Joe Hillshoist wrote:
Burnt Hill wrote:
Quote:
The miracle of life and creation are brutal violent disgusting events.
No. Not really.
Hi justdrew.
But I've yet to see a baby born laughing and smiling.
Sex can be pretty good. And, as full on and dangerous as birth is, its also fucken awesome to see/experience. When my daughter was born it was less than 5 minutes before she recognised my voice and smiled at me. Consiodering shes just been dumped from a warm cosy, comfy world where everything is provided (the only world she's ever known in that body) into the cold hard light of day that is kind of cool.
Sex, you still have sex? How long have you been married Joe? Though I do remember it as enjoyable..
Seriously, when my last daughter was born,(by C-section) the doc cuts her out and begins to hand her to me. The he/we noticed the umbilical cord wrapped twice around her neck. If she had been delivered naturally she may have died, or worse. When I did get my hands on her, I held her up and danced. Pure Joy.
Spoilers ahead;
I think what resonated most with me after seeing Prometheus this weekend was the lack of drive, passion, curiosity in all the characters.
You would think going to see your creators, and then finding them, would be of some interest to the people on the ship. Nope, not really.
Everyone is just a job now. "I just fly the ship." "I'm just here for the money and I fucking love rocks" "I'm the biologist" (but I want to go back to the ship when their is the possibility of real life).
"I'm the ceo of the company, etc" It felt like everyone was telling everyone else constantly "I'm just a temp, I'm not responsible." If I remember correctly, in the first Alien film the crew was a mining ship and you could excuse a lack of exuberance with them, but I remember there was much more bonhomie and engagement with them.
Even the two archaeologists never sold me really that they were really interested in their mission. The male archaeologist falls into a funk when they discover the temple (two seconds after arriving on the planet) with about a thousand years of alien artifacts because no one was there when he rang the door bell? Hello, they're asleep up in the attic of the temple you haven't even begun to explore and you are already throwing in the towel? It might have been casting but he came across as a disingenuous start up dot commer to me. This and a few other dozen missteps along with the ones jlaw172364 mentioned made it rather boring. There were very little attempts at building mood or suspense through lighting, music, timing, etc. Even in the scary temple I spent more time admiring all the little details in the alien woodwork than feeling any foreboding.
And The Creators themselves are basically monosyllabic albino Right Said Fred/very fit Hellraiser Cenobites? How is it possible they have less personality then everyone on the ship? And the android is the most charming character out of the lot? Everyone from the aliens, creators to crew seem completely mindless. Maybe this was intentional and David the android was used to juxtapose the lack of spontaneity and growth in everyone else? It's a shame because the visuals of the film really were great. I think if they just poured Tangerine Dream throughout the ship and temple it would have been better then much of the dialogue.
For me though the allusions to the Prometheus myth seemed pretty straight forward. The ship Prometheus has one mission with two goals. To find the Creators of humans (this would make them de facto Gods because they made humans) to gain knowledge of our origins (for the archaelogists) and our possible immortality (for weyland). Gaining this knowledge would be taking the power (the fire) the Engineers (Gods, or like Zeus, the king of the gods) have which makes them God-like (the powers of creation and immortality) and democratizing it. The crew of prometheus in their quest to discover and liberate this knowledge from their creators overstep and are punished in as novel and as gruesome ways as Prometheus was.

I also think possibly there are refinements of this with allusions to the quest of self knowledge and the growth of consciousness a variant of the fire taken from the Gods. The ability of being self aware and sentient is what makes humans more then dumb matter and god like. David the robot and Elizabeth the archaeologist are the only ones who survive and also seemed to be the only ones who are interested in exploring their inner and outer-worlds earnestly. This could be a coincidence. But everyone who is single minded in the film: alien, creator, crew member, ends up canceling one another out. (It is also interesting how David, who is mostly all intellect, has his head ripped from his body and Elizabeth ends up dragging his separated head and body around we assume to later make him whole.)