When looking at the female icons of horror, we usually think ofthe final girl, the young woman who survived the masked killer murdering all of her friends, now finding the strength at the end to kill her aggressor. There’sJamie Lee Curtisas Laurie Strode inHalloween, of course, andHeather LangenkampasNancy Thompson inA Nightmare of Elm Street.A more recent example isNeve Campbell’s Sidney Prescott in theScreamfilms. There is a female hero of horror more badass than any final girl, however. That woman isSigourney Weaver’s Ellen Ripley, the flamethrower-holding, child-saving warrior from the Alien franchise. Ellen Ripley is the epitome of late 70s and 1980s cinematic cool. She was a good person, but if evil creatures from outer space wanted to start some shit, she fought back and destroyed everything in her path. As loved as Ellen Ripley is though, not just as a female protagonist, but as one of film’s greatest heroes in general, her iconic status almost didn’t happen. In the early stages ofAlien, directorRidley Scottdecided he was going to kill her off in a shocking twist finale.

In deep space, the crew of the commercial starship Nostromo is awakened from their cryo-sleep capsules halfway through their journey home to investigate a distress call from an alien vessel. The terror begins when the crew encounters a nest of eggs inside the alien ship. An organism from inside an egg leaps out and attaches itself to one of the crew, causing him to fall into a coma.

Alien 1979 Film Poster

‘Alien’s Ellen Ripley Is Horror’s Most Badass Female Hero

Aliencame out in 1979, a year afterJohn Carpenter’sHalloween. While the films are vastly different in some ways, they are also very similar. You can almost look atAlienasHalloweenin space, with a silent figure in the shadows picking off Ellen Ripley’s friends one by one until only she remains. No, there are noslasher tropes such as sex and drinking. The most slasher-like vulnerability is when the alien attacks at the moment Ripley has stripped down to her underwear. Ellen Ripley isAlien’s final girl, the only one in the bunch who isn’t making dumb decisions or wandering off alone, as if there’s not a monster out there. She’s paying attention and knows what to do, but no one else listens to her.

Alienchanged things for movies. There had been movies about extraterrestrial creatures before, but never where the creatures looked so real and scary. It might have been a man in a suit, but thanks to theH.R. Gigerdesign, the creature inAlienlooked like a foreign nightmare. The movie has a great, claustrophobic setting, as almost all of it takes place on board theNostromospaceship, and the monster is scary as hell, but none of that matters without characters to care about.

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‘Alien: Romulus’ Star Cailee Spaeny Knows She Can “Never Be” Sigourney Weaver

“Watching Sigourney play that role – she’s part of the changing of the game that those films did,” said Spaeny.

Alienis made up of a great cast, including the likes ofTom Skerritt,John Hurt, andIan Holm, but it was the 28-year-old Sigourney Weaver who was the star. At the time,Weaver had done a few small rolesand had a little part inAnnie Hall, butAlienwas her big break. The fact that most of the audience didn’t know who she was helped her character. We didn’t look at Ellen Ripley and see a movie star acting. We saw the portrayal, and a woman who was the protagonist, not as a forced idea, but a hero who just happened to be a woman. That made her so cool. She wasn’t a character who “kicked ass pretty well for a girl,” she simply kicked ass.

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Ridley Scott Wanted To Kill Ellen Ripley at the End of ‘Alien’

As much of an alien-ass-kicking warrior as Ellen Ripley was in that firstAlienmovie, her status as a cinematic icon almost never happened. At the end of the film as it is now, Ripley is the only survivor in the last act, along with the ship’s cat, Jones. Ripley sets theNostromoto blow up and escapes to a smaller shuttle. TheNostromoexplodes, and the alien is dead. Movie over — or so it seems. But then, as Ripley is getting ready to go into hypersleep for the trip back to Earth, she notices that the creature has snuck onboard her vessel. She will have to fight again. Ripley manages to get an airlock open and the beast is sucked out, with Ellen shooting it in the chest with a harpoon, then frying it with the shuttle’s engines. The alien is dead this time and Ellen will live to fight another day. If Ridley Scott had been allowed the ending he wanted, however,she wouldn’t have made it toAliens.

In an interview withEntertainment Weeklyin 2017, Scott talked about his original ending idea that was never filmed. He felt that the idea of theNostromoblowing up and Ripley getting on the shuttle was a flat ending. Instead, when Ripley discovered the alien onboard and hit the buttons to open the airlock, what played out next would have altered movie history. With the alien hanging onto the door, Scott said, “She harpoons it, it makes no difference. It comes forward andit slams through her mask and rips her head off.“Then Scott would have cut to the alien’s hand going to the controls, and mimicking Tom Skerritt’s voice perfectly, it would say, “I’m signing off.” Scott pitched this to the studio over the phone and said he could feel the tension. “The first executives arrived within 14 hours from Fox, threatening to fire me on the spot, so we didn’t do that.” Scott said it would have been a veryAlfred Hitchcock-like ending, but that the decision to keep Ripley alive was a good one.

a composite image of Cailee Spaeny in Alien Romulus and Sigourney Weaver in Aliens, both hold guns

Talk about a twist! Picture yourself sitting throughAlien, only for the hero you’ve been watching and rooting for this entire time to die at the very end. What had been a tense, yet fun movie suddenly would have become something very depressing and hard to rewatch.

A World Without Ellen Ripley Would Have Been Disappointing

Usually, when you hear stories about movies being made and directors fighting with studio execs, it’s because the studio, completely misunderstanding the film, is wanting the director to do something that goes against the theme of the project.Ridley Scott is an all-time great director, with films likeBlade Runner,Thelma & Louise, andGladiator, before returning to the xenomorph universe withPrometheusandAlien: Covenant, but in this case at least, the studio was right, and the director was wrong. Sure, maybe they were thinking of sequels and the amount of money that would be lost, but still, killing off Ripley would have been a colossal mistake.

If Ripley had died at the end ofAlien, then the whole film, if you could stomach watching it again,becomes all about the monster and not the hero.She’s just another victim who took longer to kill than the rest. There’s no happy ending, just depressing disappointment. Imagine if at the end of the firstHalloween, after Laurie Strode went through so much, Michael Myers just stabbed her to death anyway. What would have been the point?

Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) on the com in the cockpit of an aircraft in ‘Alien’

On top of that, imagine a world where theAliensequels never happened.James Cameronhit it big withThe Terminatorin 1984, then immediately followed it up withAliens, a high octane action film that took everything fromAlienand turned it up to eleven with more monsters, more deaths, more guns, and more explosions. If he didn’t get the chance to makeAliens, it would have altered his career.Cameron went on to make several colossal films in a row, includingThe Abyss,Terminator 2: Judgment Day,True Lies, andAvatar. IfAliensnever happened, would what came after have happened? Even if they did, they would have been made at a different time and would have been altered from how they are now.Alien 3might have been a dud, but it’s best remembered for being the first movieDavid Fincherdirected. If there was noAlien 3for him to start with, there would have been noSeven, noFight Club, noThe Social Network, or any of the other huge films he made throughout his influential career. That then would have affected the stardom of actors like Brad Pitt. You could go on and on about the butterfly effect created over decades if Ridley Scott had been allowed to kill off Ellen Ripley inAlien.

The Alien Sequels Emphasize Ellen Ripley’s Importance

It’s all the more important that Ellen Ripley lived because of those sequels the studio was envisioning.In 1986,James Camerontook over directing duties withAliens, a film even bigger and better than the first. IfAlienwas a slow burn horror movie,Alienswas a big, blockbuster action film. With Ripley carrying her flamethrower and classic lines like, “Get away from her, you bitch!,” she was no longer just a horror icon but an action one as well. Suddenly,Sigourney Weaver found herself an action staron par withArnold SchwarzeneggerandSylvester Stallone. Women had their cinematic hero to look up to, one who didn’t cower or wasn’t turned into a sex symbol.

Sequels toAliencould have been made without Ripley. Some other character just like her could have been written into a new movie, but it wouldn’t have been the same. Ripley was why we watched. Even ifAlien 3andAlien: Resurrectiondidn’t work, they still had Sigourney Weaver as Ripley. It’s why we can still watch them, even with their flaws. Thankfully, for once, the twist was that the studio saved the film by saving the hero. Cinematic history would be a lot different if her character hadn’t continued on.

The character sadly didn’t continue afterAlien: Resurrection. Though Weaver had hopes of returning as Ripley for aNeil Blomkampdirected sequel, when that was canceled, Weaver gave up,tellingTotal Filmearlier this year that she was done playing Ripley. That doesn’t mean fans have been done with the xenomorphs though. There was the much anticipatedAlien vs. Predator,now streaming on Hulu,Alien vs. Predator: Requiem, and then the shocking return of Ridley Scott in the director’s chair forPrometheusandAlien: Covenant. NowFede Álvarez-directedAlien: Romulusis here.

The ‘Alien’ Franchise Is Still Trying to Figure Out How To Exist Without Ellen Ripley

Just like theHalloweenfranchise withJamie Lee Curtisas Laurie Strode,Alienhas struggled with how to move past their own popular heroine. WithHalloween, Curtis left after the second film, so they killed her off-screen, then focused on her daughter for several movies, then brought Curtis back from the dead, then killed her again, did some reboots, then brought her back from the dead again.Halloweennever figured out how to exist without Laurie Strode. TheAlienfilms haven’t known what to do either. After the first two got it right, Ellen Ripley became a gimmick.Alien 3had her in a male prison with a shaved head. Even though she died,Alien: Resurrectionbrought her back as a clone.When fans began to turn away from the silliness, the franchise went in a different direction. Okay, how about the aliens fight predators twice? Okay, now let’s bring Ridley Scott back for some mythology-building prequels. Those films have their fans and their detractors. Criticism came from the fact thattheAlien vs. Predatormovies focused on the xenomorphs too much, while we were disappointed thatPrometheusandAlien: Covenantdidn’t focus on them enough.

Alien: Romulusis another attempt to create a film that can exist without its iconic heroine. This time, it may have succeeded. Álvarez’s attempt was a hit with both critics and audiences,amassing an 81% on Rotten Tomatoesand making avery impressive $108 million worldwidein its opening weekend. It succeeds with this on a few different fronts. First,Alien: Romuluswisely exists in a world where Ellen Ripley is alive but can’t be part of the action, as the film takes place in the years betweenAlienandAliens. While a whole new cast of characters are encountering face huggers and xenomorphs, Ripley is floating out in space somewhere on her escape shuttle during her 57-year sleep. Still, Álvarez knows we miss her, so we get to see the wreckage of the Nostromo at the beginning and are told about a missing survivor. Álvarez also recognized what else we loved about those early films. It wasn’t just Ripley, but how scary the aliens were. The sequels got away from that. Just asHalloweentried to replace Laurie Strode with bizarre movies about cults,Alienwent from being simple space horror to convoluted tales about engineers. That’s not what a lot of fans wanted. By going back to being scary,Alien: Romulusreminds fans of what they loved about those first two classic films.

Sigourney Weaver let go ofAlienafter the failures of the Neal Blomkamp movie, and now they have finally learned to let go of her, ironically by, in a way, going back to stories that remind us of her. If Ellen Ripley had been allowed to die all the way back in 1979, the strange path the franchise took afterward could have been avoided, but I think for most horror fans, we wouldn’t want to give up the sequels, no matter how strange they got. Careers were built and history was made off of her survival, and a franchise got to go in unpredictable directions with follow-ups that, while not always successful, have always been memorable.

Alienis available to stream on Hulu in the U.S.

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