After much buildup in the popular SciFi mags of the day, back when there was no internet, and Fox was able to keep a tight lid on any spoiler leaks to the media, I watched
Alien for the first time back in '79 in a theater that had a wide screen (rare in those days). I'd been an avid reader of horror fiction and hard core scifi for years, so I was already looking forward to it for months. I'd seen some of H.R. Giger's bizarre/grotesque paintings and heard that he was involved in making the film. I had no idea it was to be the only movie I've ever seen as an adult that actually creeped me out enough to sleep with a loaded weapon beside me when I got home alone that night!
Fast forward several years and now it's
Aliens, with the promo pitch "This time it's WAR!". I think I imagined some of the eggs in the derelict ship had been brought back to Earth and that the xenos were running amok on the planet, or something like that. Again, there wasn't much released back then in the way of spoilers. I was already in Japan and saw it within days of its theatrical release. I really hadn't expected the story to take place on Acheron LV-426 again, but once the reasons for that were revealed I had a pretty good idea what was in store for Ripley, especially after Lt Gorman of the US Colonial Marines was introduced...
Now I was a little surprised to find they were still using relatively contemporary small arms, and that their armor was rather simpler than I would've imagined so many years in the future, esp. after having read so many great science fiction novels beforehand. But there was something about the characters, the Colonial Marines themselves, that drew me in right away. It did take me a while to warm up to Hudson's character, however, as his blatantly insubordinate attitude and whining didn't seem to fit in with the rest of the Marines, and Lt Gorman's inexperience and ineptitude as a leader when the shit hit the fan was disconcerting, but that was only a first impression, and before I'd watched the movie all the way through. Apone, Hicks, Vas, Drake, Ferro, Frost, Bishop, and especially Ripley were all great characters, not to mention Newt and Burke. Hudson turned out to be a real diamond in the rough, especially after getting to see the additional 20 min. that were cut from the theatrical release a couple of years later on a rental video in Japan, before it was available in the states.
I loved the Sulaco and dropship designs, and I thought the smart guns were inspired creations, too. I thought the pulse rifle design was also extremely cool, though I'd imagined something rather more futuristic as a primary weapon, not to mention the "antique" pistols and shotgun Hicks carried. Stan Winston's makeover of Giger's xeno design was also new and inspired I thought, and when the queen was finally revealed near the end, and after the epic battle with Ripley and the power loader, I knew it was going to be a classic. The extended edition made it even more so. The UA571-C RSWS, aka robot sentries, and Hudson's "badass" speech were and are priceless.
I didn't have any trouble sleeping that night, but I do still have marks on my arm where the girl I was dating for the first time had her fingernails dug into my arm through the last hour or so of the movie. Guess I should've taken her to something a little milder. Needless to say, that was our first, and last date.

She's long forgotten, but I'm still very much in love with
Aliens!
