a) Within the localityWorld famous writer, J G Ballard, lived in Shepperton where the famous Shepperton film studios were located, and in the Kings Head pub hotel less than a mile from where Ballard's house was, the famous Swiss Surrealist artist H R Giger lived for several months back in 1978 while he worked on the movie Alien and J G Ballard was living in his semi detached house there at the same time as well and continued to live there.
b) JG Ballard, HR Giger and Alien
i) When Ballard thought very little of the Alien movieIn 1984, a book "Re/Search no. 8/9" about him was published, JG Ballard had been interviewed and talked about film, he was asked about his view on to Blade Runner, and then he mentioned Alien, a film that he said he disliked, so for a while, it seemed as if he didn't like this film at allThat year, David Pringle editor for Interzone magazine wrote to Ballard to query about a rumour he heard about that he had been offered the job of novelising Alien, and on 26th of February, Ballard wrote back stating that he was quite right , and it was when the shooting had just been completed, and someone had brought the script over to from New York. He knew nothing about the film, he wasn't shown the film and when he read the script, he liked it even less. At the time it struck him as an unoriginal horror movie with almost no connection with science fiction. They offered him $20,000 but he found it easy to turn down. He found the film to be very glossy but empty at its centre.But the truth be told, his own past experiences with Hammer films had put him off Science Fiction movies, he wrote a treatment for When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth, and so he saw them to be bad enough without having to novelise them, although he wouldn't have mind doing the novelisation for a scifi film like Alphaville.
ii) Ballard begins to think againIn 1987, he wrote a review for American Film saying " Alien is a tour de force of pure horror, a barrage of brutal eruptions (some literally so) that obscure the existence, behind the blood and terror, of an extremely elegant s-f film. Returning to Earth, the crew of the Nostromo is diverted to a remote planet and there unknowingly picks up the alien organism, which then proceeds to metamorphose its way through the cast until defeated by the courage and wiles of Sigourney Weaver, the s-f film's first feminist heroine. While all this is going on one has barely a pause to notice a host of fine details: the claustrophobic world of the spaceship, with its fraying camaraderie; the entropy of long voyages, time slowing down so that a brief conversation seems to last all day; the stylish interior of the Nostromo, a cross between a computer terminal and a nightclub; the final appearance of the alien, an insane mesh of ravenous teeth straight from the paintings of Francis Bacon that materializes just after Weaver strips down to her underwear. Dinner, fortunately, is delayed , at least until a sequel"
iii) Unoriginal horror film transforms into one of the most original horror films
In 1990, he talked about the matter the Alien novelisation in an article in the Independent (which was republished in his book A User's Guide to the Millenium in 1996) Someone thought about J G Ballard being someone ideal to write the novelisation for the film, he was approached but declined and the final book was written by Alan Dean Foster, he wasn't at all happy about the script that he felt outlined a hackneyed story about a malevolent stowaway with dialogue that rarely rose above "Chow-time. Where's Dallas? 'Topside.' 'Uh-huh'. However when the film came out, what amazed him was that not that someone decided to film the script but that he had been able to make a movie based on script with such empty dialogue. And so what seemed to him like one of the most unoriginal horror movies ever made back in 1984 had transformed into one of the most original horror movies ever made for him and the throwaway dialogue perfectly set off the terrifying vacuum that expanded around the characters. He compared the stylish Nostromo interior to a computer terminal crossed with a nightclub and compared the final appearance of the alien with something from a painting by Francis Bacon and this film would eventually appear in his top ten of scifi movies.
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Island of the Dead (fifth version) by Arnold Böcklin |
iv) Faux "David Cronenberg’s Alien — Novelization by J.G. Ballard"Such was the fascination in the idea of an Alien novelisation by J G Ballard, that in 1993, on page 5 of #70, Interzone magazine still edited by David Pringle, announced a competition for the for the best short extract from an imaginary novelization of the science-fiction movie Alien as it might have been written by leading British novelist J.G. Ballard. The prize was a copy of the new edition of The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (ed. Clute & Nicholls), . The response, for what was quite a demanding competition, pleased the magazine: over a dozen good entries were received. The clear winner, however, was Lyle Hopwood, who performed a clever double-twist: she not only reimagined the novelization as having been written by Ballard (rather than Alan Dean Foster), but she reimagined the film itself as having been directed by David Cronenberg (rather than Ridley Scott) and in the style of his movie Videodrome which came out back in 1983. (Click here to read the Lyle Hopwood's David Cronenberg’s Alien — Novelization by J.G. Ballard)v) Paul Laville questioned Ballard on AlienIn 1995, Paul Laville asked Ballard about the fact that in Re/Search it looked as if he didn't like Alien, and Ballard was able to clear the matter up, perhaps not realising what he must have said in the RE/Search interview but he actually was talking about Ridley Scott's Blade Runner film which left too little to the imagination and the sets didn't convince him, while Alien he found totally fine and convincing. vi) Ballard asked about GigerSee HR Giger's Homage To Böcklin  |
HR Giger's homage to Arnold Böcklin's Island of the Dead |
vi) Giger admires Ballard's writingsIn 1997. HR Giger was mentioned in an interview with the Italian version of SFX magazine that JG Ballard was his favourite author
vii) Alien in Ballard's Top Ten Sci-fi films
In 2005, in his top ten scifi films for the Independant, he mentioned Alien with few statements borrowed and rewritten from his previous review, that "This is a tour de force of pure horror in which Sigourney Weaver plays science fiction's first feminist heroine." but instead of stating that the creature came from the paintings of Francis Bacon, he was able to declare that "The alien came from the imaginings of the Swiss designer HR Giger."
c) Loose ComparisonsSometimes comparisons between their work have been offered such as by James Verniere in an introduction to an interview with J G Ballard for Twilight Zone magazine back in 1988. In 2012, Telegraph film reviewer Sukhdev Sandhu compared Giger's aesthetic to being a tacit dialogue with other pioneering work of the late Sixties and early Seventies such as JG Ballard's novel Crash. James Verniere, in his forward to his writeup of his interview with J G Ballard for the June 1988 issue of Twilight Zone mentioned that "Like Swiss surrealist H.R. Giger, Ballard sees the twentieth century as a horrible, post-nuclear mutation - the monstrous offspring of that "rough beast" that slouched - not to Bethlehem - but to Hiroshima to be born."
Quote sources- J G Ballard: Alien (Ridley Scott, 1979): This is a tour de force of pure horror in which Sigourney Weaver plays science fiction's first feminist heroine. The alien came from the
imaginings of the Swiss designer HR Giger. (The Independent, March 2005) - SFX: In che rapporti è con la lettertura di fantascienza? Quali sono i suoi autori preferiti?
HR Giger: Ballard, senza dubbio. Ballard su tutti!
Googletranslation:
SFX: What's your relationship with the Literature of Science Fiction? What are your favorite authors?
HR Giger: Ballard, no doubt. Ballard of all! (Cinema SFX #9, Gennaio 1997) - Paul Laville: I read in the Re/Search special that you disliked Blade Runner and Alien, two of the most influential sf films of the past few decades.
JG Ballard:I didn't care for Blade Runner. The sets looked unconvincing and I didn't believe any of it. Alien however was a very fine film, totally convincing. (Interview by letter, July 1995) - J G Ballard: Years ago I was offered the chance to do the novelisation of a film then being made by a leading British director. The script outlined a hackneyed story about a malevolant stowaway, with dialogue that rarely rose above 'Chow-time. Where's Dallas?.' 'Topside.' 'Uh-huh.' What amazed me was not that someone had decided to film this script, but that he had been able to form any idea of the finished movie from those empty lines. Yet the film was Alien, one of the most original horror-movies ever made, and the throwaway dialogue perfectly set off the terrifying vacuum that expanded around those characters. (Independent on Sunday, 1990, republished in A User's Guide To The Millenium, 1996, p4)
- James Verniere: Like Swiss surrealist H.R. Giger, Ballard sees the twentieth century as a horrible, post-nuclear mutation -- the monstrous offspring of that "rough beast" that slouched -- not to Bethlehem -- but to Hiroshima to be born. (Twilight Zone, June 1988)
- J G Ballard: Alien is a tour de force of pure horror, a barrage of brutal eruptions (some literally so) that obscure the existence, behind the blood and terror, of an extremely elegant s-f film. Returning to Earth, the crew of the Nostromo is diverted to a remote planet and there unknowingly picks up the alien organism, which then proceeds to metamorphose its way through the cast until defeated by the courage and wiles of Sigourney Weaver, the s-f film's first feminist heroine. While all this is going on one has barely a pause to notice a host of fine details: the claustrophobic world of the spaceship, with its fraying camaraderie; the entropy of long voyages, time slowing down so that a brief conversation seems to last all day; the stylish interior of the Nostromo, a cross between a computer terminal and a nightclub; the final appearance of the alien, an insane mesh of ravenous teeth straight from the paintings of Francis Bacon that materializes just after Weaver strips down to her underwear. Dinner, fortunately, is delayed , at least until a sequel (American Film, 1987, republished in A User's Guide To The Millenium, 1996 p22)
- Re/Search: The movie Blade Runner was supposed to be representative of Hong Kong.
JG Ballard: From Philip K Dick's novel, directed by an Englishman, Ridley Scott; who made Alien, a film which I disliked a lot. In a lot of these blockbuster SF movies that come out of Hollywood - the Star Wars type of movie - they leave out the imagination. (Re/Search no 8/9, p17, 1984) - Sukhdev Sandhu: The mechanistic precision of Giger's aesthetic owes a great deal to his training in architecture and industrial design. It appears to be in tacit dialogue with other pioneering work of the late Sixties and early Seventies such as JG Ballard's novel Crash. (www.telegraph.co.uk/ 4th June 2012)
- James Verniere: Allusive, obsessive, fetishistic, and often full of pseudoscientific imagery, Ballard's fiction reveals a world where sex, the family, even the evolutionary process, have fallen prey to entropy. Like Swiss surrealist H.R. Giger, Ballard sees the twentieth century as a horrible, post-nuclear mutation - the monstrous offspring of that "rough beast" that slouched - not to Bethlehem - but to Hiroshima to be born. And despite the inherent (and often petulant) strangeness of J.G. Ballard's fiction, the worlds he creates are hauntingly familiar. (Rod Serling's Twilight Zone Magazine, June 1988)
- David Pringle: Good stuff, Dom. Here's another quote for you... Ballard wrote to me on 26 February 1984, in reply to a query I'd made about a rumour I'd heard, namely that he'd been offered the job of novelizing _Alien_:
"You're quite right about my being offered the novelization of Alien ‑‑ the shooting of the film had just been completed, at Shepperton I think, but someone brought the script over from New York. I knew nothing about the film, which I was never shown, and when I read the script I liked it even less. It struck me as an unoriginal horror movie with almost no connection with sf. They offered me $20,000 but it was surprisingly easy to turn down ‑‑ the film is very glossy, but empty at its centre. Anyway, my experiences with Hammer had put me off sf movies ‑‑ bad enough without having to novelize them, though I wouldn't mind doing the novelization of Alphaville, or even Huston's Moby Dick or Hawks's Big Sleep (Welles's Macbeth would pose some problems)." (e-mail sent to the JG Ballard forum at Yahoogroups in response to Wmmvrrvrrmm's post about this page here, 12th June 2014) - On page 5 of Interzone 70 we announced a competition for the best short extract from an imaginary novelization of the science-fiction movie Alien as it might have been written by leading British novelist J.G. Ballard. The prize is a copy of the new edition of The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (ed. Clute & Nicholls), kindly provided by publishers Little Brown/Orbit. The response, for what was quite a demanding competition, pleased us: over a dozen good entries were received. The clear winner, however, was Lyle Hopwood, who performed a clever double-twist: she not only reimagined the novelization as having been written by Ballard (rather than Alan Dean Foster), but she reimagined the film itself as having been directed by David Cronenberg (rather than Ridley Scott).(Interzone 75, September 1993)
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