Everyone is comparing Ridley Scott’s new
film with his original Alien, and
there are parallels, not just the fact that it’s meant to be a prequel. The
crew include an android, a corporate nasty and a gutsy heroine, just like the
first two movies. There are also encounters with unpleasant creatures. Alien was a seminal movie, which spawned
its own sequels, albeit under different directors, yet it was more horror movie
than Sci-Fi. But SF often combines genres and is invariably expected to be a
thriller. Prometheus is not as
graphically or viscerally scary as Alien,
but it’s more a true Sci-Fi than a horror flick. In that respect I think it’s a
better movie, though most reviewers I’ve read disagree with me.
Prometheus is a good title because it’s the
Greek story about the Gods giving some of their abilities to humankind. Scott’s
tale is a 21st Century creation myth, whereby mankind goes in search
of the ‘people’ who supposedly ‘engineered’ us. One of the characters in the
film quips in response to this claim: ‘There goes 3 centuries of Darwinism.’
From a purely scientific perspective, it’s possible that DNA originally came
from somewhere else, either as spores or in meteorites or an icy comet, but it
would have been very simple life forms at the start of evolution not the end of
it. The idea that someone engineered our DNA so it would be compatible with
Earthbound DNA destroys the suspension of disbelief required for the story, so
it’s best to ignore that point.
But lots of Sci-Fi stories overlook this
fundamental point when aliens meet Earthlings and interbreed for example (Avatar). And I’ve done it myself (in my
fiction) though only to the extent that humans could eat food found on another
planet. I suspect we could only do that, in reality, if the food contained DNA
with the same chirality as ours. The universal unidirectional chirality of DNA is one
of the strongest evidential factors that all life on Earth had a common origin.
But I have to admit that Ridley has me
intrigued and I’m looking forward to the sequel, as the final scenes
effectively promise us one. One of the major differences with Alien and its spinoffs is that there is
a mystery in this story and the heroine is bent on finding the answer to it.
She wants to find out who made us and where they came from and why they did it.
There is an obvious religious allusion here, but this is closer to the Greek
gods, suggested by the title rather than the Biblical god. Having said that,
our heroine wears a cross and this is emphasised. I expect Ridley wants us to
make a religious connection.
Good Sci-Fi in my view should contain a bit
of philosophy – make us think about stuff. In this case, stuff includes the
possibility of life on other worlds and the possibility that there may exist
civilizations greater than ours, to the extent that they could have created us.
We find it hard to imagine that we are the end result of a process that started
from stardust; that something as complex and intelligent as us could not have
been created by a greater intelligence. Ridley brings that point home when the
android asks someone how would they feel about meeting their maker, as he has
had to. So I’m happy to see where Ridley is going with this – it’s a question
that most people have asked and not been satisfied with the answer. I don’t
think Ridley is going to give us a metaphysical answer. I expect he’s going to
challenge what it means to be human and what responsibilities that entails in
the universe’s creation.