So Is ‘Prometheus’ Just A Rewrite of Jon Spaihts ‘Alien’ Script Made Like A Less Direct Prequel?

Writer Damon Lindelof Explains Why Ridley Scott’s ‘Prometheus’ Isn’t & Is An ‘Alien’ Prequel


In case you’ve been living under a rock, you’re aware that director Ridley Scott is returning to the world of sci-fi after a nearly 30-year absence. Yes, it’s been that long since “Blade Runner” in 1982 (“Legend” is fantasy, leave it at that). He making “Prometheus,” a project that started out as a “Alien” prequel written by Jon Spaihts and then morphed into something new when “Lost” writer Damon Lindelof pitched a new direction which Scott loved. 20th Century Fox and Scott, pivoted and “Prometheus” was born — though considering how fast they changed everything, found a cast, a green light and a release date, one has to wonder if the changes weren’t that radical.

Starring Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, Sean Harris, Kate Dickie, Rafe Spall, Guy Pearce and Logan Marshall-Green, fans have been trying to piece together what “Prometheus” is exactly and from various statements we all know that it’s essentially a… sorta-prequel. “Out of the creative process evolved a new, grand mythology and universe in which this original story takes place,” Scott said earlier this year “The keen fan will recognize strands of Alien’s DNA, so to speak.”

And on a recent appearance on the Kevin Pollack Chat Show, screenwriter Damon Lindelof attempted to explain the connections of “Alien” and “Prometheus” without spoiling too much. What transpired was a fascinating chat with the actor and writer and we must say, Lindelof said a lot of the things we wanted to hear, including his astute observations on the redundancy and pointlessness of prequels that depict something that we already know the outcome of.

So, Lindelof on the genesis of “Prometheus,” the state and health of the “Alien” brand and the fact that in some (most?) prequels, there “is no suspense in inevitability.” Amen (watch the little dig at Lucas).

It started as an Alien prequel. That is what everybody wanted it to be. There is a real issue which is — what is the state of the Alien franchise at this point in our lives? There has been ‘Alien vs. Predator‘ and all these things, and its been completely and totally diluted. I’ve always felt that really good prequels should be original movies. And the sequels to those prequels should not be the movie which already exists because, with all due respect to anyone who makes a prequel, but why would you ruin the greatest twist in the history of cinema, “Luke, I am your father,” by showing me three movies which basically spoil that surprise. You can do movies which take place before ‘Star Wars,’ but I don’t need to see the story of the Skywalker clan. Show me something else which I can’t guess the possible outcome of. There is no suspense in inevitability. So a true prequel should essentially proceed the events of the original film, but be about something entirely different, feature different characters , have an entirely different theme, although it takes place in that same world. That was my fundamental feeling about what this movie wanted to be.

While it seems that Lindelof was simply redrafting or script-doctoring, he says his work was something completely different, but at the same time, it wasn’t a total brand-new overhaul. In fact it sounds like Jon Spaihts will be receiving some kind of co-writing credit.

And truth be told, it wasn’t script doctoring in the strictest sense because the draft that existed before I came on was written by this guy named Jon Spaihts and it was very good. And there were a lot of things in the movie, ‘Prometheus,’ which were Jon Spaihts’ and I feel like somewhere in the media reconstruction of this story, the tale is that I come in, I pitch an entirely new story, and its so original that everything else gets thrown out and that’s what we’re doing. In my brain, that’s not exactly what happened. But I also do feel that this movie is the movie I would want to see as a fanboy, take place in that ‘Alien’ universe, which precedes the events of the original Alien, but is not necessarily burdened by all the tropes of that franchise with Facehuggers and Chestbursters, and all that stuff that I love… but its sorta like, we’ve seen it before, can we do something different this time? And thats the movie that Ridley wanted to make. And when you’re working with an auteur, you basically just shut your mouth and listen and try to transcribe and channel the vision of that person, and get out of the way.

Lindelof once again sings the praises of Spaihts’ script.

So I read it, and it was good. This was not a disaster. There were really good ideas in that script. So I sent off an email…. Ridley works with these guys, Michael Ellenberg and Michael Costigan. I basically sent them an e-mail and said, “Here is what I think, and here is what I would do, if you were interested,” and the next morning … I get the call and they are like “We like your take, can you come in to Scott Free?” I walk into a room and there is Ridley Scott and an executive at Fox and I verbally present, here is everything in the script that I like now, here’s some of my thinking on it — what’s the lay of the land? What are the issues that you guys are having? And we have a great 90 minute meeting in which I do a lot of listening. Again, I don’t want to say I went in and wowed them, when what really happened was I gave a really short presentation and then Ridley talked about the movie he wanted to make. And then, they decided to hire me. I had to go down to Fox and talk to Tom Rothman about what I wanted to do as well.

Here’s where things get interesting. Lindelof says he wrote the script in two-weeks which sounds like more of a page one rewrite then the start-all-over-again rethink that he describes earlier as the “media reconstruction” of what happened (guys, to be fair, this is what you pitched out).

And then Sir Ridley Scott and I, and Michael Ellenberg, sat in a conference room for four hours a day, three days a week, and sort of went over it, again and again and again until I understood exactly what he wanted to do and I wrote it. It took me two weeks to write it, not a lot of time — the time consuming part was the collaboration because he thinks, and I know this sounds like I’m brown-noising but, Ridley Scott is a true genius and he thinks in visual terms far beyond the comprehension of mortals like us but also understands story and mood and tone.

The parts about “Prometheus” start around the 2:18 mark, yeah, this chat is that long. “Prometheus” is due in theaters June 8, 2012
[Via /Film]

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