
For example, do not place an item outside, leave it in a car, or place it on a windowsill, because it may lose its form. Please keep your products indoors, and avoid prolonged exposure to the sun. As a result, they are sensitive to very high temperatures. To ensure Bohimso’s products are as eco-friendly as possible, they are printed from plant-based PLAs. Not suitable for children under 14 years. This product is a model for display only. This product contains small parts and it is not a toy. MATERIAL: PLA - a non-toxic and biodegradable plastic made from plant-based materials. In the Alien timeline, it was the first human ship to land on LV-426.ģ.3" high x5.5” wide x 8.6” long (8.5 x 14.2 x 22cm). The United States Cargo Star Ship (USCSS) Nostromo was owned by the Weyland-Yutani Corporation (The Company) and used as a commercial hauler between Thedus and Earth. Including nameplate and highly detailed parts. Robert W Monk is a freelance journalist and film writer.3D printed model of the famous NOSTROMO spaceship from the "ALIEN" (1979) movie.

Strange and interesting, but with less to say than it initially thought it did, Spaceship is nevertheless worth a look and Taylor is a name to look out for in the future.įlickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★ The main story itself seems to have been left unattended after the first few drafts and the dialogue would have benefited from further edits. There are also some nice examples of dry humour, with the tale of the forgotten soldier at Aldershot barracks who wants to set up a rave one that could have been expanded on. This certainly isn’t a home-counties Kidulthood.

This heightens the fairy tale nature of the film, bringing out its fantasy play and make-believe. The innocence of youth is well highlighted, with the group of teens seemingly more interested in philosophising and day dreaming rather than in drugs and sex.

Still, the visuals are remarkably effective and authentically weird and psychedelic at times, admitting the audience – and Gabriel – into a strange world of circus acts, hallucinations and wonder. Unfortunately, this examination of ‘cyber-goth’ doesn’t seem to have carried over into the soundtrack, a confused melange of indie folk-rock and bargain bin electronica. The young actors, along with Lucidia’s main two friends Alice (Tallulah Rose Haddon) and Tegan (Lara Peake), are an integral part of the film’s visual focus, with a day-glo hyper stylised ‘cyber-goth’ dress sense informing the whole construction of the piece in every sense. Indeed, Alex Taylor’s debut feature certainly looks the part, with hazy shots of halcyon views emphasising the film’s essential dreaminess. The numerous tics and obsessions of the youth on show are not mocked or laughed at, merely presented as part of the nature of things. It does this in an even handed way, and it is one of the film’s strengths that it doesn’t resort to lazy cliches in its examination of youth sub-cultures and lifestyles. Using every single colour in the make-up box, it’s partly successful in showcasing teen-age confusion and wonderment, but ultimately disappoints with a mish-mash of styles and an insubstantial and wayward plot.Įssentially the story of Lucidia (Alexa Davies), a teen who dissapears in pursuit of aliens and unicorns, and her friends and grief stricken father Gabriel(Antti Reini) who try to find her, Spaceship works best when describing the seemingly insurmountable gap between adulthood and childhood. Starring Alexa Davis, Lara Peake, Tallulah Rose Haddon, Harry Jarvis, Antii Reini, Stephen ElderĪ teenage girl disappears in small town England, leaving her father to search for her amidst a strange world of adolescence and youth subculture.Īiming to bring a sense of the intensity of feeling associated with adolescence, Spaceship is an ambitious attempt at illustrating the spirit and psychology of growing up.
