Hurtling off its intended course on Earth, the Maginot crashes into a tower in Prodigy City, New Siam, a region administered by the Prodigy Corporation, a rival of Weyland-Yutani.
Led by the Synth android Kirsh (Timothy Olyphant), the team consisting of Hybrids Wendy (Sydney Chandler), Slightly (Adarsh Gourav), Curly (Erana James), Nibs (Lily Newark), Tootles (Kit Young) and Smee (Jonathan Ajayi) soon find themselves face to face with the variety of dangerous cargo aboard the Maginot.
Adding Alien: Earth (AE) into his already impressive body of work that includes Fargo and Legion, Noah Hawley’s latest television project is a breath of fresh air for an old franchise that has stayed mostly rigid in creativity for decades. As good as last year’s Alien: Romulus was, AE is simply better.
Rather than another story involving Xenomorphs causing carnage on a spaceship, the AE showrunner introduces several different locations for the series’s big story involving rival mega-corporations and humans playing god with science going terribly wrong.
On that note, for the longest time, the Alien franchise – at least in film – have kept the Xenomorph breed as the only aliens in space, before Ridley Scott introduced the Engineer race in the two 2010s films.
Deviating from norm
Though both are old science fiction tropes that have long existed in media, they are new to the Alien franchise, which up to this point only featured Synthetics. These androids, or Synths, were always mindless robots that operated on the orders of their owners without fail.
Much of AE is focused on both and the conflict that emerges between them, their “creators”, benefactors or against each other. Like how Fede Alvarez’s Romulus moved away from Scott’s themes involving mankind questioning where they came from, Hawley’s series does it in a much more concentrated, deliberate way to the point that the Xenomorph and other aliens appear as after thoughts.
Hawley explores how the character is forced to quickly “grow up” as she and her friends grapple with being the “children”, properties and captives of Kavalier and his corporation, along with the situation involving murderous aliens.
The downside is the second season will likely come in two to three years, as Hawley is notorious for taking his time in between seasons.
Alien: Romulus review
Xenomorphs: The Ultimate Killing Machine
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