Alien Resurrection

Plot
In the year 2379, the android David "Dave" Bowman's consciousness (disguised as a philosopher, Louis Tuli), known as a android Louis Duval of Project 5639, has a cryptic conversation with a scientist named Johner and Coffey. He leads them to an abandoned research facility containing the contents of the United Systems' (US) second-generation cloning vessel, USM Auriga, including a blood sample of a young alien facehugger, and the deceased Ellen Ripley's clone. The US Company scientist, Dr. Lilienstein, is attempting to clone Ellen Ripley, with the intention of capturing and harvesting an alien queen's genetic material to use as a bioweapon against the "Perfect Organism," or Xenomorph. After a security mishap, the researchers flee, but ultimately blow up the ship, blowing the ice housing the Xenomorphs. US scientist Eldridge rushes to Ripley (the clone known as Number Eight), while Dr. Laurie Brackish, who expresses negative opinions towards the cloning process, discusses with the senior man, Wilkins. As the US shuttle is drifting through space, the organism has awoken. When a crew member rushes to fix the gravity systems she begins to hatch from the small creature, after attaching an embryo to Ripley during a burst of cell activity. The US scientist believes she is useful as it attaches a symbiotic form of Xenomorph that grows in numbers inside the clone. Inevitably, the child Xenomorphs from Ellen Ripley, Number 8, break free from her skin, she sets her aside. After more occurrences, four scientists, lead by a team leader, Samuel "Rapey" Branson sign up and along, board this derelict United Systems ship and fight the Alien facehuggers - a Xenomorph that has the appearance, but not the abilities of another Xenomorph. The company rep: Johner thinks rape 's likely dead. More destruction occurs and it appears Number 8 can only provide one last possible solution for everybody. They discover, very late in their boarding procedure, that there were real 'alien-muscle, gene-receptors', when they are infected and facehugged. Number Eight - who escapes the fight, was beginning to, from that point on develop different forms that displayed her alien "receptors" to provide in the body where an infection would do no harm. Since it was only their hosts' Xenomorph cells dying off this individual - called EED. To the dismay of the crew. Number eight realises she had accepted her new alien - alien-cell alien-component and in human form - body after mating with X from Earth to replicate. The survivors manage to make it on a United Systems starship to their own war-crusade into outer space, to track down the creature. They track it down as it makes Earth again vulnerable following an alien-spore encounter, that had earlier destroyed other planets within the galaxy they were visiting. It had recently arrived on board (The Pyramid) this military vessel for a search. First though many innocent civilians are killed. They return, yet, with four inhumal killing attempts already, ready to "mimic" their hostess once again.
Reviews
Quinn
The final scene, where the Alien evolves a sense of humanity, irrevocably diminishes the mystique of the monstrous creature (even the Alien baby suffers this fate), ultimately leading to the possibility of only prequels. Looking forward to Prometheus! 7.3
Jace
Okay, here's a translation suitable for a darkly humorous and warped review of *Alien Resurrection*, playing on the disturbing themes of cloning and motherhood in the film: Once upon a time, there was this dimwit son who thought his mom was too ugly, so he slapped her head clean off. Or Back in the day, a dopey kid once slapped his mother's head off because he thought she was so unbearable.
Kimber
After returning to Earth, Ripley, missing her Xenomorph "child," creates the WALL-E robot in its likeness as a memorial.
Lily
Oh my god, please don't bat those eyes and try to be cute when you look like that! Seriously! Winona is so beautiful she transcends humanity.
Layla
Beneath the guise of science fiction, the Alien quadrilogy subtly explores distinct themes: I. horror, II. action, III. religion, and IV. ethics. Jeunet clearly had a vision and must have thoroughly researched the series. The setting of the spacecraft effectively pulls the tone back towards the path of the first two films, and the ending has a touch of paying homage. However, the film attempts to express something that completely deviates from the pure struggle for survival that defined the beginning of the series, and this adaptation proves to be a fatal misstep.
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