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HomeEntertainmentSigourney Weaver On 'Galaxy Quest' Director's Cut, Proposed Sequel

Sigourney Weaver On ‘Galaxy Quest’ Director’s Cut, Proposed Sequel


While breaking down her career timeline, Sigourney Weaver reflected on 1999’s satirical sci-fi comedy Galaxy Quest and how she wishes the cult favorite had stuck to its initial R-rated guns (or, rather, space lasers).

In a video interview with Vanity Fair, the Alien star said she related more to her character Gwen, a has-been actress who resented her objectification in the movie’s bygone space soap opera series, than the steely Ripley in the 1979 Ridley Scott classic.

“I wanted to play a young woman in that world of stardom, who wants so much to be a star and who, because she’s beautiful and bosomy and blonde, no one takes very seriously — not even the commander. And I felt great compassion and sisterhood with Gwen and Tawny [the fictional character she plays in the world of Galaxy Quest].”

Adding that she was “fortunate” to have worked with an “amazing group” of co-stars including Tim Allen, Tony Shalhoub and Alan Rickman, the Avatar actress said, “I wish they put out a director’s cut of the movie because, at the last minute, DreamWorks decided to release the movie with some of the more sophisticated scenes cut that Alan was in because it needed a kids’ movie to go up against [Columbia Pictures’] Stuart Little. And why they don’t put out the movie again with more of his very, very strange and wonderful scenes?”

Of the long-discussed sequel that never came to pass, Weaver said, “[Co-writer] Bob Gordon had written a second one, and he wouldn’t give it to DreamWorks because he just felt they’d missed the boat on ours. And so we always meant to do a sequel, and then with Alan passing away, we just lost heart. But it was a great privilege to do this love letter to actors.”

Directed by Dean Parisot, the parody and loving homage to series like Star Trek centers on a group of alumni of a space TV show who are unwittingly drawn into an intergalactic conflict by aliens who believe their imaginary series to be a depiction of real life.

Though sequel discussions have circulated prior to and following Rickman’s death as a result of pancreatic cancer in 2016, potential follow-ups have since stalled. However, OG film producer Mark Johnson told Deadline earlier this year that a Galaxy Quest TV series is currently being written for CBS Studios.



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