10 Reasons Alien 3 Is A Misunderstood Masterpiece

By Percival Constantine /

8. This Time, It's Personal

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There€™s a progression in each of the Alien movies. In the first film, the conflict was completely impersonal, it was just a matter of survival. But in Aliens, it became slightly more personal. Due to the alien, Ripley was stuck in hyperspace for fifty years. And as a result of this, her daughter grew old and died. So in a way, the alien was indirectly responsible for the death of Ripley€™s daughter. So the stakes were raised. But even after her life was ruined by the alien, Ripley seemed to be on the path to recovery. She persevered, proved herself to be a survivor, and she even found a new family for herself. Her relationship with Newt was so obviously a mother/daughter one, and the relationship with Hicks was, to a much lesser extent, a husband/wife dynamic. And the mother dynamic was really played out, with the epic showdown between the two €œmothers€ of the series €” Ripley and the Alien Queen. Once the smoke had cleared, Ripley had a new chance for happiness. Just look at the closing scene when Newt asks, €œcan I dream?€ and Ripley says, €œyes honey, I think we both can.€ And what happens? The aliens strike again, taking away Ripley€™s family for a second time, only now they€™ve done it directly and given her a third family€and this one is even worse. The personal connection is brought home solidly when Ripley tells the alien, in one of my favorite scenes, €œyou€™ve been in my life for so long, I can€™t remember anything else.€