Alien: Containment

Last updated
Alien: Containment
Directed byChris Reading [1]
Written byChris Reading [2]
Based on
Alien
by
Produced by
  • Quaid Kocur
  • Patch Ward
  • Executive producers:
  • — James DeJulio
  • — Caleb Light-Wills
  • — Lesley Worton
Starring
CinematographyHoward Mills
Music bySimon Porter
Production
companies
Distributed by IGN
20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • March 29, 2019 (2019-03-29)(IGN)
  • May 3, 2019 (2019-05-03)(Fox)
Running time
10 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
Budget$35,000 [3]

Alien: Containment is a short film based on the science fiction action media franchise Alien . Released via IGN on March 29, 2019, coinciding with the 40th anniversary of the franchise, the film was written and directed by Chris Reading, through Tongal Studios and 20th Century Fox. [4] Starring Gaia Weiss, Theo Barklem-Biggs, and Sharon Duncan-Brewster, the film follows the survivors of the colonial transport Borrowdale who discover one of their number may be harboring a chestburster.

Contents

The sixteenth short film in the Alien franchise, it received a generally positive critical reception. [5] [6] James Paxton would reprise his role as MacWhirr from the film in Alien: Alone .

Plot

As the colonial transport spaceship Borrowdale breaks apart and explodes, [7] four survivors who escaped via a shuttle — Ward, Nass, Albrecht, and the comatose Mills — discuss the xenomorph outbreak that had taken place aboard the ship, and the chance one or more of them may have have been contaminated by a facehugger. After Albrecht discloses that Weyland-Yutani had okayed the Borrowdale's destruction to prevent the outbreak from spreading, Nass becomes paranoid that Mills is infected before attempting to kill him, before he realises he himself is the one infected as a chestburster begins to tear its way out of him. As Ward attempts to help Nass, Albrecht flees to another room onboard the shuttle and seals the others off via a hatch, only for a sudden impact — a rescue ship docking to their shuttle — leading her to accidentally reopening it, letting lose the infant xenomorph. As the infant mauls Albrecht, Ward scrawls "Do Not Open" in her blood on the shuttle window to prevent the rescue crew from letting the xenomorph onboard their own ship. [8] [9]

In a post-credits scene, Mills awakens to find Nass' corpse beside him. Hearing the now full-size xenomorph moving, he clutches his oxygen mask back to his face to return to unconsciousness. [10]

Cast

Production

In July 2018, it was reported that 20th Century Fox had joined forces with Tongal Studios to produce a series of Alien short films to coincide with the 40th anniversary of the franchise. [12] [13] [14] By March 2019, the details of the short films were released, Tongal co-founder and CEO James DeJulio describing the joint-production as "reflective of Tongal's mission to bring creative opportunities to the next generation of talent." [15] [16] The first short released and the sixteenth overall in the franchise, Alien: Containment was written and directed by Chris Reading with a budget of $35,000, [3] described as "captur[ing] the mood and contrast of Alien: Covenant with the DIY nature of the original Alien movie", [17] with visual effects provided by The Brewery VFX. [18] Following writing an "economical" screenplay, Reading attributed the film's post-credits scene's "tonal turn into comedic territory" as a result of on-set improvisation "get[ting] a dark laugh from the audience". [10]

Release

Alien: Containment was released on the IGN website on March 29, 2019, after which it was uploaded to the Alien Universe website, and all Alien social media pages on May 5, 2019, the short film then premiering alongside five others at the Emerald City Comic Con in Seattle, [15] and as a Movies Anywhere-exclusive bonus feature accompanying the digital release of Alien.

Reception

Alien: Containment received a positive critical reception. Josh Weiss of Syfy complimented the film for its structure as "a one-act play of sci-fi horror", as well as for the "intriguing" concepts introduced over its events, [5] with Vijay Varman of Circle of Cinema praising both the filmmaking as "a masterclass in using a minimal budget to portray a CGI-infused landscape", and Sharon Duncan Brewster's "incredibly complex performance in the vein of Ian Holm’s Ash". [6]

Notes

  1. Paxton would later portray the "Man on Radio", named "MacWhirr", in Alien: Alone . [11]

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References

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