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  1. The 1979 sci-fi horror classic is 'ALIEN, ' directed by Ridley Scott and starring Sigourney Weaver. It follows the crew of a commercial space tug as they encounter a deadly ALIEN life form that stalks and attacks them one by one. The film was a critical and commercial success, and has since become a cult classic.

  2. Here is the answer for the crossword clue 1979 sci-fi film with the tagline "In space no one can hear you scream" featured on October 31, 2024. We have found 40 possible answers for this clue in our database. Among them, one solution stands out with a 98% match which has a length of 5 letters.

  3. Oct 6, 2024 · The most likely answer for the clue is ALIEN. How many solutions does 1979 creature feature set on the spaceship Nostromo have? With crossword-solver.io you will find 40 solutions.

  4. Answers for Name of the spacecraft in the 1979 sci fi film Alien directed by Ridley Scott (8) crossword clue, 8 letters. Search for crossword clues found in the Daily Celebrity, NY Times, Daily Mirror, Telegraph and major publications.

    • The Human-Shaped Enigma
    • Waking Up
    • Parker’s Predictions
    • Side Note: The SOS
    • The Ship and The Sublime
    • Aliens Everywhere
    • The Invisible Visible
    • The Favourite Child
    • Final Foreshadowing
    • What to Read Or Watch Next

    The film’s first interior shots of the Nostromo convey an awful lot of info without a single spoken word. The ship is deserted but, given the lights are on and there’s no carnage, we can assume this is exactly as it should be. When the computer wakes up,it resolves the puzzle: this ship is in hibernation mode, and so are its crew. Hence, for now, t...

    That Gothic stories – like Alien – are preoccupied with death, and ways of dying, and the moments before death, almost goes without saying. In a similar fashion, though, they’re also often about sleep and dreaming, states that look like death from the outside, and can be just as unknowable. Alien, then, begins with the crew fast asleep, frozen – as...

    Breakfast on the Nostromo once more foreshadows multiple aspects of the story to come. Notably, we don’t see Ash tucking in. While he seems to go through the motions, we only actually see him consuming a white liquid. Only later do we realise it’s because, as an android, he doesn’t need to eat. Incidentally, when do we see all that white liquid aga...

    Ship’s computer Mother picks up a transmission.
    As protocol dictates, she reroutes the ship and wakes the crew so they can investigate.
    However, Ash has secret orders to collect an alien life form from the signal’s source, and return it to Earth at any cost. Crew expendable.
    But Ash is a new crew member. Remember how Parker says he’s sitting in his seat? Dallas later reveals Ash replaced his usual science officer at the last minute. The company even gives Ash a bigger...

    When Dallas, Kane and Lambert land on the planet, they find themselves in a recognisably Gothic landscape. It’s a dark and stormy night; even the wind shrieks like it’s straight out of hell. Notably, everything they encounter is oversized, with shades of the Gothic “sublime”. To feel the sublime is to feel terror, awe, angst and wonder, all at once...

    There’s more than one alien to this story. Firstly, the crew find the remains of an alien life form when they find the dead Engineer. However, even the creature they accidentally acquire evolves rapidly from egg to face-hugger to chest-buster and, “finally”, xenomorph. (See also Life.) But the xenomorph isn’t the ship’s only “alien” interloper eith...

    Like many aspects of this story, Ash hides in plain sight. His human disguise and predatory tactics render him invisible and deadly. Just like the alien. Thus Kane finds the eggs but doesn’t sense their danger. He doesn’t even appear to wonder where the creature is that laid all of them. The face-hugger then leaps out, attaching itself to Kane and ...

    So much has been written about Alien’s metaphors of motherhood, pregnancy and creation that I won’t repeat it here (see instead Prometheus, and Covenant). That said, what’s neat (i.e., nicely morbid) about the Alien story is the way it pits its “children” at each other’s throats. Speaking of throats, Kane describes his experience with the face-hugg...

    There’s another significant moment of foreshadowing at the end of Alien. As Ripley fires up the detonation sequence, the instructions clearly spell out the risk, once more telling us what comes next: Ripley, not expecting to find the xenomorph standing between her and shuttle, attempts to reverse the detonation procedure … but misses the window by ...

  5. We found 40 solutions for Space thriller of 1979. The top solutions are determined by popularity, ratings and frequency of searches. The most likely answer for the clue is ALIEN.

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  7. Oct 26, 2003 · Its most obvious influence is Howard Hawks’ “The Thing” (1951), which was also about a team in an isolated outpost who discover a long-dormant alien, bring it inside, and are picked off one by one as it haunts the corridors. Look at that movie, and you see “Alien” in embryo.