Vendetta wrote:
I think you've missed an important thing Stark said.
In Alien it's the alien that disrupts the lives of the space truckers. In Alien 3 it's Ripley who disrupts the lives of the prisoners, the alien is only really there for her.
We're not seeing "something we already saw in Alien", we're seeing a different thing have a similar effect on different people in a different situation.
I got the point, just don't think it's all that noteworthy. Ripley as a woman in prison, sure this is a disruptive effect and they portray it as such. I was going more with the Ripley being the alien element both in the sense her being a woman and her having a monster thing inside her. And I was talking about the actual hunt for the alien, which to me basically plays out using similar themes in both movies. Or maybe I'm somehow misunderstanding you. And if the alien is there for Ripley, I don't think they really portrayed this all that well.
Since the only real way the alien can be there for Ripley is through violence and it appears to protect Ripley... once I think? Don't remember it's been too long since I last watched the movie.
That aside, one of the underlying themes in Alien and Aliens is that the "monster" is man. In both movies it's made abundantly clear the corporations would pay ridiculous sums for this new alien critter and in both movies people get fucked over by this. This could've been used in Alien 3 and kinda sort of was, but I think it was just kind of lumped in there.
-Gunhead