Monday, 2 September 2019

Memory: The Origins Of Alien (2019)


Let's clear one thing up right from the start: writer/director Alexandre O. Philippe's Memory - The Origins Of Alien is not a "making of" documentary about Alien, and anyone picking this DVD up thinking that is going to be very disappointed.

The clue is in the title, if people could be bothered to think about it. This hour-and-a-half documentary, released in the UK this week, is a a film studies course thesis on a reading of the influences that fed the original story and shaped - consciously or otherwise - the visual iconography of key moments, which have made the film so enduring in the collective psyche.

Rather than picking apart how the film was made (I'm sure there are plenty of DVD extras dealing with that topic on the many releases of Alien), it traces the development of the script by Dan O'Bannon, movies, authors (such as HP Lovecraft) and comic books that paved the way for the story, the impact of H.R. Giger's work, and then Ridley Scott's aesthetic, cultural and artistic themes that influenced the tone of the piece etc

Then, heightening the thesis approach, we have various readings of the picture, what it meant (beyond the straight horror/haunted house in space angle).

While its doesn't go quite full-on academia, Memory - The Origins Of Alien is not a documentary for the casual horror movie fan who wants to know how much blood they squirted out of John Hurt during the chestburster scene.

Rather it deconstructs subjective readings of what the film could be telling us on a deeper level and how this all ties back into archetypes found in Ancient Greek myths (The Furies), the art of Francis Bacon, and the real-world body horror of parasitic wasps.

Fascinating viewing for someone who likes that sort of thing (such as me, who would have loved to have had this while reading essays during the film studies elements of my university course), but bound to irritate those who mistakenly thought this was something else (just check some of the IMDB reviews).

However, film geeks and aspiring writers could do worse than absorbing this in-depth examination of the roots of the story that, eventually, became one of the most memorable horror/sci-fi films of all time.

If I have a criticism, it's that Memory - The Origins Of Alien is only 95-minutes long. I'm sure there's so much more to discuss on the mythological origins of Alien and what the film "means" (be it in the shot framing or the bio-mechanical design of the central creature).

It's also a shame that Scott's input is only through second-hand footage, but a lot of key people (in-front and behind) the camera of Alien have their say, even those who've passed (such as Giger and O'Bannon) are included via old interviews, complementing the many other commentators involved.