Edit Brrip X264 Aac-m2g - A9 Prometheus 1080p Special Edition Fan
To achieve this, the edit performs nearly and color‑corrects 368 shots . The runtime is reframed from the original's 2 hours 4 minutes to 2 hours 9 minutes —seventeen minutes of problematic content are removed, while twenty minutes of restored and newly polished scenes are added back. Below is a breakdown of the most significant changes, organized by category.
: The infamous scene where characters run in a straight line away from the falling Juggernaut is edited to be more believable. Technical Execution
This term defines the video source source. A means the file was encoded from a pre-existing Blu-ray rip (usually a larger BDRip or REMUX file), rather than directly from the retail Blu-ray disc itself.
As a loose prequel to the legendary 1979 film Alien , expectations for Prometheus were impossibly high. Visually, Ridley Scott delivered a masterpiece. The cinematography by Dariusz Wolski was breathtaking, the practical sets were massive, and the special effects were flawless. However, the screenplay—written by Jon Spaihts and heavily rewritten by Damon Lindelof—left many audiences frustrated. Viewers complained about several narrative elements: To achieve this, the edit performs nearly and
Sometimes, editors try to piece back together a director’s original vision that was butchered by studio executives. Other times, fans aggressively cut out elements they personally disliked. Technical Mastery:
The fan edit aggressively cuts dialogue and scenes that critics felt made the film's scientists unprofessional or its characters illogical. Key examples include:
Note: For the best experience, it is generally recommended to own the official Blu-ray release of the film. : The infamous scene where characters run in
Here’s a text you can use to describe or accompany that fan edit:
For many fans of the Alien franchise, 2012's Prometheus was one of the most frustrating cinematic experiences of its era. Directed by Ridley Scott—returning to the sci‑horror universe he helped create—the film boasted stunning visuals, ambitious ideas about humanity's origins, and the promise of an epic mythological expansion. Yet the theatrical release left audiences divided, panned for illogical character decisions, jarring tonal shifts, awkward humor, and plot holes that undermined its grandeur.
This isn't just a re-encode; it is a fundamental restructure of the 2012 sci-fi epic. The "A9" edit has been circulating in fan edit communities as one of the definitive ways to experience the film, stripping away the clumsier aspects of the script to deliver a more atmospheric and cohesive story. As a loose prequel to the legendary 1979
: This is the most crucial part of the label. This indicates that the video file is not the theatrical version released in theaters, nor is it the official home video release. It is a customized version of the film altered by an independent editor to change the narrative pacing, add deleted scenes, or alter the color grading.
for the Alien and Predator franchises
The "a9" in the filename refers to "Agent 9," the online pseudonym of the fan editor behind this project. While like many in the fan editing community they maintain a degree of anonymity, Agent 9 is a well-respected figure on platforms like fanedit.org, known for a meticulous approach to their work. Besides their work on Prometheus , they have also created notable fan edits for Terminator Salvation , but their Prometheus: Special Edition remains their most acclaimed project.
