Jun 072012
 

 

prometheus movie review

Headline of the Day: Reveiw From Fox News 

 

Buckle up, because Ridley Scott has created a whole new beast (literally)  with “Prometheus.” Returning to the genre that skyrocketed his career with  “Alien” and ?Blade Runner,? Scott has fashioned a fascinating new mystery within  his original “Alien” universe.

Not exactly a prequel to “Alien,” “Prometheus” still shares many elements  with the classic. “Prometheus” is all about origins; both our origins and those  of the Space Jockey (which the crew of the Nostromo in ?Alien” discover at the  beginning of that film).

Fans of “Alien” will revel in the expanded history of this universe. Scott  presents a whole new world, with so many new paths to venture down in possible  future installments. Noomi Rapace is archeologist Elizabeth Shaw who, with her  team, venture to an alien planet where she believes the origins of our species  began among a race a human-like aliens.

Like “Alien,” Scott spends a good portion of the film on atmospherics,  introducing us to the ship Prometheus, the alien planet and the unsettling clues  Shaw and her crew find. Scott and his team are smart to make “Prometheus” as  much an archeological mystery as it is a creepy fright-fest.

As the mystery compounds, Scott creates an unsettling atmosphere where nobody  is safe. One scene in the Prometheus medical bay is memorably unpleasant. Some  of the H.R. Giger’s organic-styled set designs from “Alien” make a welcome  return, complimenting the eeriness of the film. Unfortunately, the creatures  (and there are plenty) are all CGI, losing the realistic sliminess and ferocity  of the models used in earlier films.

“Prometheus” is written by Jon Spaihts and “Lost” co-creator Damon Lindelof,  and like ?Lost,? Lindelof starts the story off like a tangled ball of yarn which  then unravels over the course of the film. Similarly, there are a dozen or so  questions left unanswered by film?s end.

Michael Fassbender gives a chilling performance as the android David. He is  cold, calculating, often sinister, but always engaging. There?s a also a cool  correlation in the film between his character and T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of  Arabia).

The rest of the crew are expendable cookie-cutter characters. There are  obvious layers to Charlize Theron’s character (a representative from the Weyland  Corporation who oversees the entire expedition) which are sadly never  developed.

Another disappointment is the casting of Guy Pearce, who is distractingly  unbelievable as the nearly 100 year-old Peter Weyland, the head of the company  financing the exploration. While Pearce is an excellent actor, the age makeup is  bad. Scott should have cast an age-appropriate actor.

Scott has given us a fresh story from seeds already planted in “Alien.” With  “Prometheus,” he keeps us guessing to the end.

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