John Fredrick Parker
Donor
With PoDs after the 1986 release of Aliens, how can Alien 3 be a good movie and make a worthy trilogy? Where could the franchise (plausibly) go from there, and turn out better than OTL?
Wow... I'm sorry, I didn't know this was a DBWI...coincidentially watched Alien 3 again just yesterday. I rather like it. But it dwarves under Aliens. They needed to keep showing a lot of Xenomorphs instead of going back to 1. Well, at least they fixed that in Alien 4, which was better then 3 or 1.
coincidentially watched Alien 3 again just yesterday. I rather like it. But it dwarves under Aliens. They needed to keep showing a lot of Xenomorphs instead of going back to 1. Well, at least they fixed that in Alien 4, which was better then 3 or 1.
Don't destroy the entire point of Aliens in the first 5 minutes...
Yeah, that's a huge one; at the very least, Newt has to live (and that includes Ripley with the others), though having Bishop "die" with the rest makes little sense. (I suppose if the filmmakers had a hard-on for killing survivors at the start of the film, they could do Hicks, seeing as he did have substantial acid injuries, but anyone else this early is going to make the movie worse.)
Wasn't Bishop pierced by queen's tail in Aliens and then chopped in half?
Yeah, but his upper body survived.
Seeing as Colonial Marines is apparently canon, I have found yet another way to save the franchise. You can probably all guess what it is.
Wait, do you mean the videogame?
The premise of Alien 3 was great, but the execution sucked in a way that requires astronomical units of measurements to quantify.
Have 'em crash land on the planet, but all three survive from the second movie. None of this dead on arrival nonsense. Then have the situation spin out of control as the alien takes over the colony, but avoid the crap like that dude who gets killed in the middle of the cafeteria when the alien comes down from the ceiling.
The premise of Alien 3 was great, but the execution sucked in a way that requires astronomical units of measurements to quantify.