Initially, H.R. Giger's derelict ship was accepted, and then rejected, in a tense meeting with the Twentieth Century Fox team and director Ridley Scott, they were concerned the bone-like shape would blend into the already bone-like environment. Giger believed his friends Dan O'Bannon and Ronald Shusett were behind the idea, and tried to argue his case that the biomechanical nature of the ship would separate it from the background, until Gordon Carrol ordered him to create something new. Ridley remained quiet in the discussion, drawing a standard plane like fin sticking out of the ground in silent opposition. Two months later, Giger returned to the U.K. astonished to find they had gone back to his original designs, feeling there wasn't enough time to begin again.
Scritto da il
05-03-2025 alle ore 07:46