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Video: Unboxing Alien Anthology Blu-ray
The Alien Anthology is a 2010 six-disc
Blu-ray box set which, for the first time, brought Alien, Aliens, Alien3 and Alien
Resurrection to high-definition home video. As with the Alien
Quadrilogy DVD set before it, the Anthology was
designed to be the definitive collection of the films in the Alien franchise,
also including a wealth of bonus materials.
The set contains remastered high-definition transfers of not only each of
the four theatrical films in the Alien franchise,
but also their respective alternate versions (the Alien Director's Cut, the Aliens Special Edition, the Alien3 Special Edition and
the Alien Resurrection Special Edition).
The set also brings together, for the first time, virtually all of the bonus
material from every home video release of
the Alien movies up to that point, including the 1991/1992 LaserDisc
releases, the 1999 Alien Legacy VHS and DVD
releases and the 2003 Alien
Quadrilogy DVD set, along with new never-before-seen bonus material
exclusive to this set.
The box set was released on October 25, 2010 in the United Kingdom[1] and October 26, 2010 in the United States and Canada.[2] The set's discs were also included in the Alien Anthology: Limited Collector's Edition box set, which was released simultaneously.
Overview
The Alien Anthology set features six Blu-ray discs, the
first four of which contain high-definition transfers of the four films in the
series in both their original theatrical and alternate versions. As well as the
new HD transfers, Aliens director James
Cameron took the opportunity to digitally correct certain mistakes in
his film for its Blu-ray debut, while the extended Special Edition of Alien3 also
underwent additional post-production work specially for the set — specifically,
some of the original cast were brought back to re-record dialogue in some of
the added and extended scenes so that the occasionally poor sound quality
present in previous DVD releases could be corrected.[3]
Disc 5 contains four extensive making-of documentaries, originally created
in 2003 by Charles de Lauzirika for the Alien
Quadrilogy DVD set, that detail the production of each film in the
series. For the Anthology, these documentaries were newly rebuilt
in a widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio (having originally been filmed in 4:3) and
feature newly created title graphics.[4] Additionally,
the documentary on Alien3, Wreckage and Rage, is
presented in its entirety for the first time — the version included in the Alien
Quadrilogy was cut by over 20 minutes at 20th Century Studios' behest, to remove
negative comments about the troubled production made by the cast and crew.[5] Also
included on the disc are numerous "Enhancement Pods", essentially
deleted and extended scenes from the documentaries, which provide additional
depth and detail on the making of the movies.
Disc 6 contains a wealth of additional bonus material, including all the
remaining documentaries that had been produced for the Alien series
at that time — including The Alien Legacy, The Alien Saga and both
versions of Alien Evolution — plus additional videos,
still images and script drafts. Virtually all of the special features and
supplements from previous releases of the Alien movies
(including an archive of the Special Collector's Edition LaserDisc box sets,
with all their image galleries and other unique content) are included, as well
as new exclusive bonus material. Owing to the increased storage capacity of the
Blu-ray format, the previous five discs of special features from the Quadrilogy set
have been condensed to just two Blu-ray discs, which hold approximately 60 hours
of bonus video content and over 12,000 still images.[6]
The Blu-ray discs from the Alien Anthology were
simultaneously released as part of the Alien Anthology: Limited
Collector's Edition box set. The same discs have since been reused
for several other releases, including the Prometheus to Alien: The Evolution box
set and the individual single-disc Blu-ray releases of each of the films in the Alien series.
MU-TH-UR Mode
Owing to the hugely extensive nature of the bonus material, the set also
includes a special interactive "MU-TH-UR Mode" (named after the MU/TH/UR computer
aboard the Nostromo in Alien)
to help users navigate this bonus content. When active, MU-TH-UR Mode overlays
an interface on the screen during the film that can be used to quickly switch
between audio track options, or bring up a special "Weyland-Yutani Datastream"
text track that provides trivia and behind the scenes anecdotes. MU-TH-UR Mode
also grants access to bonus video and image content directly relating to the
scene currently being played — instead of being viewed immediately, this
content can be "tagged" and saved to a list so that the viewer may
quickly access the relevant material, found on discs 5 and 6, after they have
finished watching the movie; tags are retained when switching Blu-ray discs,
and a complete list of currently saved tags can be viewed and revised on the
main menu of any of the set's discs. This list additionally informs the user
which of the two bonus discs contains each piece of content.
As well as each of the four films, the MU-TH-UR Mode interface is also
available during the documentaries on disc 5, linking to additional behind the
scenes content and also providing a search index allowing the viewer to seek
out any and all material linked to a particular topic or member of cast and
crew. Unlike the main films, some of the supplemental material accessed through
MU-TH-UR Mode can be viewed immediately. Some of the bonus video content
accessed in this way is exclusive to MU-TH-UR Mode.
Easter eggs
As well as the advertised material, the Alien Anthology box
set also includes all of the secret Easter eggs found on previous Alien franchise DVD
releases. They are now accessed from the Anthology Archives disc.
Omissions
Several new bonus features intended for the set ultimately had to be left
out. Notably, a single Enhancement Pod from Superior Firepower: Making Aliens,
titled "Dailies: James Remar as Hicks", was removed at the
request of Lightstorm Entertainment (James
Cameron's production company).[4] Had
it been included, this would have been the first time footage of Remar playing
Hicks was released to the public. It was also planned to have Sigourney
Weaver record new audio commentaries for each of the four films in the
set, but scheduling conflicts with her work promoting Avatar meant
there was no time to record them.[4]
Despite the set's generally exhaustive nature, a small number of
pre-existing supplemental features were also left out. Perhaps most notably,
the vintage documentary Giger's Alien, created by H. R. Giger himself
in 1979, was not
included. Other materials left out of the Blu-ray set include the
"Alternate music and production sound" audio track for Alien,
which had previously appeared in the Alien Legacy box set; the track
was omitted due to space concerns.[4] Finally,
some additional Sigourney Weaver screen test footage and four short promotional featurettes for Aliens were
also omitted, all of which had previously appeared as bonus material on The
Alien Saga DVD release.
2012 UK release
[Above] The cover of the 2012 Alien Anthology set.
In 2012, a
four-disc budget version of the set was re-released exclusively in the UK.
This version includes the first four discs from the full Anthology set
(containing both versions of each of the four films, as well as commentaries
and isolated scores), but omits the two bonus discs of documentaries and
additional features. Unlike the 2010 set, all discs are contained in their own
separate Blu-ray cases (which are essentially the same as those used for the
individual UK Blu-ray releases of the films), held together in an exclusive
slipcase.
The four-disc Anthology set was released on January 16,
2012.[7]
Contents
Disc 1: Alien
- 1979 theatrical
version
- 2003 Director's Cut with Ridley
Scott introduction
- Audio
commentary with director Ridley Scott, writer Dan
O'Bannon, executive producer Ronald
Shusett, editor Terry
Rawlings, and actors Sigourney Weaver, Tom
Skerritt, Veronica Cartwright, Harry Dean Stanton and John Hurt
- Alternate
audio commentary with director Ridley Scott (theatrical cut only)
- Final
theatrical isolated score by Jerry
Goldsmith (theatrical cut only)
- Composer's
original isolated score (theatrical cut only)
- 7 deleted and extended scenes*
- Deleted
scene footage marker (Director's Cut only)
- MU-TH-UR
Mode interactive experience with Weyland-Yutani Datastream
Disc 2: Aliens
- 1986 theatrical
version
- 1991 Special Edition with James
Cameron introduction
- Audio
commentary with director James Cameron, producer Gale
Anne Hurd, Alien effects creator Stan
Winston, visual effects supervisors Robert
Skotak and Dennis
Skotak, miniature effects supervisor Pat
McClung, and actors Michael
Biehn, Bill Paxton, Lance
Henriksen, Jenette Goldstein, Carrie
Henn and Christopher Henn
- Final
theatrical isolated score by James
Horner (theatrical cut only)
- Composer's
original isolated score (theatrical cut only)
- 16 deleted and extended scenes*
- Deleted
scene footage marker (Special Edition only)
- MU-TH-UR
Mode interactive experience with Weyland-Yutani Datastream
Disc 3: Alien3
- 1992 theatrical
version
- 2003 Special Edition (restored
version)
- Audio
Commentary with cinematographer Alex
Thomson, editor Terry Rawlings, Alien effects designers Alec
Gillis and Tom Woodruff, Jr., visual effects
producer Richard Edlund, and actors Paul
McGann and Lance Henriksen
- Final
theatrical isolated score by Elliot Goldenthal (theatrical cut only)
- 31 deleted and extended scenes*
- Deleted
scene footage marker (Special Edition only)
- MU-TH-UR
Mode interactive experience with Weyland-Yutani Datastream
Disc 4: Alien Resurrection
- 1997 theatrical version
- 2003 Special Edition with Jean-Pierre Jeunet introduction
- Audio
commentary with director Jean-Pierre Jeunet, editor Hervé
Schneid, Alien effects creators Alec Gillis and Tom Woodruff, Jr.,
visual effects supervisor Pitof, conceptual artist Sylvain Despretz, and actors Ron
Perlman, Dominique Pinon and Leland
Orser
- Final
theatrical isolated score by John
Frizzell (theatrical cut only)
- 11 deleted and extended scenes*
- Deleted
scene footage marker (Special Edition only)
- MU-TH-UR
Mode interactive experience with Weyland-Yutani Datastream
Disc 5: Making the Anthology
- The Beast Within: Making Alien
- Superior Firepower: Making
Aliens
- Wreckage and Rage: Making Alien3 (restored version)
- One Step Beyond: Making
Alien Resurrection
- Enhancement
Pods
- MU-TH-UR
Mode interactive experience
Disc 6: The Anthology Archives
- Alien
- The Alien Legacy documentary
- Experience in Terror promotional featurette
- 7 deleted
scenes:
- Kane in
the Morning
- The Derelict
- Kane's Condition
- Repairs Interrupted
- Regrouping
- Ripley Soothes Lambert
- Airlock Sequence
- First
draft screenplay by Dan O'Bannon
- Original
Ridley Scott storyboards and notes
- Storyboard
archive
- Sigourney
Weaver screen test
- Multi-angle Chestburster sequence
- Video
graphics gallery
- American
Cinematheque Ridley Scott Q&A session
- LaserDisc archive
- Trailers
and TV spots
- Production
and promotional image galleries
- Aliens
- 2 deleted
scenes:
- Burke Cocooned
- Deleted Scene Montage
- Original treatment by
James Cameron
- Storyboard
archive
- Previsualizations
- Colonial Marine helmet
camera footage
- Video
graphics gallery
- Nostromo inquest
crew dossiers
- Main title
concepts
- Aliens: Ride at the Speed of
Fright introductory
movie and on-ride footage
- LaserDisc archive
- Trailers
and TV spots
- Production
and promotional image galleries
- Alien3
- The Making of Alien3 documentary
- Alien3 promotional featurette
- Storyboard
archive
- Arceon concept
art from Vincent Ward's Alien III
- Furnace
set construction time-lapse video
- Multi-angle EEV bioscan
footage
- Trailers
and TV spots
- Production
and promotional image galleries
- Alien Resurrection
- HBO First
Look: Alien Resurrection - Behind the Scenes documentary
- Alien Resurrection promotional featurette
- First
draft screenplay by Joss Whedon
- Storyboard
archive
- Previsualizations
- ADI creature test footage
- Trailers
and TV spots
- Production
and promotional image galleries
- Anthology
- Alien Evolution documentary (2001 original TV version)
- Alien Evolution documentary (2003 Alien re-edit)
- The Alien Saga documentary
- Aliens in the
Basement: The Bob Burns Collection documentary
- Aliens
3D attraction
script and concept art
- Family Guy and Spaceballs parody clips
- Dark Horse Comics cover gallery
- Patches
and logos gallery
- MU-TH-UR
Mode interactive experience
Other contents
- MU-TH-UR Mode viewer's guide booklet
*The deleted and extended scenes found on discs one to four are in fact merely
the additional scenes added in the alternate cuts of the four Alien movies.
In the case of Alien, this means some of these scenes have been
edited from the originally filmed version.
Trivia
- Among the
material released for the first time on the Anthology set,
perhaps the most notable is a deleted scene from Aliens where Ripley discovers Burke inside
the Atmosphere Processing Plant,
cocooned and impregnated with a Chestburster,
whilst searching for Newt. For years, still images
of the scene had been in circulation, but the Alien Anthology set
represents the first time this footage has been available for fans to
view.
- The main
menus for each film's disc contain schematic breakdowns, surveillance
footage, and other imagery offering a look at the film's elements and
characters. On the Alien3 one, de Lauzirika
and designer Raleigh Stewart took the opportunity to offer their own
explanation for a long debated question regarding how the egg managed
to be inside the USS Sulaco, using some clips from Aliens of
the Queen and its detached egg sac.[8]
- Reception
to the Alien Anthology set has been overwhelmingly
positive, with reviewers variously describing it as "a landmark for
entertainment in the home",[5] "an
amazing collection that improves on the nigh-perfect Alien
Quadrilogy DVD release in every way"[9] and
"one of the most extraordinary packages made available for the home
video market".[10] In
their glowing review, IGN concluded "there probably won't be a single
release that matches the sheer magnificence of this beautiful box
set".[11]
- The plastic
trays inside which the discs are housed feature egg-shaped recesses for
the discs, instead of the usual circular recesses.
See Also
- Alien Anthology:
Limited Collector's Edition — A deluxe Blu-ray box set based on the Anthology.
External Links
- Official website (now
a redirect to the Alien Facebook page)
- Alien Anthology at Amazon.com
- Alien Anthology at AvPGalaxy.net
References
- ↑ "Blu-ray.com - Alien Anthology Blu-ray (UK)".
Retrieved on 2018-02-28.
- ↑ "Blu-ray.com - Alien Anthology Blu-ray (US)".
Retrieved on 2018-02-28.
- ↑ Alien Anthology Hits Blu-ray, Dark Realm Fox
- ↑ Jump
up to:4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "The Digital Bits - Blu-ray Review: Alien Anthology".
Retrieved on 2016-01-11.
- ↑ Jump
up to:5.0 5.1 "AVForums - Alien Anthology Blu-ray Review".
Retrieved on 2018-10-01.
- ↑ Tribbey, Chris. "'Alien Anthology' Boasts 60 Hours of Bonus Content".
- ↑ "Blu-ray.com - Alien Anthology Blu-ray (UK)".
Retrieved on 2018-03-13.
- ↑ "AVPGalaxy - Reassembling Opinions, Talking Alien 3 With
Alien Anthology Producer Charles de Lauzirika – AvPGalaxy Podcast #107".
Retrieved on 2020-05-13.
- ↑ "Blu-ray.com - Alien Anthology Blu-ray Review".
Retrieved on 2014-01-10.
- ↑ "High
Def Digest - Alien Anthology Blu-ray Review". Retrieved on
2018-10-01.
- ↑ "IGN - Alien Anthology Blu-ray Review". Retrieved
on 2018-10-01.
More Images Source: https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Alien-Anthology-Blu-ray/5090/#Packaging
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