Alien: Romulus

 

R

Horror/Sci-Fi

Released: August 16, 2024

Screened: August 16, 2024

MC Score
3.26 / 4.00
Reel Details

snynopsis

A group of young scavengers stumble upon a terrifying alien while searching an abandoned space station.

runtime

1h 59m

Director

Fede Alvarez

Cast

Cailee Spaeny, David Jonsson, Archie Renaux

Parents' Guide

Bloody violence / terrifying situations / cursing

bonus scenes

None
Real Reviews
Mackenzie
3.15 / 4.00

20/100

Re-watchability

72/100*

Humor

70/100

Action

85/100

Drama

92/100

Acting

92/100

Snap Judgement

* average of other categories
It was amazing but scared the heck out of me.
Alien: Romulus is probably my favorite of the Alien movies I have seen. I think it is an absolute masterpiece that had my heart racing. Most of the movie resembles the previous movies in terms of the gore and the aliens. However, the last 30 minutes were very different, and scared the crap out of me.

I may not be the person to go to when it comes to horror recommendations. I have watched very few movies in that genre. And the movies I have watched aren't very scary at all. So, going into this movie I thought it would be like the other Alien movies. However, I was not expecting the end to be the way it was. If you have ever watched Alien, you would know how an alien comes to be. A parasite will latch onto a human, and put a “seed” in them. The human acts as a host until the baby alien is ready to pop out of their chest. This time, it was different. When it happened to Kay, she was already pregnant, so the circumstances were different. She eventually gave birth to an egg, and inside was a human/alien hybrid. And like the aliens, it became full grown almost instantly. Maybe I just get really creeped out by humanoid things, but this thing will be in my nightmares. The following sequences were just as disturbing. Hours after the movie and I am still sweating just thinking about it.

The actors did an absolutely amazing job with their roles. Performances like that often make me wonder why super popular actors don’t seem like they are as good as them. They were able to portray panic, worry, and empathy so well. However, one of the main characters was an android, yet he was able to switch his demeanor well depending on what his directive was. The side that was with the group showed more compassion and emotion compared to the company who was cold and calculated.

Overall, this movie was absolutely incredible. It is one of my favorites I have watched this year. However, I will probably not be watching it again because it’s too scary for me and I don’t want to relive it

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Chris
3.38 / 4.00

50/100

Re-watchability

82/100*

Humor

90/100

Action

95/100

Drama

87/100

Acting

88/100

Snap Judgement

* average of other categories
It's intense, very intense, and is not for the squeamish.
Romulus follows Rain Carradine (Cailee Spaeny), an orphan whose mining contract is forcibly extended by an unscrupulous company. Losing hope of ever leaving her planetary outpost, she and her adopted brother and synthetic human, Andy (David Jonsson), join her ex-boyfriend Tyler (Archie Madekwe) and his friends to retrieve cryostasis chambers from an abandoned space station. The group hopes to use the cryostasis chambers to travel to a distant planet and start a new life.

They steal a spacecraft and head to the wayward space station. As the group approaches, they discover that the station is about to collide with planetary rings, and they must work quickly to avoid disaster. Tyler’s cousin, Bjorn, has a distaste for synthetic humans and harasses Andy. When several members of the group board the space station, a series of events unleashes dormant facehuggers, and the terror begins. They encounter Rook, an android science officer modeled after Ash from the original Alien film. Like Ash, Rook’s objective is to advance the human race and he manipulates Andy into providing valuable data on the aliens to "The Company."

One by one, the group is picked off by the aliens, leaving only Rain, Andy, and Kay (Tyler’s pregnant cousin). Kay is badly injured by an alien but is rescued. In Rook’s final moments, he convinces Kay to take an injection of alien/human hybrid DNA to save her own life. The three escape the space station as it plunges into the planetary rings. Rain sets a course for their new life and places Kay in a cryostasis chamber. While preparing to enter her own chamber, Rain receives an alert from Kay’s chamber. Rain opens it to find Kay’s pregnancy has rapidly advanced, and she immediately gives birth to an alien/human hybrid. The hybrid escapes to another part of the ship, eventually finding its way back to Kay and killing her. Andy is wounded by the hybrid, and Rain fights to kill it while narrowly avoiding a crash into the planetary rings. Rain places Andy in a chamber and vows to fix him when they reach their destination.

Did I mention this movie is intense? There’s little in the way of comedy, except for a few deliberately lame dad jokes told by Andy (presumably programmed by Rain’s deceased father). The action sequences are what you would expect from a modern big-budget sci-fi movie. The zero-gravity scenes are believable enough (as if I would know how things react to zero gravity).

I’ve now seen Cailee Spaeny (Rain) in three movies, two this year, both featuring rather serious roles. Her first film this year was Civil War, where she played a young aspiring war photographer who inadvertently led to the protagonist's demise. Spaeny carries Romulus from an acting standpoint, although the supporting cast is serviceable. They effectively convey terror at the right moments.

Fede Alvarez has a winner on his hands—Romulus is very well done. However, terror-infused gore just isn’t my cup of tea. If not for that, I’d be more inclined to rewatch it.

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