*some spoilers*
FarSky wrote:
It's a brilliant picture, niggling flaws though it may have. Time will be quite kind to it, much like Scott's other sci-fi projects. Of this I've no doubt.
I disagree. When I emerged from the movie theater, ultimately disappointed, after such high hopes, I thought to myself "what did everyone else think of this film?" I read reviews and saw that the film was actually very well received. I thought "okay, maybe I missed something, but I'm more interested in hearing from those that were disappointed in it like me. Did they see the same flaws I did?" They did.
The film looked beautiful. The visuals, the directing, the 'scope' of the film, all wonderful. What ultimately killed it was that it wasn't believable. I don't mean in the sci-fi sense. I mean in the human nature sense. Every film, even sci-fi films, must be believable according to an understandable and accepted set of rules. We can suspend our disbelief that we're in the future, that we're able to travel across space, that we could encounter an intelligent alien species. What we can't suspend our disbelief about is that humans will suddenly
and conveniently act in unrealistic ways, contrary to human nature, to arbitrarily further the story. The human characters in this film were merely props to forcibly further the story, and were not believable - that was this film's greatest flaw. You cannot convince me that a trained biologist hand picked for that mission, on an alien world for the first time, seeing an alien creature for the first time, rising up and spreading a 'hood' just like a terrestrial snake in a threatening way, would choose to stick his finger out and try to touch it. I literally cringed at that scene. It was like watching something from a cheap B slasher flick. And there's no way that such a driven and intellectually curious.. anthropologist was it (?) - forgive me, I forget the exact occupation of the main male character scientist - even though he was obsessed only with finding our progenitors, and was disappointed when they didn't, would sit in the background, completely disinterested, while the rest of the crew
reanimated an alien head on a table. Really? No interest at all with what's going on there? And no, the effects of the alien goo do not explain away those scenes.
Oh and also, at the end the movie turned into a cheap horror film a la Friday the 13th, as the last alien forwent his mission just so we could have a chase scene where the damsel flees from the monster.