Ridley Scott

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Space colonizers battle ultimate killing machines in Alien: Romulus trailer

not-so-lucky star —

“Whatever comes, we’ll face it together.”

Director Fede Alvarez brings us Alien: Romulus, coming to theaters next month.

The face huggers and chest bursters return with a vengeance in a few weeks when Alien: Romulus finally hits theaters. It’s the latest installment in the Alien franchise from horror director Fede Alvarez (Don’t Breathe, Evil Dead), and the final action-packed trailer just dropped.

(Spoilers for Alien and Aliens below.)

As previously reported, Alien: Romulus is set between the events of Alien and Aliens (and is not related to FX/Hulu’s Alien prequel series slated to premiere next year). That is, after Ellen Ripley, the sole survivor of the Nostromo, destroyed the killer xenomorph and launched herself into space in the ship’s lifeboat—along with the ginger cat, Jonesy—and before she woke up after 57 years in hypersleep and battled more xenomorphs while protecting the young orphan, Newt (Carrie Henn). Per the short-and-sweet official premise: “While scavenging the deep ends of a derelict space station, a group of young space colonizers come face to face with the most terrifying life form in the universe.”

Cailee Spaeny (Priscilla, Pacific Rim: Uprising) stars as Rain Carradine, Isabela Merced (The Last of Us) plays Kay, and David Jonsson (Murder Is Easy) plays Andy. Archie Renaux (Shadow and Bone) plays Tyler, Spike Fearn (Aftersun) plays Bjorn, and Aileen Wu plays Navarro. But we aren’t likely to see iconic badass Ellen Ripley (immortalized by Sigourney Weaver) in the film. At this point in the timeline, she’s in the middle of her 57-year stasis with Jonesy as her escape shuttle travels through space toward her fateful encounter with a xenomorph queen.

Haunted house in space

We got our first look at Alien: Romulus, the ninth installment in the sci-fi franchise, in March with a brief teaser. That footage showed promise that Alvarez could fulfill his intention to bring this standalone film back to the franchise’s stripped-down space horror roots. There was also some special footage screened at CinemaCon in April featuring the expected face-huggers and chest-bursters. A full trailer dropped in March, and it looked as gory, intense, and delightfully terrifying as the seminal first two films in the franchise, with some spooky haunted house-in-space vibes thrown in for good measure.

  • Space is beautiful, but horrors lurk.

    YouTube/20th Century Studios

  • The face huggers claim another victim.

    YouTube/20th Century Studios

  • That feeling when something alien is about to burst out of your chest.

    YouTube/20th Century Studios

  • Kay is justifiably horrified.

    YouTube/20th Century Studios

  • XENOMORPH!

    YouTube/20th Century Studios

  • The xenomorph stalks another victim.

    YouTube/20th Century Studios

This final trailer has a lot of the same footage but gives us a few more details as to the plot. The young space colonizers are gearing up to steal “highly regulated equipment” from the aforementioned derelict space station, mostly because Tyler thinks it “could be our only ticket out of here.” The team thinks it should be a quick job, in and out in 30 minutes. But we know better, don’t we?

They are welcomed to the Romulus Space Station by MU/TH/UR (the ship’s computer), and Bjorn is the first to say out loud that this space station is super creepy. Poor Bjorn gets the first face hugger, followed by Navarro—she’s the one we’ve seen in prior footage discovering she’s got an alien growing inside her chest. In this trailer, we see the chest burster preparing to emerge, to Kay’s understandable horror. Kay, Rain, Andy, and Tyler break out the weaponry, prepared to face the monsters together. But how well do we like their odds of survival against the ultimate killing machines? Especially given that ominous final countdown to an “impact event”…

Alien: Romulus hits theaters on August 16, 2024.

Listing image by YouTube/20th Century Studios

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It’s another bloody power struggle for Rome’s future in Gladiator II trailer

Those who are about to die…. —

“What is the dream of Rome if our people are not free?”

Paul Mescal and Pedro Pascal star in director Ridley Scott’s long-awaited sequel, Gladiator II.

Ridley Scott’s epic 2000 historical drama Gladiator was a blockbuster hit that has become a classic over the ensuing two decades, thanks to powerful performances and spectacular special effects—especially in the gladiator arena. The director has long wanted to make a sequel, and we’re finally getting Gladiator II later this year. Paramount Pictures just dropped the first trailer, and it promises to be just as much of a visual feast, as a new crop of power players (plus a couple of familiar faces) clash over the future of Rome.

(Spoilers for 2000’s Gladiator below.)

For those who inexplicably haven’t seen the original: Russell Crowe starred as Maximus, a Roman general who leads his army to victory against Germanic tribes on behalf of his emperor, Marcus Aurelius (Richard Harris). The aging emperor wishes Maximus to succeed him and restore the Roman Republic, passing over his own son, Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix). Commodus secretly murders his father instead and proclaims himself emperor, executing Maximus’ wife and son because Maximus would not acknowledge his rule. Commodus also harbors squicky incestuous longings for his sister, Lucilla (Connie Nielsen), mother to Lucius (Spencer Treat Clark) and former lover of Maximus.

Maximus escapes his own execution and ends up being sold by slave traders to gladiator trainer Proximus (Oliver Reed), who tells him he can earn his freedom by “winning the crowd” during the gladiator games in Rome. And win the crowd he does. Who could forget the epic scene where the gladiators are forced to re-enact the Battle of Zama, when the Romans defeated the Carthaginians? With Maximus in command, the tables are turned and the “Carthaginians” prevail in the re-enactment. Maximus is ultimately able to exact his revenge by killing Commodus in the arena, dying himself to join his wife and child in the afterlife.

Gladiator II focuses on the grown-up Lucius, originally played by Spencer Treat Clark.” height=”428″ src=”https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/gladiator9-640×428.jpg” width=”640″>

Enlarge / Gladiator II focuses on the grown-up Lucius, originally played by Spencer Treat Clark.

YouTube/Paramount Pictures

Gladiator received much critical praise, grossing $464 million globally and receiving 12 Oscar nominations. It won five: Best Picture, Best Actor (Crowe), Best Visual Effects, Best Sound, and Best Costume Design. Scott was already planning for either a prequel or a sequel the following year, with the idea for a sequel centered on an older version of Lucius, hinging on the secret of his biological father (strongly hinted to be Maximus in the first film). But when Dreamworks was sold to Paramount in 2006, the Gladiator sequel project was shelved. Paramount finally green-lit the project in November 2018 with a production budget of $165 million. (That ballooned to a rumored $310 million during filming.)

Strength and honor

Gladiator II does indeed center on Lucius Verus (Paul Mescal), son of Lucilla and former heir to the Roman Empire, given that his father (also named Lucius Verus) was once a co-emperor of Rome. Lucius hasn’t been seen in Rome for 15 years. Instead, he’s been living in a small coastal town in Numidia with his wife and child. Like Maximus before him, he is captured by the Roman army and forced to become a gladiator. Pedro Pascal plays Marcus Acacius, a Roman general who trained under Maximus, tasked with conquering North Africa. Although the young Lucius once idolized Maximus, Marcus Acacius apparently will be a symbol of everything Lucius hates.

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