Harry Dean Stanton's Brett suffers a bleak fate in Alien became a genre-defining work in 1979, with the "Haunted House in Space" movie bringing to life one of the greatest movie monsters, in addition to introducing Signoney Weaver's iconic Ripley. Everything about the movie from its casting to cinematography and production design worked beautifully and naturally led to many sequels and ripoffs.

Surprisingly, Ridley Scott wasn't invited back for Alien: Covenant, which was even more divisive. Noah Hawley is currently set to create an Alien TV series for FX.

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Alien 1979 features some visceral death scenes for the unlucky crew of the Nostromo, including John Hurt's infamous Alien chestburster scene. The late, great Harry Dean Stanton played Brett in the movie, who is the first character killed onscreen by the fully-grown Xenomorph. The build-up to the character's demise is one of the tensest sequences in the movie, with the creature descending on Brett when he's alone searching for missing cat Jones. The Xenomorph grabs the terrified Brett, punching a hole in his head with its tongue before pulling him into the vents.

There is a slightly extended version of Brett's demise, which saw the Xenomorph slide its tail between his legs and slowly crushing his head in its hands before the bite. Ripley and Parker then ran into the hold when they heard his screams, with Brett's blood raining down on them from above. The shot of the Xenomorph's tail moving between Brett's leg was later reused for Lambert's demise. In the Theatrical Cut of Alien, Brett's body is never recovered, but it turns out his fate was even bleaker.

In a major deleted scene that was later reinstated for the 2003 Alien: The Director's Cut, after Ripley activates the ships self-destruct, she was supposed to find the Xenomorph's nest. This is where she would find Brett's body, which was being transformed into an Alien egg. She also finds the barely alive Dallas (Tom Skerritt), who begs her to kill him; Ripley reluctantly burns both Dallas and Brett's body before making her escape from the doomed ship. Ridley Scott removed this scene because it was felt it slowed the pace of the finale, and there was concern over the effects in the sequence too.

Nevertheless, this particular piece of Xenomorph biology has continued to fascinate fans, though it's still not technically canon within the Alien franchise. Brett was almost certainly dead by the time his body was used for the Eggmorphing process, but still, it makes what was already a grim fate even grimmer.

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