In the first half of the film the audience is meant to think that Ripley is a heartless bitch, especially the airlock scene when she refuses to let the landing party return aboard. I've always thought that her saving the cat was a great narrative device to show us that she isn't this cold, heartless person. She was doing what was necessary to save as many members of the crew as possible.
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This is the correct answer.
https://www.smartcompany.com.au/industries/information-technology/sack-google-staff-pay-tech/
Yeah exactly, it seems like a such a shame that The Thing (1982) didn't find its audience until years later. Because I feel like that's as close as we got to seeing a John Carpenter film with a big budget and it was great.
John Carpenter > Steven Spielberg
I just watched the video, that's really interesting. Thanks for the explanation
Wouldn't it be 3 = 6π/2π ?
Stay fresh, cheese bags 🤙
No no, the Nikon incident at the waterslide hotel isn't Canon because it comes from the expanded universe novels that were published before Disney+ bought LucasArts.
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100% agree! RotJ is where the cracks started to show. I think people forget this because all the nonsense that followed, starting with the Special Editions, makes RotJ seem restrained in comparison.