


Sometimes the eroticism was pushed so far that Giger was accused of pornography, with strange phallic machines emerging from the mouths or crotches of his figures. No one has ever forgotten Giger’s creation, voted the greatest movie monster of all time in a Radio Times poll.įor much of his career he worked with airbrushes on huge, two-metre canvases, creating monochrome figures that blended human and machine parts in ways that were both erotic and monstrous. Giger to design the “critter” and prove Aldrich wrong. You shouldn’t see it very much.”Ī young up-and-comer, Ridley Scott, was hired instead, and brought with him a Swiss artist called H.R. He had an even better idea for the grown creature: “Maybe we could get, like, an orangutan. It’s not as if anyone’s going to remember that critter once they’ve left the theatre.” One of the names initially considered to make the film was Robert Aldrich, the Hollywood veteran behind Kiss Me Deadly and What Ever Happened To Baby Jane? Aldrich lost the job when discussing the facehugger attack that starts the Alien’s lifecycle, when he appalled producer Gordon Carroll by saying, “I’ll just go to the market and get a liver and throw it in the guy’s face. In the late 1970s, 20th Century Fox began auditioning directors for Alien, a science fiction script they had in the works. Helen O'Hara explains how the movie's monster became a cinema icon – and brought unexpected fame to the shy Swiss artist who created it Alien was first released 40 years ago this month.
