ALIEN: ROMULUS is good. This is something that should be said in the start of the review because it is a miracle on par with Moses parting the Red Sea or the resurrection of Lazarus. It may sound as if I’m engaged in hyperbole but I’m a fan of the Aliens franchise since I bought one of those incredibly mismarketed children’s toys when I was ten. In simple terms, my summary of Aliens can be viewed as, “Alien is good, Aliens is good, Aliens vs. Predator the video game is good, the Dark Horse, comics were good, Alien: Isolation is good, and everything else is crap.” There’s degrees of crap among the Alien franchise and some things are much worse than others but there is a lot of crap in the franchise and some of it is historically bad like Aliens: Colonial Marines.
The issues are many but boil down to the fact that much of the movie is about the mystery of the xenomorphs and them becoming a known quantity after the first movie. Prometheus failed because they tried to set up a grand mythology around what amounted to, “a bunch of space wasp-spider-ants tear into us.” I’ve long held to the belief that the best way to view the original Alien was a space trucker was transporting some moldly alien caviar and the eggs hatched, killing everyone. Space is hostile in Alien and no one can hear you scream but the horror is multi-layered with the real terror being that in the year XXXX, we’re still a capitalist dystopia.
Alien: Romulus mostly gets it right. It’s the story of a bunch of twenty-somethings barely out of their teens that are trying to escape a colony world where they’re treated as little more than slave labor by Weyland-Yutani. They decide on the risky plan of heading up to a seemingly abandoned space station in order to do some looting and get themselves to a planet where they aren’t expected to die in the mines. It is not a spoiler to state that the abandoned space station is full of face-huggers, xenomorphs, and signs that Weyland-Yutani have been conducting unethical experiments like their spiritual descendants in Resident Evil’s Umbrella Corporation.
Indeed, if I have a small complaint, it’s that Alien: Romulus feels very much like a video game and the Alien: Isolation influences are obvious. There’s more monsters, more action, and more puzzles that our heroes have to solve in order to escape. The cast is also younger, prettier, and, honestly, feel a bit like extras from The Force Awakens with Rain (Cailee Spaeny) having a Rey-like quality about her. I say this is a small complaint because it is a very good video game. I also enjoyed this a helluva lot more than The Force Awakens and I didn’t hate that as much as most fans. If you’re going to steal, steal from the best in your franchise and Alien: Isolation is up there.
I’m not getting too much into the plot of the movie because there’s not that much of one to describe. It was a very bad idea to come to this space station and getting off becomes a very challenging task. There’s an attempt to weave together all of the mythology from the franchise, including elements from Alien: Resurrection and Prometheus. This I’m iffier about as I am happy consigning them to the dustbin of non-canon but Romulus does better with both film’s concepts than either film. I’m not going to spoil but there’s an element here from Resurrection that was incredibly stupid there but is genuinely horrifying in this one.
An interesting take on the subject of androids in the setting is the character of Andy (David Jonsson). He is a barely functioning unit that has fallen into the hands of the cast. He is also treated like crap by everyone other than Rain. He is an interesting allegory for racism and disability as the man gets an “upgrade” midway through the film that calls into question how we treat people by their apparent value. Speaking as someone neuroatypical, I resonated with Andy even as I kind of felt like he should have left them all to become alien chow. Even Rain doesn’t look great in how she treats her “brother” more like a pet than a person at times.
The acting is good, the characters are more than paper-thin, and I enjoyed the action even if I would have slowed it down a bit. I wasn’t a fan of using Ian Holm’s face for a CGI performance by an “Ash”-model android. I feel like they could have easily cast Lance Henrikson instead and it would have made a lot more sense with none of the necromancy element. Rain may not be a Ripley but she’s a solid lead.
In conclusion, Alien: Romulus is a solid space horror film that reminds me of a lot of the better elements of the franchise while ignoring most of the worst. I give it a solid 8 out of 10. That may not sound like a super-ringing endorsement but it’s fantastic by comparison to much of the regurgitated garbage that just makes use of the HR Giger puppets.