Exclusive: Alien: Romulus director Fede Álvarez compared new shots with the 35mm print of Alien to stay true to the orignal
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Director of the upcoming franchise installmentAlien: Romulus,Fede Álvarez, reveals that right from the start he wanted his movie’s cinematography to mimic Ridley Scott’s Alien despite being made decades later.
“We have a scan of the original 35mm print of Alien and we put it on the screen side by side with ours,” Álvarez tellsSFX magazinein the new issue, which hits newsstands on August 7 and featuresAlien: Romuluson the cover. “Obviously that would do nothing if we didn’t do our job on the day,” he adds, noting that the team has to light the set in a certain way to reflect the color-grading of the first movie.
This is not just a style choice but is vital to making the audience believe this film sits within the Alien world, as although Alien: Romulus is the newest movie in the franchise, it is actually set between the events of Scott’s Alien released in 1979 and James Cameron’s 1986 sequelAliens. The filmmaker continues: “Visually, half of the work is that: just making sure that it looks like you’re in that universe.”
Even at the very birth of the project, Álvarez and production designer Naaman Marshall went to considerable lengths to ensure that the sets looked right. The director explains how the two would rifle through archives looking to take inspiration from conceptual artist Ron Cobb’s work. “We dug out a lot of concept art that was done for those movies that wasn’t even used,” adds theEvil Deadhelmer. “And figured out a way to be inspired by that and put it in this movie.”
The result? We will just have to wait and see. But what has been revealed so far including the trailer and the first look at the Xenomorph does feel rather reminiscent of the original.
Alien: Romulus starsCivil War’s Cailee Spaeny, David Jonsson, Archie Renaux,The Last of Us’ Isabela Merced, andAftersun’s Spike Fearn as a group of young space colonizers who get more than they bargained for when they step foot on a derelict space station and come face to face with the universes most terrifying life forms.
Not a subscriber to SFX? Thenhead on over here to get the latest issues sent directly to your home/device!
Sign up to the SFX Newsletter
Get sneak previews, exclusive competitions and details of special events each month!
Alien: Romulus releases on August 16. Read more inthe latest issue of SFX magazine, which features Alien: Romulus on the cover and is available from Wednesday, August 7.
For even more from SFX, sign up to ournewsletter, which delivers all the latest exclusives straight to your inbox.
Dune 2 director Denis Villeneuve has perfect response to Josh Brolin saying he will “quit acting” if the filmmaker isn’t nominated for an Oscar