Xenogenesis (film) explained

Xenogenesis
Music:Bernard Herrmann
Runtime:12 minutes
Language:English
Budget:$20,000

Xenogenesis is a 1978 Canadian-American science fiction short film directed by James Cameron and Randall Frakes. It stars William Wisher Jr. and Margaret Umbel.

Plot

Raj (an engineered man, trained to deliver humanity from the final cataclysm) and Laurie (a woman raised by a machine, but she alone knew the power of love) are sent in a gigantic sentient starship to search space for a place to start a new life cycle. Having come across a derelict starship, belonging to an unknown people said to have been dead for fifty thousand years, Raj decides to investigate. He comes across a gigantic robotic cleaner, which attacks Raj and he ends up hanging from an edge. Laurie arrives to help, operating a vehicle which moves on four legs. Raj instructs her to get back to their ship, but she refuses and engages the robot in combat. The film ends with Raj still hanging from the ledge; Laurie pushing the robot towards the edge, with the robot fighting to not go over it.

Cast

Production

Cameron raised $20,000 from a local dentist to fund the movie. Most of the film was shot in his living room and the methods he used were self taught.[1] [2] Learning as they went, Cameron said he felt like a doctor doing his first surgical procedure.

It was noted in A Critical Companion to James Cameron that the scene from Aliens where Ripley yells at the Queen Alien was similar to a scene in this movie. It was also noted that many of the themes that would appear in later Cameron movies, included a strong female character, can be first found here.[3]

The dentist pulled out of the project based on the screened demo, but Roger Corman was sufficiently impressed to hire Cameron to work on Battle Beyond the Stars and Piranha II.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Watch: James Cameron's 1st Short Film Xenogenesis - Indie Film Hustle . 2020-06-15 . 2020-06-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200615040501/https://indiefilmhustle.com/xenogenesis-short-film-james-cameron/ . dead .
  2. Web site: James Cameron and his unmade films. February 4, 2015. Den of Geek. en. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20191019133823/https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/james-cameron/33928/james-cameron-and-his-unmade-films. October 19, 2019. October 19, 2019.
  3. Barkman, A. (2018) Critical Companion to James Cameron. Lexington Books
  4. Web site: BDSF: James Cameron's Xenogenesis. 15 November 2008.