zpostcode
Alien
Feb 15, 2026 10:44 PM

  

Alien1

  Sigourney WeaverSigourney Weaver as Lieut. Ellen Ripley in the science-fiction–horror film Alien (1979).(more)Alien, American science-fiction–horror film, released in 1979 and directed by Ridley Scott, that chronicles the struggle of the crew of a deep-space commercial spacecraft to survive an encounter with a terrifying alien creature. The film stars Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, and John Hurt. Alien, which won widespread critical acclaim, is regarded as a classic of the genre and has significantly influenced later science-fiction, horror, and action films. Alien’s poster, which shows an eerie green light emitting from a crack in the shell of an alien egg (which resembles a creepy smile), carries the iconic tagline, “In space no one can hear you scream.” The film was inducted into the National Film Registry of the U.S. Library of Congress in 2002 as a work that is “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” to America’s film heritage.

  Plot and characters CastSigourney Weaver (Lieut. Ripley)Tom Skerritt (Capt. Dallas)John Hurt (engineer Kane)Veronica Cartwright (navigator Lambert)Harry Dean Stanton (engineering technician Brett)Ian Holm (science officer Ash)Yaphet Kotto (chief engineer Parker)Helen Horton (voice of Mother) Alien, set in the year 2122 ce, tells the story of the deep-space commercial mining ship Nostromo. The ship is on its way back to Earth, carrying a load of extraterrestrial ore, when its crew is awakened from hypersleep, a type of high-tech hibernation, by the ship’s computer, Mother. The ship has intercepted what appears to be a distress signal from an uncharted planetoid, LV-426. Obligated to respond, the crew lands on the planetoid, and several of its members explore the surface. They find a spacecraft with a dead pilot and a cargo of alien eggs. When crew member Kane (John Hurt) inspects an egg that has opened, he is attacked by a face-hugging creature that inserts part of its body down his throat and clings fiercely to his head.

  Alien’s poster carries the iconic tagline, “In space no one can hear you scream.”

  

Alien2

  John HurtJohn Hurt as engineer Kane lying on a table in a scene from the science-fiction–horror film Alien (1979).(more)Against the orders of Lieut. Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver), other crew members violate quarantine rules by bringing Kane back on board. They find that the creature, whose blood is a corrosive acid, cannot be removed from Kane’s body without also killing Kane, but it eventually falls off on its own and dies. Kane awakens, seemingly recovered, and the crew gathers for a meal before reentering hypersleep and returning to Earth. Later, in a terrifying scene that has become an iconic moment in cinema history, an alien creature bursts from the chest of the screaming, convulsing Kane and scuttles away before the shocked crew members can respond. Belatedly, they realize that the creature is a parasite that can use human bodies to incubate its young. For the rest of the film, crew members desperately try to kill the quickly growing creature and, when they fail, to escape from it. One by one, the alien picks off the crew members, until only Ripley remains to do battle with it.

  Ripley—a smart, tough, courageous woman who set the standard for generations of female protagonists to come—is the standout character of the film. She is strong and determined, relates to her crewmates on a purely professional level, and, unlike some of the crew, is able to control her terror and focus on eradicating the creature. Female characters like Ripley were rare in the 1970s. Alien explores the misogyny that Ripley faces as a woman in a male-dominated workplace. The film shows how the mostly male crew disrespects her, ignoring her orders and warnings to its detriment. Late in the film Ripley uncovers the commercial mining company’s scheme to transport the alien back to Earth for possible use as a military weapon, no matter the cost to the crew, which the company considers expendable. This subplot functions as a critique of capitalism as exploitative of workers.

  Art direction and visual effects Academy Award nominations (* denotes win)Art direction (Michael Seymour, Les Dilley, Roger Christian) and set decoration (Ian Whittaker)Visual effects (H.R. Giger, Carlo Rambaldi, Brian Johnson, Nick Adler, Denys Ayling)* Alien is notable for its extraordinary art direction and visual effects, which have had a tremendous influence on the look and feel of later films. The dark, grungy, claustrophobic corridors of the Nostromo ratchet up the film’s tension and suspense and highlight the isolation of space. Decades before the advent of digital special effects, the Swiss artist H.R Giger designed the now-iconic alien, a horrifying mixture of reptile, insect, and humanoid forms with an elongated head. The Italian special-effects artist Carlo Rambaldi designed and built the alien’s mechanical head effects—including a grotesque head-within-a-head. For most of the film, the creature camouflages itself in the shadowy industrial setting of the ship, a melding of monster and machine that is often more terrifying than a full view of the creature.

  Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content. Subscribe Now Sequels and crossovers Production notes and creditsStudios: 20th Century Fox, Brandywine Productions, Scott Free ProductionsDirector: Ridley ScottProducers: Gordon Carroll, David Giler, Walter HillWriters: Dan O’Bannon, Ronald ShusettMusic: Jerry GoldsmithRunning time: 117 minutes The film spawned a trilogy of sequels in the 1980s and ’90s: Aliens (1986), Alien 3 (1992), and Alien Resurrection (1997). Weaver played Ripley in the sequels, which focus on Ripley’s frantic quest to keep the alien lifeforms from reaching Earth. Prometheus (2012), a prequel of sorts directed by Ridley Scott, explores questions regarding the origins of human life. A 2017 sequel to Prometheus, Alien: Covenant, continues the former film’s story. A further sequel to Alien, Alien: Romulus, is scheduled to be released in the summer of 2024. The film’s story is set in the period between the events of Alien and Aliens.

  Alien and its original trilogy of sequels inspired the creation of novels, comic books, and video games related to the world of the films. It also inspired film crossovers that brought the lifeforms of the Alien series into the world of the Predator film franchise in the movies Alien vs. Predator (2004) and Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem (2007).

Comments
Welcome to zpostcode comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Recommend >
The Family of Carlos IV
  The Family of Carlos IV, oil painting by Francisco Goya in 1800 depicting the royal family of Spain. It has often been described as Goya’s greatest portrait. In 1799 Goya was made first court painter to Carlos (Charles) IV of Spain. The king requested a family portrait, and in the summer of 1800 the artist prepared a series of oil...
packet-switched network
  Key People: Vinton Cerf Robert Kahn Paul Baran Leonard Kleinrock (Show more) packet-switched network, digital network that transfers data files by breaking them up into smaller units (“packets”) and transmitting them through a series of nodes (“switches”). In a process known as store-and-forward, the switches route the packets to their destination, where the data files are then reassembled. The Internet...
McMurdo Station
  McMurdo Station, research and logistics installation located on the Hut Point Peninsula, on Ross Island, Antarctica. Operated by the National Science Foundation (NSF) with the assistance of the U.S. military, the station is the largest town in Antarctica and the continent’s largest research station. It sits near the foot of Mount Erebus and occupies the southernmost point of solid ground...
Fran Lebowitz
  Renowned by generations as a quintessential New Yorker, Fran Lebowitz arrived in New York City in her late teens after being expelled from her New Jersey preparatory school for what she has described, in her trademark acerbic humor, as “nonspecific surliness.” From a young age she had aspired to be a writer, and within a few years of moving to...
Information Recommendation
Great Mosque of Gaza
  Great Mosque of Gaza, largest mosque in the Gaza Strip and a key landmark of Gaza city. Its origins as a mosque date to the reign of ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb (634–644). The history of the mosque, whose site served as a sacred space long before the advent of Islam, is considered emblematic of the complex history of the region. The...
Hope Hostel
  Also called: Hope House, Association of Student Survivors of the Genocide (AERG) Hostel, or One Dollar Campaign Complex (Show more) Hope Hostel, a four-story lodging facility located in Kigali, Rwanda. It opened in October 2014 to house college students who had been orphaned after their parents were killed during the Rwandan genocide of 1994; it provided a place for them...
Warm ocean water is rushing beneath Antarctica's 'Doomsday Glacier,' making its collapse more likely
Antarctica's Doomsday Glacier is melting significantly faster than scientists previously thought, thanks to warm ocean water that is infiltrating miles beneath its surface, a new study has found. The Thwaites Glacier, which is nicknamed the Doomsday Glacier because of its potential to massively increase sea levels, is located in West Antarctica and is roughly the size of Florida. Previous research...
8 Famous Animals
  Home List Science Science & Tech Actions Cite verifiedCite While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions. Select Citation Style MLA APA Chicago Manual of Style Copy Citation Share Share Share to social media Facebook Twitter URL...
Noor Inayat Khan
  Also called: Nora Baker (Show more) Code name: Madeleine (Show more) Born: January 1, 1914, Moscow, Russia (Show more) Killed: September 13, 1944, Dachau, Germany (Show more) Noor Inayat Khan (born January 1, 1914, Moscow, Russia—killed September 13, 1944, Dachau, Germany) was a British resistance agent in Nazi-occupied France during World War II, serving in the Special Operations Executive (SOE)....
Potemkin (Russian battleship)
  In full: Kniaz Potemkin Tavricheskiy (Show more) Potemkin (Russian battleship), Russian battleship built for the Black Sea fleet of the Imperial Russian Navy. It is best remembered for a 1905 mutiny by its sailors, one of the events of the Russian Revolution in the same year. The mutineers took the ship to Odesa, Ukraine, but the mutiny eventually failed. The...
Lori Piestewa
  In full: Lori Ann Piestewa (Show more) Also called: Qotsa-hon-mana or Köcha-hon-mana (Show more) (Hopi:: White Bear Girl) (Show more) Born: December 14, 1979, Tuba City, Arizona, U.S. (Show more) Died: March 23, 2003, Al-Nāṣiriyyah, Iraq (Show more) Lori Piestewa (born December 14, 1979, Tuba City, Arizona, U.S.—died March 23, 2003, Al-Nāṣiriyyah, Iraq) was a U.S. Army soldier who became...
Memphis sanitation workers’ strike
  Memphis sanitation workers’ strike, 64-day labor conflict in the winter and spring of 1968 that brought Martin Luther King, Jr., to Memphis, Tennessee. The striking workers sought higher wages, better working conditions, and the right to form a union. At the height of the conflict, King, members of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and local leaders led thousands of...