Celebrating its 40th Anniversary, ALIEN Returns to U.S. theaters October 13th, 15th & 16th

¨It’s got a wonderful defense mechanism. You don’t dare kill it.¨

Forty years ago, Ridley Scott‘s science-fiction/horror masterpiece ALIEN revolutionized the genre and the industry. To celebrate its 40th anniversary and everlasting impact on filmmaking, I wanted to remind you that Fathom Events is bringing ALIEN back to the big screen at more than 600 nationwide theaters as part of its TCM Big Screen Classics series. A perfect pre-Halloween fright, ALIEN returns to theaters for three days only: this Sunday, October 13, Tuesday, October 15, and Wednesday, October 16.

Moviegoers can search for their local participating theaters and purchase tickets for ALIEN now at FathomEvents.com.

Working from a screenplay by Dan O’Bannon and a story by Dan O’Bannon and Ronald ShusettALIEN is a film dripping in dread. Sigourney WeaverTom SkerrittVeronica CartwrightHarry Dean StantonJohn HurtIan Holm and Yaphet Kotto are the crew members of the Nostromo, which investigates a mysterious signal coming from an unknown planet. When they unwittingly take an alien creature aboard the ship, they have no idea just how terrifying—and deadly—the ordeal will be.

·       WHAT: In the summer of 1979, moviegoers journeyed into deep space and met with unimaginable horror as they discovered director Ridley Scott’s science-fiction/horror masterpiece Alien. Working from a screenplay by Dan O’Bannon and a story by O’Bannon and Ronald Shusett, Scott created a film dripping in dread, one that upended audience expectations for a science-fiction film by combining a futuristic setting with extreme terror. Forty years later, Alien returns to more than 600 cinemas nationwide for three days only, with special commentary before and after the film from TCM Primetime Host Ben Mankiewicz.

Sigourney WeaverTom SkerrittHarry Dean StantonVeronica CartwrightJohn HurtIan Holm and Yaphet Kotto are the crew members of the Nostromo, which veers off course to explore a mysterious signal emanating from an unknown planet. When they unwittingly take an alien creature aboard the ship, they have no idea just how terrifying – and deadly – the ordeal will be.

Combining a remarkable visual style, including designs by H.R. Giger and Oscar®-winning visual effects, along with a disquieting score by Jerry Goldsmith, Alien has become a modern classic.

·       WHO:        Fathom Events, Turner Classic Movies and Twentieth Century Fox

·       WHEN:  Sunday, October 13, 2019 – 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. (local time)

                 Tuesday, October 15, 2019 – 7:00 p.m. (local time)

  Wednesday, October 16, 2019 – 7:00 p.m. (local time)

·       WHERE: Tickets for Alien can be purchased at www.FathomEvents.com or participating theater box offices. For a complete list of theater locations, visit the Fathom Events website (participating theaters are subject to change).  

40th Anniversary! ALIEN – Original Theatrical Cut Midnights This Weekend at The Tivoli

¨It’s got a wonderful defense mechanism. You don’t dare kill it.¨

ALIEN plays this weekend (May 3rd and 4th) at the Tivoli (6350 Delmar Boulevard)as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight series. A Facebook invite for the screening can be found HERE

Ridley Scott has had a great career and has made many fantastic films, but ALIEN (1979), only his second, may arguably be his best.

It may be one of those films where everything fit perfectly. Direction, cast, visuals, score, atmosphere, editing, pacing. It’s hard to believe it was made 34 years ago it holds up so well. Made two years after Fox’s license to print money after STAR WARS, their next big sci-fi hit couldn’t have been more different. Much like STAR WARS, ALIEN drew on older movies for inspiration, such as IT THE TERROR FROM BEYOND SPACE, PLANET OF THE VAMPIRES, FORBIDDEN PLANET, THE THING, etc. And like STAR WARS, it presented B-movie thrills  with an A-picture budget, treating its material seriously. If you could liken STAR WARS to a cliffhanger serial for modern kids, ALIENis like the old B-movie space monster films for a modern adult audience.

Now you’ll have the chance to revisit ALIEN in all its big-screen glory when it plays midnights this weekend (May 3rd and 4th) as part of the Tivoli’s Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight Series! Even better, this will be the ALIEN Original Theatrical cut that we all enjoyed 40 years ago! Don’t miss ALIEN this weekend!  I’ll be there with ALIEN trivia and prizes!

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

Here’s the rest of this Spring’s ‘Reel Late at the Tivoli’ schedule:

May 10-11          PERFECT BLUE Subtitled  

May 17-18          THE CONJURING

William Holden in WILD ROVERS Available on Blu-ray From Warner Archives


Great news for fans of offbeat 70s westerns! William Holden in WILD ROVERS will soon be available on Blu-ray From Warner Archives. Pre-order information can be found HERE.


Lifelong ranch hand Ross Bodine decides cowpunching is no kind of life. So he and a raw cowboy half his age rob a bank to get the cash each needs to improve his lot. An indignant posse is soon in pursuit. Filmmaker Blake Edwards made his name with The Pink Panther and other comedies, but he also showed great skill in other genres with the thriller Experiment in Terror, the drama Days of Wine and Roses and this nuanced paean to the West. In performances perfectly matching Edwards’ balance of rowdy comedy and hardscrabble period realism, William Holden and Ryan O’Neal play the fugitive saddlebums, with Holden drawing special praise. “As he grows older, he grows better like a great old wine. All the reverberations from the previous roles are beginning to sound” (Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times).

Blake Edwards directs William Holden and Ryan O’Neal in this anti-Western about two cowboys who quit cattle-ranching and take up bank-robbing. Karl Malden plays the offended cattle rancher who sends his two sons (Tom Skerritt and Joe Don Baker) out to bring the two cowboys to justice. Heavily edited by the studio in its initial release, this edition brings you the reconstructed ‘roadshow’ version of the film, with original overture and exit music intact, as Edwards intended the film to be seen. Edwards’ use of wide-open widescreen along with Philip Lathrop’s scintillating cinematography are rendered as never before in this new 1080p presentation that truly brings Edward’s epic roadshow and Holden’s masterful performance home. SPECIAL FEATURES: “The Movie Makers” Featurette; Theatrical Trailer (HD). 16×9 Letterbox

LUCKY – Review

Harry Dean Stanton says farewell in the movie LUCKY, which turned out to be the beloved actor’s last. Not much happens in LUCKY and its slow, unhurried style may not appeal to everyone, but this movie has a big heart and a moving performance by Stanton that acts as a summary of  his long and extraordinary career.

LUCKY follows Lucky (Stanton) and his friends and neighbors who live in the dusty desert town of Cave Creek, Arizona. Lucky is 90 years old but fiercely independent, rejecting any idea of assisted living. The film follows his routines over a few days of his  life. Lucky smokes, takes a sponge bath, gets dressed, listens to Spanish-language music, does yoga, and smokes some more. Lucky’s interactions with others consists of eating at a diner run by his friend Joe (Barry Shabaka Henley) where he does his crossword puzzles, and a daily stop at the local watering hole. There he chats about mortality and spirituality (he’s an atheist) with barmaid Elaine (Beth Grant) and a couple of fellow regulars; ageing lothario Paulie (James Darren) and Howard (David Lynch), who’s dealing with the loss of a pet turtle named President Roosevelt. Lucky, feeling run down, visits his doctor (Ed Begley, Jr.), who diagnoses his lethargy as a matter of simply getting old and advises him to not stop smoking (“quitting will probably do you more harm than good”). At the shop where Lucky buys his cigarettes, the Mexican storekeeper (Bertila Damas), invites him to a birthday party for her son Juan (Ulysses Olmedo). There, Lucky sings the Spanish song ‘Volver, Volver’ .

There are no surprises in LUCKY and it’s a bit modest and brief at just 87 minutes. But the directorial debut of actor John Carroll Lynch, greatly enhanced by the evocative cinematography of Tim Suhrstedt and the sensitive music of Elvis Kuehn, is a deeply affecting look at an old man near the end of his life. There’s a wonderful scene where Lucky swaps war stories with a fellow vet he meets at the bar (played by Stanton’s ALIEN co-star Tom Skerritt). When Stanton tells of being a cook on an LST in the Navy during WWII and shares other anecdotes, these are events that actually took place in the actor’s life. Stanton’s minimalist performance shows his complexity and range as an actor who can do so much by doing so little and he makes LUCKY an enjoyable, and worthy, swan song.

Read my interview with LUCKY director John Carroll Lynch HERE

4 of 5 Stars

WAMG Giveaway – Win the A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING Blu-ray

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Academy Award  winner Tom Hanks (Best Actor, Forrest Gump, 1994) stars in the classic fish-out- of-water tale A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING, is now available on Blu-ray (plus Digital HD), DVD (plus Digital), Digital HD and On Demand  from Lionsgate. Based on The New York Times best- selling novel of the same name by David Eggers, the humorous and touching film about one man’s quest to find professional (and personal) redemption was written for the screen and directed by Golden Globe nominee Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run). Alexander Black (Tim), Sarita Choudhury (TV’s “Homeland”), Sidse Babett Knudsen (TV’s “Westworld”), Ben Whishaw (Spectre) and Tom Skerritt (TV’s “Pickett Fences”) co-star. Academy Award ® winner Tom Hanks delivers one of his most engaging performances as Alan Clay, a recently divorced American businessman who is sent overseas to pitch a state-of- the-art holographic teleconferencing system to a king. As Alan vainly tries to navigate new and unusual customs, he finds himself thrust into a series of wonderful misadventures, and a fateful encounter that changes his life forever.

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The A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING home entertainment release comes with three all-new behind-the- scenes featurettes including “From Novel to Screen: The Adaptation of A Hologram for the King” looking at the transition from best-selling novel to feature film; “Perfecting the Culture” highlighting the impeccable production design behind A Hologram for the King; and a “Making Of” featurette rounding out the bonus footage with in-depth interviews and behind-the- scenes peeks at the creation of the film.

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Now you can own the A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING Blu-ray! We Are Movie Geeks has three copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment below and tell us what your favorite Tom Hanks movie is (mine is BACHELOR PARTY!)

It’s so easy. We’ll be picking the winners next week. Good Luck!

1. You must have a U.S. mailing address.
2. No purchase necessary.

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Tom Hanks And Sarita Choudhury Star In Delightful Trailer For A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING

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Tom Hanks asks “How did I get here?” (ala The Talking Heads) in the first trailer for director Tom Tykwer’s A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING

Cultures collide when an American businessman (Hanks) is sent to Saudi Arabia to close what he hopes will be the deal of a lifetime. Baffled by local customs and stymied by an opaque bureaucracy, he eventually finds his footing with the help of a wise-cracking taxi driver (Alexander Black) and a beautiful Saudi doctor (Sarita Choudhury).

This look absolutely charming!

Tykwer and Hanks previously worked together on the 2012 science-fiction movie CLOUD ATLAS. That film, which only gets better upon repeat viewings, was written and directed by Lana Wachowski, Tom Tykwer and Lilly Wachowski.

Lionsgate, Roadside Attractions and Saban Films will release A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING in theaters April 22, 2016.

A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING will have its world premiere at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival in the ‘Spotlight’ section.

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GARGOYLES and DEVIL’S RAIN at the Heavy Anchor Oct. 13th – KRAMPUS MOVIE NIGHT!

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“Who calls me from out of the Pit?!”

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Holy Melting Travoltas! A pair of schlock classics from the early ‘70s both involving horned demons in the desert plotting world domination?!? It must be Krampus Movie Night!

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The Krampus Research Association of St. Louis will be throwing their first movie night Monday October 13th at The Heavy Anchor (5226 Gravois, St. Louis 63116) with a double feature of GARGOYLES and THE DEVIL’S RAIN. This is a Fundraiser for Saint Louis Krampusnacht 2014. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. Show starts at 8 p.m. Suggested donation of $5 for admission.

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GARGOYLES is one of the seminal TV horror films of my youth. I saw this gem the first time it aired as a Tuesday Movie-of-the-Week in 1972 when I was 9 years old and it’s all the kids talked about at school for a solid week. For 1972, this was one helluva TV movie. The effects, though dated by today’s CGI-laden standards, were spectacular — and the Stan Winston-created gargoyle suits still look good pretty damn today.

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GARGOYLES is a surprisingly sober and professional affair considering the subject matter, with an interesting use of slow motion film effects to give an unearthly feel to the early gargoyle attack scenes that is actually mildly disturbing. Though it’s been mostly out of circulation for the past several decades, GARGOYLES is a film that people remember having seen even after over 40 years – no easy feat. Cornel Wilde is convincing as an anthropologist demonology expert who’s handy with a shotgun and Bernie Casey manages to pull off a real performance under all that makeup as the chief Gargoyle. GARGOYLES is a classic!

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Anton Levay served as technical adviser on THE DEVIL’S RAIN, which I saw at the long-shuttered Ellisville Cinema back in 1974. It’s always been known as the movie where “everyone melts at the end”, but is actually a pretty spooky and grim little thriller.

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If you don’t appreciate THE DEVIL’S RAIN’S incoherent plot (a bunch of jumbled stuff about devil worship), you gotta love it for its cast. It’s John Travolta’s film debut, but it doesn’t end there. Also starring are Ernest Borgnine, Tom Skerritt, Eddie Albert, William Shatner, Ida Lupino, and Keenan Wynn. You read that right: the MARTY Oscar winner, the ALIEN co-star, the king of “Green Acres“, Capt. Kirk, one of Hollywood’s most revered actresses, and DR. STRANGELOVE’s Gen. Bat Guano. Don’t miss it!

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If you’re wondering, the Krampus is the anti-Santa Claus, a wicked beast from the folklore of the Alpine countries of Europe who loves to swat children who have misbehaved at Christmas with his bundle of birch sticks and rusty chains before dragging them in baskets to the underworld. Krampus is celebrated on Krampusnacht, which takes place on the eve of St. Nicholas’ Day. In parts of Europe, party-goers masquerade as devils, wild-men, and witches to participate in Krampuslauf (Krampus Run). Intoxicated and bearing torches, costumed devils caper and carouse through the streets terrifying children and adults alike. Krampusnacht is increasingly being celebrated in other parts of Europe as well as in many American cities.

The facebook invite for this event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/277791022416591/

For more info about The Krampus Research Association, visit their Facebook pageHERE

www.facebook.com/krampusresearchassociationstl

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Ridley Scott’s ALIEN Celebrates 35th Anniversary With All-New Blu-ray Edition Arriving October 7

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A word of warning….

This Halloween revisit one of the scariest films of all-time as ALIEN: 35TH
Anniversary Edition
arrives on Blu-ray October 7 from Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment.

This Limited-Edition Set includes both the theatrical version and director’s cut on Blu-ray, along with audio commentaries, deleted scenes and more — PLUS — a reprint of the original Alien illustrated comic and all-new, collectible art cards as a tribute to the late H.R. Giger, creator of the iconic movie monster that started it all. Check out my look back at the film HERE.

When the crew of the space-tug Nostromo responds to a distress signal from a barren planet, they discover a mysterious life form that breeds within human hosts. The acid-blooded extraterrestrial proves to be the ultimate adversary as crew members battle to stay alive and prevent the deadly creature from reaching Earth. Directed by Ridley Scott and starring Sigourney Weaver in her breakout performance as Ripley, this legendary first film in the ALIEN saga will leave you breathless!

Throughout 2014, Twentieth Century Fox Consumer Products is honoring the milestone 35th anniversary with a yearlong celebration marking the beginnings of the Alien legacy by releasing commemorative and fan-favorite products.

Best in Class licensees including Dark Horse Comics, SEGA, NECA, Titan Publishing, Sideshow Collectibles, Diamond Select toys, Super7 x Funko and other partners will roll out exclusive branded publishing, toys and collectible merchandise worldwide to celebrate the ALIEN franchise.  The highly-anticipated first person survival horror game Alien: Isolation will be available on the PlayStation4 computer entertainment system and Xbox One, the all-in-one games and entertainment system from Microsoft, as well as PlayStation3 computer entertainment system and the Xbox 360  video game and entertainment system from Microsoft and PC also on October 7.

In addition to Alien: Isolation, hardcore fans can finally add Lieutenant Ellen Ripley to their ALIEN collections as we welcome her NECA figures into the family of officially-licensed merchandise. Many other exciting first-time and limited edition products will also release to celebrate this exciting milestone this year.

Fans can also help celebrate the 35th anniversary of ALIEN by joining the fight at www.AlienRevolt.com. Simply login to Facebook to create your profile, choose your team and complete the missions, sharing your triumphs with friends. The more badges you earn the bigger chance you have taking home some great ALIEN prizes including H.R. Giger’s Alien Diaries, a copy of the all-new ALIEN: ISOLATION video game from Sega and more!

ALIEN: 35th Anniversary Edition Blu-ray Special Features

  • Includes the 1979 Theatrical Version and 2003 Director’s Cut!
  • Audio Commentary by Director Ridley Scott, Cast and Crew
  • Audio Commentary by Ridley Scott (Theatrical Version Only)
  • Introduction by Ridley Scott (Director’s Cut Only)
  • Final Theatrical Isolated Score by Jerry Goldsmith
  • Composer’s Original Isolated Score by Jerry Goldsmith
  • Deleted and Extended Scenes
  • Digital HD
  • Alien Illustrated Comic
  • Collectible Art Cards

ALIEN: 35th Anniversary Blu-ray
Street Date: October 7, 2014
Prebook Date: September 3, 2014
Screen Format: Widescreen 2.35:1
Audio: English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio, English 4.1 Dolby Surround, English Dolby Surround
Subtitles: English / Spanish / French / Portugeuse
U.S. Rating R
Closed Captioned: Yes

Pre-order here: foxconnect.com/alien-35th-anniversary.html

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ALIEN – Ridley Scott’s Masterpiece Released 35 Years Ago Today: May 25, 1979

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AVCO Center Cinemas, Westwood, CA

On Friday, director Ridley Scott arrived in Sydney, Australiareportedly to scout for locations for PROMETHEUS 2.

PROMETHEUS (2012) starred Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron and Idris Elba, was well received by critics and subsequently a box office hit. The sequel is scheduled for a release in March 2016.

I’ll bet Scott never thought in a million years that he’d be scouting locations for another ALIEN movie almost 35 years to the day after the original hit theaters.

Jump back to opening weekend… May 25, 1979. “In space no one can hear you scream”

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I was a 12 year girl when my mother, after much pleading, took me to the Showcase Cinemas in East Hartford, CT on that Friday night. These were the days prior to the words “spoilers” and “internet” when audiences went into a film blind and when parents didn’t take their children to R rated movies.

All I knew from the ad in the TV Guide was that it was science fiction. Period. After seeing JAWS in 1975, my naïve younger self really didn’t think there’d ever be another movie that would give me such nightmares.

What I didn’t bargain for was director Ridley Scott’s movie would scare the living daylights out of me and become his masterpiece – ALIEN.

The terror begins when the crew of a spaceship investigates an S.O.S – “A transmission, out here?” – from a desolate planet, and discovers a life form that is perfectly evolved to annihilate mankind. One by one, each crew member is killed off until only Ripley is left, leading to an explosive conclusion.

Today’s trailers give everything, and I mean everything, away. The monsters are no longer a surprise. Keeping the money-shot hidden are a thing of the past. This trailer set the tone and mood before the film’s release.

It’s hard to impress on today’s moviegoers how truly frightening the experience was – hearing people’s screams, while watching others get up and walk right out of the theater – as the two hours unfolded up on the screen. To say audiences were white knuckling the armrests of their chairs from the minute the opening title began is an understatement. Would it have the same effect on audiences if released into cinemas today? Truthfully, no.

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With only a crew of seven, and a cat, Jones, these truck drivers in space try to survive a killing machine. The menacing feeling of not being able to escape from such claustrophobic quarters, while the “Company” you work for has only one thing in mind – Insure return of organism… Crew expendable.

Staying with me throughout the 35 years are three things. Ripley has the wherewithal to survive until the conclusion, this visceral film still looks as fresh as it did on that weekend in 1979 and the underlying, continual sound of the ship’s heartbeat running throughout the audio.

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The combinations of the jumpsuit uniforms, the commercial towing vehicle ‘The Nostromo,’ decorated with relics from airplanes, and most importantly, H.R. Giger’s creature – the rich aesthetics of the film refuse to look dated or low-budget. As with all of Scott’s pictures, ALIEN is a beautiful film to watch.

The production design and attention to detail is impeccable. The knobs, switches, buttons, lights, headsets – all the functioning technicality of the set made such an impression on twelve year old me that I later became a newscast director pushing the same knobs, switches, buttons in a control booth.

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Editor Terry Rawlings cut the film with such a slow, long burn that by the end of the chest-burster scene, you could cut the tension in the theater with a knife. It was that palpable. Anything remotely sounding like a pinging tracker still send chills down the spine.

Sigourney Weaver’s “Ripley” becomes the hero and it is ultimately her story. Up to that time, for a studio to make the lead protagonist a woman, keeping her wits together and being the sole survivor was unheard of. Science Fiction was never the same.

Her character inspired heroines to come – THE TERMINATOR’s Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), BRAVE’s Merida (voiced by Kelly Macdonald), PROMETHEUS’s Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and GRAVITY’s Ryan Stone (Sandra Bullock) just to name a few.

Without a realistic alien, the movie would have been laughable instead of lauded. The double-jawed head filled with razor like teeth is still scary stuff. Jerry Goldsmith’s menacing score added fuel to the horrifying one hundred and sixteen minutes in the darkness. Seven months later, audiences would hear his score for another sci-fi film, STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE.

In the end, the stars aligned for the perfect movie, and 35 years later, ALIEN is still a terrific melding of horror and science-fiction.

After all was said and done on May 25, 1979, the cheering from a weary audience died down and the “blink and you’ll miss them” credits with Howard Hanson’s pacifying Symphony No. 2 “Romantic” rolled, what did my mother and I do? Went out to the Box Office and bought tickets for Saturday night’s show.

An in-depth book on all things ALIEN is Alien Vault http://beckermayer.com/titles/alien-vault/

Check out the making of ALIEN below.

Cast: Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, Ian Holm, Yaphet Kotto, John Hurt, Harry Dean Stanton, Veronica Cartwright, Bolaji Badejo, Helen Horton, Eddie Powell.

Director: Ridley Scott

Producers:  Gordon Carroll, David Giler, Walter Hill, Ivor Powell, Ronald Shusett.

Story By: Dan O’Bannon and Ronald Shusett

Composer:  Jerry Goldsmith

Cinematography:  Derek Vanlint

Editor: Terry Rawlings, Peter Weatherley

Production Design: Michael Seymour

Art Direction: Roger Christian, Leslie Dilley

Set Decoration: Ian Whittaker

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Tom Tykwer’s A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING Starring Tom Hanks Begins Photography in Morocco

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Shooting started in Morocco today on the comedic drama A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING, which is being directed by Tom Tykwer (“Cloud Atlas”, “Perfume”), who also adapted the script from the eponymous novel by Dave Eggers.

The independently-financed production stars Tom Hanks. A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING reunites Hanks, Tykwer, Schott, and Arndt after working together on CLOUD ATLAS, which has grossed over $130 million globally.

The picture takes place far away from the recession-weary USA, as an up-and-coming Saudi Arabian city provides the backdrop for foundering American businessman Alan Clay’s (Tom Hanks) last-ditch effort to stave off bankruptcy, pay his daughter’s college fees, and finally accomplish something big. A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING is a gentle, crazy, wistful ballad recounting the journey of a man, who has lost almost everything, to a country that requires him to rise to completely unknown challenges – and that answers old questions in new and unexpected ways.

The cast also includes Sarita Choudhury (“Homeland”), Omar Elba (“Intelligence”), Tracey Fairaway (“Enough Said”), David Menkin (“Zero Dark Thirty”) and Tom Skerritt (“Ted”, “Top Gun”).

Shooting will take place in Morocco and Germany and will continue until June. X Verleih will distribute the film in Germany.

A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING is being produced by Uwe Schott (“Cloud Atlas”, “Me and Kaminski”) and Stefan Arndt (“Cloud Atlas”, “Amour”) of X Filme Creative Pool; Arcadiy Golubovich and Timothy D. O’Hair of Primeridian; and Tom Hanks and Gary Goetzman (“Larry Crown”, “Mamma Mia”) of Playtone; in Association with Silver Reel Entertainment, and Fábrica de Cine. Dave Eggers, Steven Shareshian of Playtone, Claudia Bluemhuber of Silver Reel, Gaston Pavlovich of Fabrica de Cine, and Bill Johnson and Jim Seibel of Lotus International will executive produce.  Lotus introduced the picture at AFM in November and is handling international sales.  CAA is representing the domestic rights.

Published by McSweeney’s in 2012, A Hologram for the King, was a finalist for that year’s National Book Award and was also featured in The New York Times Best Seller list.