Warning: Major spoilers for Alien: Romulus below!

Summary

  • Ripley's cryosleep detour in Alien: Romulus adds an extra wrinkle to her survival between films.
  • The movie includes well-hidden Easter eggs connecting to the Alien franchise's expanded universe.
  • Ripley's miraculous survival and the recovery of her pod setups potential future storylines.

the original Alien movie expected it to become a franchise. Director Ridley Scott even wanted to include an ending where Ripley was killed by the titular Star Beast, which would then send a distress signal using the voice of Captain Dallas (Tom Skerritt). Instead, the ending of Alien saw Ripley and her cat Jonesy going into hypersleep and hoping for rescue.

Aliens revealed Ripley was drifting in space for 57 years, and that her daughter Amanda died in the interim. Weaver's Ripley has become one of the most iconic characters in sci-fi cinema, though the actress has ruled out any kind of return for a future entry. This extends to Fede Álvarez's Alien: Romulus, which nevertheless features numerous easter egg nods to Alien, Prometheus and other entries in the series. Romulus even brings back Ian Holm as new android Rook, via the use of AI techn.

Alien: Romulus Reveals New Details About Ripley's Survival Between Alien & Aliens

Romulus reveals Ripley's pod made a detour between movies

(Sigourney-Weaver-as-Ripley)-from-Alien-1979-and-(Bolaji-Badejo-as-Alien)-from-Alien-1979-

Every Alien Movie

Release Year

Alien

1979

Aliens

1986

Alien 3

1992

Alien Resurrection

1997

Alien vs Predator

2004

Alien vs Predator: Requiem

2007

Prometheus

2012

Alien: Covenant

2017

Alien: Romulus

2024

Álvarez is a self-confessed fan of the whole series, so it's not a shocker to learn he buried various nods within his film. One of the most shocking reveals is that Ripley's Narcissus shuttle can be seen drifting away from the Renaissance station as it is being destroyed during Alien: Romulus' ending. This shuttle can also be spotted in the background of a scene where Isabela Merced's Kay is trying to get away from a rampaging Xenomoprh. This reference confirms that instead of just floating in space for decades, Ripley's shuttle was recovered by Weyland-Yutani.

Sigourney Weaver's final time (to date) playing Ripley was voicing the role for 2014's acclaimed Alien: Isolation video game.

The company also recovered "Big Chap" from Alien, with the creature's offscreen resurrection having kicked Romulus' story into motion. It makes sense that if they could recover the creature itself, they could have tracked down Ripley's escape shuttle too. It should be underlined this is a well-hidden, background detail in the movie, so viewers are given no hint as to when the Narcissus was recovered, what Weyland-Yutani's intentions were with the shuttle or if they attempted to wake Ripley from her hypersleep.

Alien: Romulus' Ripley Easter Eggs Mean She Almost Died Multiple Times Before Aliens

Ripley is even luckier when taking the events of Romulus into

Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) in stasis at the end of Alien

Pulling "Big Chap" from the Nostromo's wreckage and studying him would have been the research station's number one directive, while Ripley was left in her shuttle until the company decided what to do with her.

Ripley being discovered between the events of Alien and Aliens implies a lot. Presumably, after they recovered her pod she wasn't considered any kind of priority by Weyland-Yutani. Pulling "Big Chap" from the Nostromo's wreckage and studying him would have been the research station's number one directive, while Ripley was left in her shuttle until the company decided what to do with her. There's a version of that story where they just killed Ripley in her sleep to cover up the events of Alien too.

Related
Ripley Easter Egg In Alien: Romulus Confirmed (& It Changes Her Story Before Aliens)

VFX Supervisor Daniel Macarin confirms two major Ripley Easter eggs featured in Alien: Romulus, and it changes her story before Aliens.

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Luckily for her, this didn't come to . However, considering Alien: Romulus' Renaissance station itself became infested with Xenos, one of them could have discovered Ripley sleeping and either killed her in the pod, or yanked her out to be used in the nest. Finally, Ripley could have also been killed when the space station crashed into the planetary rings during the finale too.

Laying it out like that, it's almost a comedy of errors that Ripley survived her stay in the Renaissance station. Be it by Weyland-Yutani's hands or the station being destroyed, there are many ways she could have met her end. Instead, Romulus suggests Ripley had a brief pitstop while gliding through the vastness of space, before detaching and floating away again in the chaos of the station being destroyed.

Ripley's Survival In Aliens Is A True Miracle Thanks To Alien: Romulus

As Burke said, the chances of being found were "One in a thousand"

After Ripley's shuttle floats away in Alien: Romulus, she essentially spends the next three decades drifting before a recovery team comes across her. When the smarmy Burke (Paul Reiser) breaks the news about how long she was in hypersleep, he highlights just how miraculous her rescue was and that the odds were "One in a thousand." Factoring Ripley's short stay at the ill-fated Weyland-Yutani research outpost, this makes her survival all the more impressive really.

Given that he went to some length to add the Ripley easter egg, the next question is did, Álvarez have something in mind for the character? During a post-screening Q&A for Romulus (via Film Stories), the director stated "… I even take the novels as canon and the comics. I always had [Xenopedia] open on my laptop when I was writing." Whereas most filmmakers approaching a new entry in a famous franchise might only count the movies as canon, Álvarez's comments suggest a higher level of respect when it comes to Alien's expanded universe.

If he is thinking of the novels, there is a 2014 book called Out of the Shadows by Tim Lebbon that detailed another Ripley adventure between the first and second films. This is set 37 years after the first movie, where she is awoken onboard a mining vessel amid another Xenomorph outbreak and discovers Ash's AI consciousness survived in the shuttle's computer. The book's ending explains why she doesn't any of this in Aliens, so perhaps Álvarez is thinking of Out of the Shadows as a possible Alien: Romulus follow-up.

Source: Film Stories

Alien Romulus Poster Showing a Facehugger Attacking A Human

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Alien: Romulus
Release Date
August 16, 2024
Runtime
119 Minutes
Director
Fede Alvarez

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Alien: Romulus is the seventh film in the Alien franchise. The movie is directed by Fede Álvarez and will focus on a new young group of characters who come face to face with the terrifying Xenomorphs. Alien: Romulus is a stand-alone film and takes place in a time not yet explored in the Alien franchise.

Writers
Fede Alvarez, Rodo Sayagues, Dan O'Bannon, Ronald Shusett
Franchise(s)
Alien
Distributor(s)
20th Century
Main Genre
Horror