May 19, 2017
With the summer movie season kicking into high gear, there's plenty of films coming out each weekend – and this time around, you can't ask for a bigger difference in styles than the latest epic in the "Alien" series, and the teen romance "Everything, Everything."
"Alien: Covenant" marks the sixth official film in the "Alien" series, which means no one counts the two awful and stupid "Alien Versus Predator" movies made just over a decade ago. Director Ridley Scott exploded into the top tier of directors with the first "Alien" in 1979, and after branching out with an eclectic array of other classics including "Gladiator" and "Thelma & Louise," he returned to the well with the "Alien" prequel "Prometheus" five years ago.
That film launched a trilogy designed to show how the vicious aliens came into being prior to the initial film's atrocities, and this weekend he's back to reveal more of how the aliens originated with "Covenant." But with less memorable humans in the battle, it's getting harder to care about their fates.
The film opens with a flashback to an unspecified time decades before when David (Michael Fassbender), the android who played a key role as part of the crew in "Prometheus," was being trained by its creator, Dr. Weyland (Guy Pearce). As they discuss God and creation, there is a brewing air of tension between the two as David seems to bristle at the idea of being controlled.
But most of the film takes place in 2104, about a decade after "Prometheus," and features a giant spaceship called Covenant with a 16-member crew in charge of 2,000 people and hundreds of embryos all hoping to colonize a distant planet. All are in cryogenically suspended sleep for the decades-long journey, under the care of an android named Walter (also Fassbender), and another android in the mold of David.
When the Covenant gets caught in a space storm that cuts off some of its power, the crew is forced awake. The captain (James Franco in what has to be the shortest cameo in years) dies in the havoc, leaving Oram (Billy Crudup) in charge amid tensions wrought by the fact he orders them to fix the ship with no real time to mourn the death of their former leader.