
#Star warfare alien invasion common sense media movie
While this once-shadowy monster species has been exposed in inferior sequels, video games, and comic books (even Superman battled them!), some of the best minds in cinema tried to ensure this movie would be a nightmare-inducer, and parents should keep that in mind. Most of the violence here, in fact, is suggested in quick edits rather than directly shown, just like the skittering, skeletal/serpentine alien parasite itself. Teachers: Find the best edtech tools for your classroom with in-depth expert reviews Parents Need to Know. The 25th-annivesary DVD of Alien includes a few minutes of restored footage of what the alien does with captured prey - considered too grim for 1979, but no surprise for anyone who saw the sequel, Aliens, or any of the later followups. Check out new Common Sense Selections for games Common Sense Selections EdTech Reviews. Alien did defy stereotypes of its time in the brilliant move of making the ultimate survivor a vulnerable-looking young woman, Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver), who courageously fights back against the alien marauder.

For a generation of moviegoers, Alien was a state-of-the-art shocker, even though it basically has a second-hand monster plot and characters that behave like cliched horror-movie victims, wandering alone in the dark or waiting like sitting ducks to be picked off. Being scary, in new and disturbing ways that hadn't been done before, was the mission of Alien. Kids like scary movies, and this one definitely succeeds small kids are better off with E.T., though teens can take this movie for the thrill ride it is.
