No, because they didn't participate in the writing of this cinematic trainwreck. Paul WS Anderson took it upon himself to "borrow" elements from early drafts of the "Alien" screenplay by O'Bannon and Shusett. Early posters and the novelization credited Anderson and fellow hack Shane Salerno as...
Well, if you really wanna get technical, Bishop isn't a living thing so he cannot be "killed". Any way you address it, you really can't say he was killed by an alien. C'mon, he's a machine that's still functioning in the sequel to the film in question. As for the pen thing, I think it's...
Ripley deactivates him at his request, so you can't say that the Alien Queen killed him. His "injury" wasn't even "life-threatening". It is said that he could have been repaired. Bill Paxton can still claim to be the only actor killed by an Alien, a Predator and a Terminator.
There's always been debate as to whether or not Bishop was an andrord or a human in "Alien3". In the theatrical version, it's certainly ambiguous, but in the "special edition", it's obvious that he was intended to be human, since his blood is red, although the effect of him having his ear torn...
Yeah, throughout this whole trainwreck, I just kept thinking "poor, poor Lance Henriksen". The guy is a flat-out amazing actor, but he makes awful movies. I saw that "AvP" making-of special where he said something like "but when I talked to Paul WS Anderson and he told me what he had in mind, I...
Well, the verdict is in, so to speak. Theaters supposedly got their prints as early as yesterday (which would confirm that Fox was trying to pull one over on critics by not screening it until tonight) and tons of reactions to the film are popping up all over the internet, from Aint It Cool News...