Alien 3: The Unproduced Screenplay by William Gibson
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Publisher Description
The first-draft Alien screenplay by William Gibson, the founder of cyberpunk, turned into a novel by Pat Cadigan, the Hugo Award-Winning “Queen of Cyberpunk.”
William Gibson’s never-before-adapted screenplay for the direct sequel to Aliens, revealing the fates of Ripley, Newt, the synthetic Bishop, and Corporal Hicks. When the Colonial Marines vessel Sulaco docks with space station and military installation Anchorpoint, a new form of Xenomorph appears. Written by Hugo Award-winning novelist and “Queen of Cyberpunk” Pat Cadigan, based on Gibson’s never-produced first draft.
The Sulaco—on its return journey from LV-426—enters a sector controlled by the “Union of Progressive Peoples,” a nation-state engaged in an ongoing cold war and arms race. U.P.P. personnel board the Sulaco and find hypersleep tubes with Ripley, Newt, and an injured Hicks. A Facehugger attacks the lead commando, and the others narrowly escape, taking what remains of Bishop with them.
The Sulaco continues to Anchorpoint, a space station and military installation the size of a small moon, where it falls under control of the military’s Weapons Division. Boarding the Sulaco, a team of Colonial Marines and scientists is assaulted by a pair of Xenomorph drones. In the fight Ripley's cryotube is badly damaged. It’s taken aboard Anchorpoint, where Ripley is kept comatose. Newt and an injured Corporal Hicks are awakened, and Newt is sent to Gateway Station on the way to Earth. The U.P.P. sends Bishop to Anchorpoint, where Hicks begins to hear rumors of experimentation—the cloning and genetic modification of Xenomorphs.
The kind of experimentation that could yield a monstrous hybrid, and perhaps even a Queen.
ALIEN 3 TM & © Twentieth Century Films. All rights reserved.
Customer Reviews
Better than the movie(?)
As an Alien fan, I really enjoyed this version of Alien 3. <<< spoiler warning >>>
There’s very little overlap between the movie and this book. That’s a positive to me. I didn’t mind the movie but it didn’t meet the bar the first two had set. This book probably would have made a better film as it seems more aligned with the Alien monsterverse and weaves in familiar characters along the way. Some of the new alien traits also did seem to make their way into a newer film or two (e.g. how they can infect), so interesting to see how far back that concept took shape. All things considered, a worthy addition to Alien lore, and I would’ve loved to see the branch of this story keep going.
Nope
Just terrible. And I love Alien.