John Carpenter's The Thing is the perfect horror film — discuss
On what made the original Alien (1979) a masterpiece of spatial dread.
Alien is a film that uses the enclosed space of the Nostromo to generate dread in a very specific way. The ship is large enough to create genuine uncertainty about where the alien is at any given moment, and small enough that there is no escape. The characters cannot run; they can only navigate.
H.R. Giger's design of the alien creature is one of the most important contributions to the film and to the genre's visual vocabulary. The creature is disturbing not because it is ugly but because its biology is inhuman in a way that touches something pre-rational: the combination of the phallic and the oral, the wetness, the translucency. These are elements from the grammar of sexual anxiety rather than the grammar of monster design.
Ridley Scott shoots the creature with a discipline that few directors have managed with their monsters: we rarely see it completely, and for most of the film we only see enough to understand that we don't want to see more. The partial reveal is more frightening than the full reveal would be.
The scene in the airlock is the correct ending. Ripley is alone, in a small space, with the alien. The film reduces its architecture to its essence: one person, one creature, and the vacuum outside.