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Re: Back To The Egg ...

Animal Hour
SubjectRe: Back To The Egg ...
FromAnimal Hour
Date2002-04-10 12:00 (2002-04-10 12:00)
Message-ID<20020410060055.27628.00000401@mb-bj.aol.com>
Client
Newsgroupsalt.cult-movies.alien
Followsspauldingae
FollowupsAdam Cameron (2h & 41m) > Animal Hour
aaron.percival (5h & 16m) > Animal Hour
spauldingae (1d, 9h & 39m) > Animal Hour

In article <zzds8.235869$702.41404@sccrnsc02>, "spauldingae" <spauldingae@home.com>writes:

spauldingae
I personally got the idea they eggs were cargo, nothing more. I have no Idea where the "SJ" got them, but some have speculated the Xenomorphs were genetically engineered by them (perhaps as bioweapons)?

Some possibilities:

1) The eggs were a biological weapon carried by the Space Jockey (from his home base toward a target which "he" never reached)

2) The eggs were being carried by the SJ as scientific specimens (from the xenomorph homeworld to labs on the jockey's world)

3) The alien is a weapon created by an unknown species for use *against* the SJ.

4) The SJ got infected on the Alien homeworld and returned while impregnated to his ship. His chestburster became a queen. She laid the eggs Kane found.

****** A possibility eliminated by ALIENS:

The SJ was the pilot of a ship with a large crew. The pilot got infected. The chestburster grew, captured the rest of the crew, and cocooned them. The "eggs" are the remains of the boneship's crew. * ******

I don't particularly like options (1) and (2). Wouldn't the SJ take some precautions? In (1) the jockey's knowledge of the alien would make him wary; in (2) his total *lack* of knowledge would make him wary.

Anyone can wander around among the eggs and there doesn't seem to be anything to keep a facehugger from leaving the hold and running around the ship.

Perhaps there was some sort of barrier enclosing the eggs but there was a power failure or other malfunction. Then a facehugger got loose. Option 2 (scientific specimen) makes some sense then. Option 1 (weapon) still doesn't work well though.

Another possibility is that there was a barrier for a long time after the jockey's death, but eventually the power was drained too much to maintain the warning transmission and the field. But in this case there must have been an alien outside of the barrier the whole time. Otherwise, the jockey would not have been attacked.

You can combine (3) and (4) to create option 5. In that case, the xenomorph doesn't really have a "homeworld", though, because it's genetically engineered. I have two variations of (5).

5a -- An egg is planted on some world for the SJ to stumble upon.

5b -- The SJ is abducted by the unknown aliens for impregnation with a queen. He is returned to his ship. He doesn't remember the implantation.

(5a) and (5b) have the following in common: The idea is that he will return home exposing his race. En route his medical equipment detects the larva. He doesn't want to endanger his own people or other species. He sets down on an uninhabited planet -- self-imposed quarantine. He broadcasts a warning. He dies. The resulting queen lays the eggs.