also. Unlike The Matrix, this movie is definitely more substance over style, and the complete absence of CGI in Aliens may make it always take the top spot. The fact that it is a sequel is just icing on the cake. The Matrix would be a stronger contender if it had no sequels.
I don't think you can criticise the Matrix for it's sequels. Aliens has a bunch of sequels and they are all trash.
Also saying that the Matrix is style over substance is absolutely wrong. Aliens had a military boot camp, the Matrix had a philosophy reading list.
@@fallofcamelot I really don’t mind the Matrix sequels, I just feel that the first movie as a standalone would be stronger. It really ends perfectly IMO. Also, I think the Matrix is MORE substance than style, it’s just that it has so much style that it can sometimes distract from the amazing philosophy. It’s like trying a pick a favorite child for me, I love both. I stand by my practical FX argument though, it just speaks to me better.
It should have got an award for the costumes and design and armour it was so far ahead of its time and the military in space motif has never been done better than in any other movie
Yep! Michael Bihen plays Hicks. He also played Kyle Reese in Terminator :) he's great in this. Loved his relationship with Ripley
He's also in James Cameron's "The Abyss."
@@jeffthompson9622 And Tombstone!
Aliens feels like having a perfect five course dinner. By the end credits I am completely full up and totally satisfied and also ready for a good nap. I am thankful I got to feast on such a movie as Aliens.
Your reaction when they were trying to leave in the apc and that alien sticks his nose into the door. Your anxiety just sorta noped you outta there for a second. Lol
This was by far the best sequel ever made to a movie, I'm dating myself but i remember skipping school to go see this movie a few times. Ripley is the original badass when it comes to action stars, i loved her in these movies, she was put in situations where she did not want to be, but stepped up and took care of business when it was needed.
One of my fav lines in the movie is when Bishop called them all in to tell them about the bad news about the reactor going critical and Hudson's reaction was "that's a switch" for bad news was funny.
but in the end with all of Hudson's BS being afraid and not wanting to do anything he stood up and went down flighting. Truly one of the best movies ever made period........
a quick trivia question easy for Sci Fi Fans, what actor was the only one to get killed by a
Predator,
Alien,
Terminator,
easy peasy
The director's cut is worth a watch now that you've seen the theatrical version. It has more scenes about Ripley learning about her daughter, Hicks and Ripley interacting more with each other (i.e. flirting), more scenes about the colony and families, etc. Nothing that makes it better than the theatre release. Just fan service.
Do u know if she has seen the original Star Trek tv series
@@perrycampbell6499 LOL! Are you asking me because of my profile name and pic?
Yes, I think the theatrical version is the better cut and I'm glad she started with it, but the directors cut is interesting. The scenes at the colony play very differently, for example, because of the before-and-after effect you get from seeing it pre-invasion.
@@thegorn68 yes
One bad synthetic doesn't mean all synthetics are bad... #stopantiandroidbigotry #justice4bishop
Oh I know that! I love droids. Still couldn't help but be suspicious of him though, but he was great in the end. #Here4Bishop
@@kaiielle execs with the company on the other hand... #notmadaboutburke
@@kaiielle I think they did his character perfectly. Ripley being sceptic about him, he looks more untrustworthy after a marine gives him tools to disect a facehugger (with no emotion, BECAUSE he is an android but the movie wants us to think bad of him), then he instantly redeemes himself when he tells on Burke's plan. You can see the instant trust of Ripley, then at the end we all know he saved them.
This was a great reaction. The Burke and Bishop misdirects both worked on you (and that's not great BECAUSE it fooled you, it's great that the director's intended misdirect worked and you weren't overanalyzing it looking for the twists). And pretty much every jump scare got you. 🤣
I like Aliens better, but that's just cause I like action better than horror. Both are really good films.
Everyone should join her patron!!! The full movie reaction is a classic. ❤❤❤
The 57 years is not a dream
As a veteran I can tell you that a leader doesn’t have to give reasons for their orders, all that is required is that they execute them. Having said that, it’s also important for the troops to have all the right information before they deploy.
And confidence in their leader.
A leader doesn't have to, but a good one does. If you haven't time, that's one thing, and there's infosec, but otherwise it's a sign of respect. You keep your people as informed as you can.
There's a sliding scale where more information causes sensory overload where too much thinking paralyzes people in high stress situations like combat. Trust the people giving orders to know what you need to and are relaying what you actually need to know.
Cameron has said that this film in an analogy of the Vietnam War. You have the Marines representing the Americans - overconfident in their technology and firepower, convinced this mission will be over quickly and they will easily win. Once they get to the planet (representing Vietnam) they are quickly overwhelmed by the aliens (representing the Viet Cong) who are not as technologically advanced as the Marines but they are stronger and tougher then the Marines thought, and they have the home-field advantage. They quickly make the marines realize that they were not prepared for this.
43:24 I don't know why I laughed so hard. It sounded like Ripley was "roaring" Hahahaha
LOL it does! Sorry about that. But glad you laughed.
Loved your reaction Kaiielle! ❤ Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) is definitely a badass in a cast of badasses. It sux to see any of the heroes die but Vasquez's death bums me out the most. Michael Biehn (Hicks) is great in any movie he's in. The best part of the movie for me is the badass mom battle at the end 👽
Couple things about this movie. Pvt. Vasquez was played by Jenette Goldstein, the foster mom in Terminator 2. Bill Paxton was one of the punks in the beginning of T1 and Bishop (Lance Henriksen) plays the one of the detectives. Reese, you obviously know.
The actor who played Burke, his mother cheered in the theater when his character got wasted.
In the directors cut, Ripley had a daughter, who aged and died. While cut for the film, it really enhances the relationship Ripley has with Newt.
The Halo video game series (especially the first) was heavily inspired by this movie.
I don't know if you are into comics but there is an Aliens vs Predator vs Terminator crossover comic book that's worth checking out.
Last, don't watch Aliens 3. Aliens, Like T2 is a perfect wrap of for the series. However, if you want to watch Aliens vs Predator, either reaction or on your own time, go ahead because it doesn't really ruin the canon of the series (think of it like a "what if" which is fun)
This is my favorite movie of all time. Vasquez is the ultimate bad a** Her gun says Adidos. Lets Rock definition of 80s but awesome. The late great Bill Paxton has one of the best death scenes, he went out as a trooper. Also when Hicks tells Vasquez forget him he is gone, she does the same thing for Hicks when Hudson is dying. Vasquez (Jennette Goldstein) it is John Conners adoptive mother in Terminator 2. Also. When the computer says 15 minutes it is exactly 15 minutes till the explosion. Yes I timed it.
About Ripley's motivation for "going back out there", it can be summed up as-
The "nightmare" will never be over for Ripley until she knows every last one of those creatures is dead.
I love Paul Reiser's performance as Burke. One of the best corporate sleaze bags ever. At the time this movie came out Paul Reiser was only known as a likeable guy in comedy movies, so this part was an amazing case of casting against type. People watching this for the first time back then didn't realize he was a villain.
Fun fact: Bill Paxton is the only actor to be killed by a Terminator, Predator (Yautja) and an Alien (Xnomorph)
I love when Newt calls Ripley "mommy ".
@@chrisdavis408 Yes, but it makes it all the sadder that Newt and Hicks don’t survive the crash in A3. I just wanted Ripley to have a little bit of rest, romance and family, but nope.
😢
Thank goodness for you.
You're one of the first and only reactors that has talked about what "Alien" is, as opposed to what "Aliens" is. One is not better than the other. They are two different genres!
Great reaction, found your channel from this one but I'm definitely subscribing.
So glad you included my very favorite little moment, maybe one of the absolute best bits of wordless acting of all time. At 36:44, you can see Ripley give herself one brief moment to feel all the insane fear she rightfully feels, walking into this nightmare after everything she's already been through. Then you see her take a deep breath, clench her jaw, and put all that fear aside so she can give everything she's got to save Newt. Goddamn, Sigourney, what a performance.
Everytime I watch a first reaction to this film it re-asserts that it may just be my favorite film of all time
"It looks like a glitter bomb went off in here" -- sometimes you get in sync with someone so well that they notice glitter like you do Kaiielle understands me.
That slow zoom when incorrectly making a prediction about Burke shows your good editing skill, good humor, good humility... chef's kiss all around. Solid casual self-roast. I notice when people over-edit, and what I notice here was very chill mature professional editing. You're getting very good at this!
"I'm already feeling goosebumps" -- and that was a miniature model of the base. All analog special effects. An art form and expertise we might lose due to lack of demand... yet one so potent that it can elicit a biochemical response in the host organism.
The moment of combat that became too intense and forced you away from your computer -- I haven't seen you do that in a reaction before, and you're tough, so that's very telling. The power of old fashioned filmmaking - just guys in suits with fast camera cuts - can be more intense than a modern CG battle with more details. Size (number of characters, number of guns, area of the battlefield) isn't everything. Talent and luck come first!
The purity of a TOTALLY UNSPOILED reaction is a sight to behold. Concurrently, this is your kind of movie, so you're really into it, enjoying it, and having all the reactions you're meant to have. It's like we get to look in the mirror and see ourselves enjoying something beloved the way it was meant to be enjoyed. I needed to note this observation because it's positive feedback that your plan to stay strictly unspoiled is working.
Teaser: the extras of this movie reveal a behind-the-scenes detail that I think about EVERY time I see this movie.
Teaser: the special edition of this movie is optional just like the T2 one was, BUT they both reveal important plot details that I now think about EVERY time I see any edition of the movies.
Teaser: again like with T2, James Cameron didn't retain ownership of this franchise that he is largely responsible for capitalizing, so the rest of the movies are randomly incoherent visions. You've already heard that, but I'm bringing it up because I believe in reactions, not not-reactions, so I still say to watch all of the movies in due time. I concede that more popular movies do get more views on reaction channels, so I support skipping things for business purposes, but if you ever FEEL like watching these sequels, they ARE watchable despite what the superfan sentiment might be, so go for it. Bonus note: compare the unorganized sequels of the 80s and 90s to the financial behemoth that is the MCU -- long-term investment into central planning clearly pays off. Nobody wants a TV show that's totally incoherent between episodes, either.
I love your observation that Bishop was presented to be scary, yet never actually did anything scary, so why were we scared? Not only does the movie convince us, it exploits our baser instincts. Fear of past trauma, stereotyping, prejudice, ignoring evidence... we're told that the old android's dangerous bugs were fixed, it's 50 years later and every ship has an android, they're incapable of hurting people, there is no evidence to the contrary... and yet we don't believe it until the last 5 minutes.
I love your crush on Michael Biehn because he has clearly been underappreciated, so he more than deserves some 2023 crushes. The YT algorithm is funneling Michael Biehn interviews to me on the right side of the screen as I type. Let's get that Michael Biehn hit counter up. Michael Biehn. Michael Biehn. Biehn, Michael. #MichaelBiehn
Here's your alien emoji! 👽 I don't entirely love following commands, but I fully support your end-of-video mini game, and I think this is providing interesting and useful data to you. I would be curious to see what % of comments meet this highest bar of dedication among the academy of viewers, and what other trends follow along. I worked on this comment through the night as I started and stopped the reaction while multitasking. Thank you for reading and hearting so many comments. I'm still on the #Kaiielle150kSubscribers2024 train! 👽
I'm glad you enjoy my editing! If I make incorrect predictions, I like to highlight that through the edit. 😅 So super glad you picked up on that.
Vasquez was also John Conner's foster mother in Terminator 2.Also a small part as an Irish mother of two children in "The Titanic".
“Burke seems to have good intentions!”
Oh, dear… 😅
Good job putting together that Michael Biehn who played Dwayne Hicks here was from The Terminator but did you also realize that 2 other actors in Aliens were also in The Terminator? Bill Paxton (Hudson) played one of the 3 gang members Arnold first approached fully naked who pulled switch blades on him when he demanded one of the guy's clothes. The actor who played the Android Bishop is Lance Henriksen who was one of the police officers at the station Reese was interrogated.
I realized that after once I looked at the full cast list. It was really only Hicks that I was too curious about to look up.
@kaiielle It's strange people have trouble identifying Michael Biehn but I think it's because Reese had a mullet and Hicks hair is short and spiked plus his voice is a bit deeper here most likely due to being a solider not a resistance fighter just winging it.
Also Vasquez was played by the step mother in T2. So really there were several actors who played characters in both Terminator and T2.
@Mike Swisher Yes James Cameron reuses actors he is familiar with from previous films. He brought in Bill Paxton again for his role in Titanic. Writer, producer director John Hughes did the same with Molly Ringwald and Anthony Michael Hall reusing them in multiple films. Same with John Carpenter.
6:41 Jenette Goldstein, John Connor's stepmom in T2 making her screen debut. She became one of James Camerons's go to actors appearing in Titanic too.
As an old guy, the laugh was they were happily surprised/impressed.
Fun trivia! Bill Paxton was also one of the punks that Arnold kills in the beginning of Terminator (the one with the mohawk) - and Vasquez was John Connor's foster mom in Terminator 2 (She was also in Cameron's Titanic! Fun little family that Cameron cultivated in the 80s. On a side note, Paul Reiser's (Burke) mother cheered his death at the screening because she hated his character so much. BTW - the director's cut has a scene where Burke tells Ripley about her daughter, and she breaks down saying RIpley promised to be back for her birthday. Which gives more weight (at least for me) how Ripley interacts and connects with Newt. Sorry, I'm geeking.
Her eleventh birthday.
The best sequel ever. Great
This was such an awesome react. Thank you for sharing! Yeah, I loved that Ripley was a badass in the first movie and she got to be equally badass here and walks away with a chosen-family; a badass daughter, a loyal and gorgeous partner and a trustworthy uncle-android-friend! Love the chemistry between all of them. (Which is also why I LOATHED Alien3...)
I love the intensity of this movie. I remember seeing it in the theater with a female friend of mine who swore she could handle it. She didn't, and I ended up with several puncture holes in my arm. 😅👽👽
😂 All those jump scares are what I live for. Great reaction, that was fun.
The pacing of this movie is absolutely impeccable. And every action is motivated. I love how Hicks doubles back to grab the fire extinguisher on his way to the medlab. Or how it's not just coincidence that the colony is wiped out right after Ripley recounts the events to the company. Or how they find the colonists using PDT's. Everything in the story flows naturally. Nothing seems forced or contrived.
In a deleted scene, Ripley encounters Burke, cocooned, on her way to finding Newt. He says, "Please help me!" and after a few seconds pause she hands him a grenade. It is hilarious in a morbid sort of way, perhaps unintentionally. Maybe that's why it was cut. Not sure.
I seem to remember that Carrie Henn (Newt) made them repeat that "falling down the slide" scene, at 34:55, like four or five times because she was having so much fun. I love this frickin' movie.
👽Great reaction KL! Enjoyed how into it you got and the epic jumpscares in this (with even some pushing back from the desk! 😆👍) . The use of practical FX and miniatures has always amazed me. Believe it or not, the powerloader exoskeleton (that Ripley wears to defeat the Xeno Queen) is actually a DUDE IN A SUIT (with Sigourney harnessed to his chest) in some shots!!! And the Xeno Queen is a lifesized puppet with 2 people laying on their sides back-to-back in her torso controlling her arms!! SO COOL! Anyway, thanks for the fun time :) 👽
Thanks for watching!! Glad you loved it.
I don't know if anyone has mentioned it yet and I don't know if you realized it but there are two people in this movie who were in the first Terminator movie. Hicks of course and Bishop. Bishop was the cop in the police station who was trying to get ahold of Sarah Connor in the first Terminator movie.
I remember ttripping when I first realized Vasquez was the same actress that played John Connors "legal guardian" in Terminator 2
Love this movie and the directors cut is the version I enjoy the most. More backstory for Ripley about her daughter, more marines interaction, a d the final fight is more personal because it is two mothers battling for their children. One to protect her, one for revenge... if you believe a xenomorph can have such feelings, if any. 👽
The director's cut / special edition is just the original version of the film before the studio made them cut it down so cinemas could get an extra screening in each day.
It's my favourite version by far, too.
@@Xoferif Technically it's the Special Edition. Both versions are director's cuts. All movies are cut down to fit a time slot. There are always scenes cut that were great, but either didn't fit the movie's pace, or made it run long. Cutting it down to under 2.5 hrs was as much Cameron's decision as it was the studio's. In fact a 2h17m runtime was considered long for movies. Most movies were around the 2 hour mark.
The same is true for The Abyss. Unfortunately, Cameron decided to cut an entire subplot out of that movie, which made a huge impact on the movie overall. In retrospect Cameron admits he could've kept the subplot in there if he had tried.
Great reaction video. The next time you watch this film check out the extended version. Several important scenes (one should particularly be of interest to you). Enjoy!
This was a huge breakthrough film for a lead woman in an action movie. Even though Aliens 1 was a success this one catapulted the genre for women.
@SomeMildTrolling 😂😂😂
And Weaver was Oscar nominated for her performance
1. Love the reaction 2. Love the Movie 3. Love the intro :) such a wonderful job, KL
Thanks Zyn!
I just saw this movie i thought ripley was gonna die saving the girl movie was spectacular
Others will likely have mentioned this already, but in the Special Edition of Aliens, near the start, Burke tells Ellen Ripley that her daughter Amanda passed away while Ripley was in hypersleep.
That reaction was wild...
So good, right? Glad you enjoyed it!
@@kaiielle who doesn't like tie dye?
41:50 Queen takes Bishop 🙃
👍 Right on, good job. Thanks for doing this movie justice because this is the best reaction to this movie out of all the ones I’ve seen and I’ve seen a few lol. I’d watch a movie with you anytime!
Fun fact: James Cameron was a college dropout working as a truck driver and making scifi models in his basement. And then he saw Star Wars and realized that was what he was made to do. He got his start in Hollywood working for Roger Corman thanks to a 10-minute VFX demo of a woman in an exoskeleton fighting a robot, with it seeming that elements of that idea became parts of his first two big movies.
He's a sfx genius with a background in B movies where he had to make the most of what he had. He used a lot of less detailed alien suits to allow more movement, cutting in closeups for the details. And clever techniques like the jumping facehugger actually having been pulled away fast and the film reversed, or a scene of an alien running through a AC duct thats actually the actor bing lowered down thecstructure and only pretending to be running which makes it look like it is unnaturally fast and sgile. He is also the "man most directly responsible" for the movie industry embracing 3D, which he helped invent pushed the adoption of so he could use the tech to make Avatar.
Very good reaction and less editing than a lot of other reaction channels. I subscribed. Keep it up!
I'm sure someone said this already but when Paul Reiser(Burke)'s mom watched it with him in the theater she stood up and cheered when his character was killed since Burke was such a tool in the movie. :)
vAsquez (jenette goLdsteIn) was the same actrEss who played johN's foster mother in t2!
Saw at the theater and still say Aliens was the most exciting movie I ever saw at the theater! Saw Alien at the Drive In when it came out, that’s where it was showing in my small Texas town, anyway thanks I’m glad I discovered your channel!
Thanks for watching!
22:50 Indeed, it is an arsenal.
Thank you for such a great reaction to a classic genre defining movie. This was a great end to my week. Thank you! Your jump scares were classic!
Thanks so much! I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks!
Thanks so much Matthew!
@@kaiielle 😀❤️😀❤️
In the Director's Cut, they showed that Ripley had a daughter who died of old age before her return. It was no dream; Ripley was really lost for 57 years.
Love the guns mounted on steadicam rigs. Steadicam was relatively new when they made this. Rocky was one of the first movies to use it.
This has high re-watchability! Aliens came out a LONG time ago, but still holds up! Memorable characters, simple, but compelling plot, etc etc. I think Aliens, moreso than Alien, really launched a franchise. Cameron, of course, was the visionary, but Gale Ann Hurd (producer) did a ton of work to make his vision happen, I think she deserves a load of credit. Great reaction, you caught all the right notes, figured out a lot of plot points, and enjoyed the ride! If you ever get the chance to see any cut scenes, or other extras, they are fun to see! Thanks KL for a great review!!! 👽
Thanks Jon! Def plan on watching all that stuff. Glad you enjoyed it.
Hicks - Reese
Bishop - cop
Hudson - punk guy
All of them acts in Terminator
I'm happy I got to watch this one in the cinema. No other sci-fi action movie I can think of have replicated the gritty look, and feeling of dread, of Aliens. It's such a unique and awesome film.
..But I do wish they had included the scene where Ripley got the news about her daughter. It would've given the scenes where she's taking care of Newt even more meaning.
You should have watched the Special Edition, which fills in Ripley's backstory a bit more, including her daughter Amanda!
And you talked over the best line in the movie... Newt hugs Ripley and says "Mommy".
Yeah, that happens sometimes during a first time watch when you have absolutely no idea what people think the "best lines" are.
I’ll be watching tonight! Just wonder if you recognized Hicks. 😉
Watch 3 as I think its pretty cool too!
9:28 oh sweet summer child, it will be a blood bath lol
Not sure if you knew this or not, but the video game character Samus Aren from the series Metroid is based off of Ellen Ripley partially. This movie probably had a lot to do with that. Her arch nemesis in the games is called "Ridley" like Ridley Scott (the creator of Alien)
Check out the vampire movie, NEAR DARK (1987), three of the ALIENS actors went on to do that flick (Bill Paxton, Jenette Goldstein and Lance Henriksen).
Great movie!
I forgot to mention, Vasquez was actually in Terminator 2 as well. She played Johns foster mother. She's also been in a number of other well known movies as well.
Here's a mind blower. Jenette Goldstein (Vasquez) also played the red headed foster mom in Terminator 2.
Aliens is the quintessential science fiction action movie along with Terminator 2.
And Vasquez was a cop in Lethal Weapon and John's foster mom in Terminator 2. I'd wager Drake and Vasquez are carrying something in the 50 cal range. Did you watch all the way to the end? Did you hear the skittering of little alien feet? And the 57 years was not a dream. Looks like you saw the theatrical version, which cut the part about her learning the fate of her daughter, among other things. The soldiers laughing at Ripley in the power loader was all good. Their facial expressions leading up to it were obviously of instant admiration, as if to say, "Well look at this." That laugh was "Damn she's cool." Totally not what they were expecting. I know, because it's exactly what I remember thinking when I saw it. Remember, it was another female that called her Snow White. Frost got burned and fell down to a lower level. He was carrying the ammo bag that also was burning, and dropped when the flames hit him. You are right in that the technology was better. The lessons learned from the first went directly into the second. Still, it's amazing what they were doing with practical effects.
Great Reaction and congrats on watching all the Alien movies, the game Alien Isolation's main character is Ellen Ripley'd Daughter, and she is mentioned in the Director's cut
You are right about this film being Terminator esk. Vasquez if you recall was the foster mother to John Connor in T-2. She was the one who stabbed Todd through the head when he was drinking out of the milk carton. Lol. I had a feeling that you would enjoy this film and seeing all of the familiar faces. Keep up the great work. 👽
She was also the cop that was blow up on the springboard in Lethal Weapon 2.
Other Terminator (one) Alumni.......
She Mentioned Michael Biehn = Reese
Bill Paxton was one of the punks by the telescope.....
Lance Hendrickson was one of the Detectives.....
Awesome reaction loved it you were great 🌹😎👍🎥
She was actually out there in space for 57 years. The special edition has the unedited version explaining what happened to her daughter.
"Ripley's daughter is in it".... 😢
Love this movie and your reaction it was great. I too love that Hicks and Newt survived so she wasn't alone this time :). Shame they didn't make any more Alien movies after this one...
at 9:02 they are laughing because they underestimated her, she took them by surprise. They probably saw her as being just another tag along corporate advisor but then she wanted to get dirty and do work. When women do that intentionally it tends to impress because its not something a lot of women want to do, volunteer to do grunt work. I say this as someone who was in a combat unit in the Army for many years and it always surprised me when women insisted on going to the shooting range with us or go on brutal ruck marches through the countryside because most just don't do that.
During the first exosuite scene, what other kind of laughing other than being impressed would make sense?
As one of the producers David Giler (sp?) would say, Alien was the Haunted House, and Aliens was the Roller Coaster. And you'd love the director's cut of this one. More character development and you get more info on Ripley as well as other things. A great watch. And in this at the end, when Newt grabs Ripley after the queen is shot into space and calls her Mommy - I lose it every time. Oh, if you like Michael Biehn, he's great in the movie Tombstone with Kurt Russell AND Bill Paxton.
I plan to watch the DC eventually! It's not easily available online here in Canada, unfortunately.
@@kaiielle You'll love it!
I never realized it before, but Jenette Goldstein's very first film role was in this movie. She absolutely knocked it out of the park.
31:52 I imagine she probably wanted to make sure he stood trial for it, and maybe use that to expose the company.
The story is that Paul Riser went to the debut of the film with his mother. When the alien killed him. She stood up and clapped. That's good acting! I was such an a**hole that my mother cheered my death.
ty for this. good reaction. im huge Aliens Fan since late 1980s.. ty so much
LETS ROCK!! I love it
Credit to Ferro: as soon as she saw the Alien behind her, she immediately went for her pistol. Not that it helped her, but you have to respect her defiance.
Her rabbits foot doesn't do her any good though
How can you miss out when Newt hugs Ripley and calls her "Mummy" ?
I've just realised it was god damn Vasquez all along - She started shooting in the nest and encouraged others - Bam, the nuclear reactor ruptured, we have four hours. Then she got hurt and Gorman had to come back for her - Bam, the grenade goes off, Newt falls in, we meet a Queen (who whould've died in an explosion anyway). So, yeah. God damn you, Vaquez! ;)
I'm glad you liked Hicks, I'm sure he has a long history going forward in the alien movies.
Nice reaction, as usual. I'm glad you enjoyed the film. 👽
5:50 "Burke probably has good intentions."
Yeah, I'm--sure he does... 😏
8:00 Fun fact--the actress who plays Vasquez, here, also played Janelle Voight, John's foster mother in _Terminator 2: Judgment Day._ The actress' name is Jenette Goldstein. James Cameron had a short list of actors and actresses he liked to put into as many of his movies as possible, and considering how they turn out, I can't see how anyone could complain. 🙂
8:55 A small detail I think Cameron may have gotten right purely on accident--most members of the military I'm aware of, particularly the Marines, here--consider your value to the team to be judged by how useful you are. If you _do_ something, you're good. Grab some boxes and help move them to storage. Grab some trash cans and help dump them. Whatever. The initial placid response to Ripley's inquiry if there was anything she could do of repeating that right back to her, then treating her in a much warmer and more friendly manner once she shows she can help, that's pretty true-to-life as far as I know. She expressed an interest in helping, which is the absolute best thing a civilian can do, and followed through on that by showing she was capable as well as willing.
So, to answer your wondering-aloud, the laughing was a good kind of laughing. She showed she was willing and capable of helping out, had no qualms about getting her hands dirty, and took the initiative to ask rather than having to be asked. She became their best friend after that, and you notice who pretty much the only person who gave her crap after that moment was Hudson, who was just a putz anyway. They stopped treating her with disrespect. Later, when Ripley directs them by headphone, they don't complain or sound exasperated or anything. She'd earned their respect.
Something to remember if you're ever surrounded by military people--help out. You might not be able to help with "the mission", but you can grab stuff and get it out of the way. You can help set up chairs. Whatever.
On a whole 'nother topic, the power loader is my favorite effect from the movie. I don't mean any others are "bad"; I just like the elegance of it. How the Queen was brought to life is simply staggering, and I love that as much as anyone. I just like the simple elegance of the power loader a little more. It's a suit being worn by a bodybuilder, and Sigourney Weaver is standing on his feet. Much of the time it was supported by overhead rigs, and they had to practice quite a bit to get in sync enough to make it look like Weaver was actually in control.
33:30 Whatever else could be said about Hudson, he wasn't a coward. He was scared, of course, as any rational person would be, but whenever he was needed he didn't hesitate. That's one thing I like about how Cameron portrayed the Marines. No matter what else, they didn't hesitate. They weren't cowards. Even Gorman. He may have been pompous and have an over-inflated sense of self-importance, but he wasn't a coward. He refused to leave a Marine behind; if he couldn't get Vasquez out, he was going to go out right alongside her.
38:30 I always liked that part; Ripley and the Queen developed a truce. Each knew that the other was quite capable, and quite willing, to decimate them, so to protect themselves and their brood, they agreed to a cease-fire. Theeeennnnn the Queen went against it and tried to have a facehugger go after Ripley, but still. 🙂
41:20 You thought Ripley was going to die, and that isn't an uncommon reaction from reactors these days, even knowing the rest of the sequels are things. Imagine, then, how it was back in the day when this had just come out, and for all anyone knew this would be the last movie. And in an era when "movie franchises" wasn't really a thing, so there was no expectation of any more movies, thus it being perfectly reasonable that Ripley and Newt were about to bite it on that catwalk. 🙂
45:20 I definitely agree that this movie is wholly different in tone and "feel" than the first one. I really have to give James Cameron credit for that. He knew he wasn't Ridley Scott. He knew he could never recapture what Scott had done, so he didn't try. He made his own movie, with his own sensibilities. I think that was the best choice, and if there's one light-switch-moment that made this movie as good on its own as the first, that was it.
49:20 Carrie Henn played Newt, and I think she was the absolute best choice. She could have had a top-tier career if she'd wanted to, but shortly after this movie she retired. Cameron never had a single problem with her. Her acting skill was phenomenal, and she was never scared by the actual alien puppets or the sets. She took direction well, and by all accounts was a great addition to the cast. She was the clear exception to the rule about never working with kids.
I contrast that with the character Danny Torrence in _The Shining,_ played by Danny Lloyd. The young boy who was around Henn's age when he filmed that movie. To Kubrick's credit, he did everything he could to make the young boy have a good time, to the point he didn't know he was filming a horror movie until later in life. I do appreciate Kubrick for that, but Cameron never had to worry about that with Henn. She understood it was all fake, and never had an issue. The closest thing Cameron had to a "problem" with Henn was the scene of her sliding down the thing away from Hicks and Ripley. Henn purposefully messed up the takes so she could keep sliding down the thing. When Cameron realized, he promised her she could play on the thing all she wanted after finishing the scene.
You get a like just for the effort of this post lol
@@Milleniumlance I'll choose to take that as a compliment. 😄
My first visit to your channel (anything with Alien/s gets my attention) Great reaction vid and vicariously enjoyed your jump scare moments as Ive seen (and still enjoy) this movie Sooooo many times that I know the script well. Its a classic movie that puts modern movies in the shade James Cameron, (and all the creatives involved HR Giger, Syd mead Ron Cobb etc) all masters coming together created a perfectly balanced movie that has remained unsurpassed by modern alternatives (ps there is a directors cut which I prefer and has alot more footage that Cameron had to leave out for reason of brevity). I enjoyed Alien3 but its not everyone's cuppa the only other film that is on the same level and has parallel elements is ......Predator which if you haven't viewed is seriously suggest you do its a blast! Anyway looking forward to viewing the rest of your vids.
I'm glad you watched the theatrical version instead of the extended version. The extended version is fine, and reveals some additional information about Ripley, but for a _FIRST_ viewing I always recommend this version and then the extended version at a later time.
The girl that plays Newt, Carrie Henn, never made another movie and is now a school teacher, which is very fitting.