The Attractive Faces Behind Famous Movie Aliens

Lauren Kirkbride | January 5, 2024 3:31 pm

Prepare for an out-of-this-world revelation, sci-fi fanatics! For decades, Hollywood has been taking us on epic journeys through the galaxy, often featuring memorable aliens with astonishingly realistic appearances. But have you ever wondered what the actors behind those intricate costumes and CGI animations actually look like?

From David Bowie to Cate Blanchett, it's time to peel back the veil and get a sneak peek at the real people behind some of the most iconic movie aliens in history. Read on to see what they look like in real life!

Natasha Henstridge In Species

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Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/MovieStillsDB, J.Sciulli/WireImage

A Canadian actress and model, in 1995, Natasha Henstridge came into popularity after her debut role in the science-fiction film Thriller. The film was then followed by Species II and Species III.

In Species, Henstridge plays the character of Sil, a genetically engineered alien/human hybrid, who breaks free from the laboratory that she was contained in. Hunted by a group of experts, Sil goes on a rampage in search of finding a mate. The film was a success, making $133 million at the box office.

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Vincent D’Onofrio Was Freaky In Men In Black

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Vincent D'Onofrio is an American actor, singer, producer, and director. He is best known for his supporting roles both in film and television, getting his start in the film Full Metal Jacket. One of his most notable roles includes Edgar the Bug in the film Men in Black.

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He begins as a farmer named Edgar who is then possessed by the Bug, becoming one of the greatest antagonists of the film. For his performance, he won a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor.

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Mads Mikkelsen In Doctor Strange

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Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen is known for his ability to play just about any role ranging from Hannibal Lecter to a Bond villain. However, in order to become Kaecilius in Doctor Strange, some altercations had to be made.

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He had to receive makeup around his eyes that made him look like a colorful raccoon, as well as dye his hair. In addition, his already prominent bone structure helped to really sell the part. Another villainous part, check.

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Lee Pace In Guardians of the Galaxy

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Most audiences, even if they are fans of Pace wouldn't recognize him as Ronan the Accuser in Guardians of the Galaxy. Not only was his face painted black and blue, but he also sported heavy cosmetics that concealed most of his noticeable features.

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On top of that, he was also fitted a hood that covered the majority of his face. However, this wasn't his first time being unrecognizable. He dressed up in women's clothes for the 2003 film Soldier's Girl.

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Maïwenn Le Besco In The Fifth Element

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Blue alien next to the actress who portrayed her, Maiwenn L Besco.
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Initially, French actress Maïwenn Le Besco didn't want to play the blue-skinned alien in The Fifth Element. Her husband at the time, Luc Besson, was the movie's director. When Luc approached her for the role, Maïwenn didn't want to muddy their relationship by working with him.

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However, the alien's original actress disappeared, and Maïwenn stepped up to the role. After the movie, Maïwenn's fears became true. Her husband left her for the leading actress, Milla Jovovich. Maïwenn moved back to France to become a stand-up comedian, and she later became a director and screenwriter.

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Idris Elba In Star Trek Beyond

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Actor and musician Idris Elba on the right with his Star Trek role, Krall, on the left.
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In 2016, actor and musician Idris Elba spent several hours transforming into Krall for Star Trek Beyond. "Typically, my day would start at 4:15 in the morning. I'd be in the chair until around 7:30, shoot about 8:30," he told Entertainment Weekly. Shooting would go until 9:00 p.m., and then he'd do the entire thing over again.

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Elba also said that he's claustrophobic and didn't enjoy all the prosthetics on his face. Head makeup artist Joel Harlow said that the aliens in Star Trek Beyond followed aquatic and lizard-like designs that required hours of prosthetic application.

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Lupita Nyong'o In The Force Awakens

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Oscar-winning actress Lupita Nyong'o turned orange for Star Wars: The Force Awakens. She played Maz Kanata, a tiny pirate alien. "I didn't really know what I was auditioning for," Nyong'o admitted on The Ellen DeGeneres Show.

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To play the CGI character, Nyong'o had to wear motion-capture dots and Maz's goggles. Nyong'o told Insider that the script was kept a secret. An assistant would fly the script to her in Morocco, give her a couple of hours to read it, and then take it again. She couldn't even tell her mother.

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Zachary Quinto In Star Trek

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One of the roles that Quinto is best known for is the Star Trek series in which he plays the character of Spock. He appeared in Star Trek, Star Trek Into Darkness, and Star Trek Beyond.

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Spock is one of the central figures in the Stark Trek franchise.

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Cate Blanchett In Thor: Ragnarok

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Cate Blanchett played Hela in Thor: Ragnarok, otherwise known as the Goddess of Death. Fans thought Blanchett nailed the character.

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However, according to Blanchett, "I just try to look the best I can at whatever age I am [...] I always find people attractive when they are comfortable with their own skin and not trying to be someone else, but their best selves."

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The Woman With Many Alien Faces

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Zoe Saldana in the middle of her two alien roles, Neytiri from Avatar and Gamora from Guardians of the Galaxy
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Zoe Saldana has become a staple of sci-fi, even though many people have never seen her face. She acted as Neytiri in Avatar and Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy and Avengers. After Avatar, Saldana told STV that she appreciated how Neytiri looked "lean with a really cute bod."

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By the time she played Gamora, Saldana had to clarify that she's not eye-candy. Playing CGI characters empowers her, according to an interview in The Daily Telegraph's Stellar Magazine. "I think science fiction has given me the ability as an artist to be colorblind and gender-blind," she said.

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Seth Rogen In Paul

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While most alien movies are serious, Paul takes a hilarious turn--especially with Seth Rogen as the alien. Throughout his role, Rogen was also under contract for The Green Hornet, so he had to play Paul while not being on set.

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A co-star, Joe Lo Truglio, acted in Rogen's place during the shooting. Afterward, Rogen created some of Truglio's lines and improv. He performed all the motion capture and voice acting post-production. In an interview with Collider, co-star Nick Frost admitted that he kept forgetting that Rogen was playing Paul.

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Working As A Deputy And A Wookie

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Actor Peter Mayhew on the right and his Star Wars character Chewie on the left.
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The beloved Wookie in Star Wars is all thanks to Peter Mayhew, an actor who towered at 7'4". His suit was layered with a combination of real yak and rabbit, and it included a water-cooling system so Mayhew wouldn't overheat. Amazingly, Mayhew kept his day job as a deputy head porter while filming the movies.

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According to makeup supervisor Stuart Freeborn, the biggest problem with Mayhew's suit was the eyes. His eyes would frequently detach from the suit, which made them look separate and hollow. He passed away in 2019 at 74 years old.

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The Gentle Giant Who Became Predator

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Actor Kevin Peter Hall on the right, and him in the Predator costume on the left.
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While casting for the 1987 movie Predator, the staff initially chose Jean-Claude Van Damme. After he dropped out, they switched to a 7'4" musical actor named Kevin Peter Hall. The producers wanted someone who could overshadow Arnold Schwarzenegger, and only a Hall could pull that off.

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Hall referred to his alien acting as "grunt roles," since he never spoke beyond growling or yelling. Although the suit was hard to navigate, Hall enjoyed playing the Predator. "I'm bigger than life and so, in a way, I'm part of the fantasy/science fiction/horror genre," he said.

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Even His Agent Didn't Recognize Him

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Eric Bana on the right and his Star Trek role, Nero, on the left.
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Australian actor Eric Bana switched up his career by playing Nero in the 2009 movie Star Trek. Bana had to sit in a makeup chair for three hours. On his first day, he didn't remember anything before lunch because of all the chemicals. When his agent arrived, he didn't even recognize Bana.

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Despite the challenges, Bana loved playing an unrecognizable character. "Those opportunities in Hollywood are so rare," Bana told The Sydney Morning Herald. After the makeup, Bana couldn't recognize his own facial expressions. He had to re-calibrate his acting to fit Nero's costume.

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Gemma Chan In Captain Marvel

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Gemma Chan is an English actress that is best known for her work on the film Crazy Rich Asians and later in the television series Humans. However, she appeared in the 2019 Marvel Cinematic Universe film Captain Marvel as Minn-Erva.

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In the film, Minn-Erva is a Kree sniper and a member of the Starforce unit. According to Chan, inn-Erva was "the star of Starforce" before Danvers joined the team and is "slightly threatened by someone else who has come in and is also very talented."

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David Bowie In Labyrinth

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Famous musician David Bowie also dabbled in acting during his life. In Labyrinth, Bowie plays the character of Jareth the Goblin King.

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Bowie was hailed for his performance as the antagonist of the 1986 film.

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Turning A Woman Into A Bug

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Actress Pom Klementieff at the Met Gala on the right, and her character Mantis from Guardians of the Galaxy on the left.
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Pom Klementieff joined Guardians of the Galaxy in the sequel as Mantis, the insect-humanoid alien. The actress told Metro that she wore prosthetics at the beginning of her forehead, but the rest was all CGI. Hence, she didn't spend as much time in the makeup chair as other actresses.

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According to Klementieff, the makeup artists tested several different looks for Mantis's design. "We tried different wigs; at some point, the makeup artists drew veins on my face...I looked really crazy. And then we decided to go for something a little more human."

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Karen Gillan In Guardians Of The Galaxy

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Red-haired actress Karen Gillan transformed into a blue robotic alien for Guardians of the Galaxy. Her minor role was so popular that she appeared beside Iron Man in Avengers: Endgame. Nebula's design wasn't painted on Gillan; it was a claustrophobic costume.

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Gillan told Variety that the suit was glued to her, which made it difficult to move her face. "I think it's stopping me from overacting," she added. After filming, Gillan said that she would watch behind-the-scenes footage of Zoe Saldana's making getting done so she felt like hers "wasn't so bad."

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The King Of CGI

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Actor Andy Serkis in the middle, with his role as Caesar on the left and his role as Snoke on the right.
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Andy Serkis has dominated the realm of CGI characters for years, from Gollum in The Lord of the Rings to Caesar in Planet of the Apes to Supreme Leader Snoke in Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Serkis is no stranger to what he calls "visual makeup."

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Serkis told The Independent that, because motion capture doesn't involve hours of prosthetic makeup, actors can play their character more truthfully. "There is no difference between performance-capture technology and conventional acting," he clarified. For Rise of the Planet of the Apes, Serkis studied gorillas to recreate their movements for the role.

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Was The Heat Worth The Alien Suit?

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Actor Simon Pegg on the left with his Star Wars: The Force Awakens character, Unkar Plutt, on the left.
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Simon Pegg has always been a die-hard Star Wars fan, so he jumped at the opportunity to play Unkar Plutt in The Force Awakens. Most fans wouldn't recognize him thanks to a combination of a suit, makeup, prosthetics, and CGI.

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Although effective, Pegg admitted that the suit was a disaster. On The Graham Norton Show, Pegg said that the suit was 50°C inside (122°F). "I had these big, rubber, silicon gauntlets...and when I took them off, I could pour the sweat out." Yikes.

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The Man Behind The Epic Snap

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Actor Josh Brolin on the right and his CGI character Thanos on the left.
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When Josh Brolin was offered the role of Thanos in the Avengers series, he hesitated at first. He told Entertainment Weekly Radio that he didn't want to do "practically nothing" in front of a green screen. But after he saw Benedict Cumberbatch's acting in motion capture during The Hobbit, he realized that CGI characters were no joke.

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Unlike other alien characters, Brolin's role was 100% CGI. Nonetheless, he felt nervous in front of 32 cameras with his face covered in iridescent paint. "It was very, very different," he later said. "But I like it. It's fun."

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Acting While On Stilts

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Willem Dafoe on the right and his CGI character Tars Tarkas on the left.
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Although John Carter tanked in the box office, we can't forget that Willem Dafoe played the green-skinned chieftain Tars Tarkas. To play a nine-foot-tall alien, Dafoe had to wear motion capture and act on stilts. On top of that, Dafoe had to navigate a rough, uneven Southwest terrain.

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Rather than feeling intimidated, Dafoe excitedly accepted the challenge. "Always as an actor you're looking for things to jump off from, to find new ways of thinking, new ways of looking," Dafoe told Coming Soon. "The stilts were part of that."

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How A Comedian Became Terrifying

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Comedian and actor Jemaine Clement on the left, and his alien role in Men in Black III on the right.
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The comedic actor from The Flight of the Conchords took a different route in Men in Black III. Jemaine Clement became the bike-riding, time-traveling alien Boris through hours of makeup. "I think the first day we put the makeup on, it took eight hours," Clement recalled. On a normal day, the makeup would take four hours.

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Clement said that he didn't mind the four hours because it gave him a chance to talk to the legendary makeup artist, Rick Baker. His appearance was so effective that when Clement joined the staff for lunch, no one would know who he was.

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Oscar-Nominated Makeup Will Transform A Person

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Sofia Boutella on the left with her Star Trek role, Jaylah, on the right
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When French-Algerian dancer Sofia Boutella played Jaylah in Star Trek Beyond, her fans didn't recognize her. She spent four hours every day in a makeup chair with an Oscar-nominated team. Joel Harlow, the Academy Award-winning makeup artist, said that only Boutella's nose, mouth, and chin were hers. The rest were prosthetics.

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Despite the hours of painstaking application, Boutella loved the costume. She said that it allowed a meditation process to get her into character. "I like that second skin," she told an interviewer with FilmIsNow. "It's like, as soon as I had it on, you feel in character."

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Terrance Stamp In Alien Nation

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An English actor, Terrance Stamp began acting professionally after studying at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London. Over the course of his career, he appeared in over 60 films and won countless accolades for his performances.

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In the 1988 film Alien Nation, he plays the role of William Harcourt, the main antagonist of the film. Harcourt is a member of the alien species known as the Tenctonese whose ship crash lands on Earth.

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Korg, The Director

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Director and actor Taika Waititi on the right and his character from Thor: Ragnarok, Korg, on the left.
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Director Taika Waititi not only guided Thor: Ragnarok, but also lent his voice to the fan-favorite alien, Korg. In an interview with The Last Leg, Waititi said that Korg's voice reflected delicate, lovely Polynesian bouncers he met in New Zealand.

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The director went on camera and improvised many of Korg's lines in the movie, and the special effects team transformed him into a seven-foot-six rock man. On the Jimmy Kimmel show, Waititi revealed that Korg will come back in the fourth movie, Thor: Love and Thunder. He seemed surprised at the ripple of cheers from the audience.

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Drax's Entire Body Was All Makeup

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Actor and wrestler Dave Baustista on the right, and his character Drax the Destroyer on the left.
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When Dave Bautista began his wrestling career in 1999, he probably didn't expect to sit in a makeup chair for five hours every day to apply 18 prosthetic pieces. That was his daily life while playing Drax the Destroyer in Guardians of the Galaxy. Before the makeup, Bautista applied a medical adhesive across his entire body.

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The makeup was sealed so that it would stay on for the entire day. As a result, it was very difficult to take off. "I had to sit in a sauna for 45 minutes to an hour," Bautista said. After it melted off, producers would remove it with more chemicals.

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Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje In Thor: Dark World

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Many fans will will know Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje from the show Lost, who was eventually taken out from the smoke monster. However, he played quite a different character of Algrim in Thor: Dark World who eventually turns into the monster Kurse.

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Underneath all of his horns and bones as the character of Kurse, few people would have been able to know who he was if he hadn't already appeared as Algrim, with his bleach wig and bright blue contact lenses.