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Alien: Earth Metamorphosis Review | Returning to Neverland vaults Noah Hawley Series to one of 2025’s Best

Chris Lee by Chris Lee
August 23, 2025
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Timothy Olyphant in Metamorphosis (2025)
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Alien: Earth’s third episode, Metamorphosis, marks a turning point for the series. The show finally delivers a pulse-pounding, suspenseful action sequence, something noticeably missing in the first two episodes. Beyond the thrills, the episode deepens its supporting cast with meaningful development, elevating Alien: Earth into the realm of must-watch television.

Metamorphosis Overview

Metamorphosis opens by resolving the previous cliffhanger thrillingly, immediately spotlighting Wendy’s intelligence and resilience.

Wendy pursues the Xenomorph that captured her brother, Hermit, and discovers him alive, but cruelly kept as bait. When the alien returns, she refuses to back down. Together, the siblings manage to defeat the creature, though Wendy is gravely injured by acid blood in the process. Sydney Chandler continues to shine, grounding Wendy with both fierce determination and vulnerability.

Elsewhere, Boy Kavalier instructs Kirsh to gather the Lost Boys and return to Neverland. This shift gives supporting characters a chance to stand out, as the Lost Boys begin to reveal distinct personalities. Meanwhile, tensions rise within Prodigy, with Kirsh and others increasingly clashing against Boy Kavalier’s reckless leadership.

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Once they return, Kirsh begins experimenting on the specimens from the crash site. He discovers the eggs react to organic lifeforms, not synthetic or hybrid. Timothy Olyphant continues to shine.

Even Morrow, the Weyland-Yutani cyborg who caused the crash, begins to evolve. His shifting loyalty, guided less by creator and more by programmed purpose, hints at deeper conflicts to come. Babou Ceesay is phenomenal throughout the episode.

The only issue continues to be Boy Kavalier. Nothing that’s happened on-screen corroborates with him being a genius, at least not yet. Samuel Blenkin is doing a great job portraying the arrogance.

Ultimately, Metamorphosis succeeds because it expands the narrative beyond horror by honing in on the characters. By digging into character growth and shifting allegiances, the episode deepens the stakes and establishes a more layered foundation for the series moving forward.

Alien: Earth is streaming on FX by Hulu.

Return to Neverland in Metamorphosis

In the first two episodes, Wendy was the only Lost Boy with a distinct personality. Metamorphosis changes that. After her thrilling opening, the spotlight shifts to Slightly, Nibs, Smee, and Curly, who each begin to emerge as characters in their own right.

Curly is the standout. Erana James delivers one of the episode’s strongest performances, rivaled only by Ceesay’s Morrow and Olyphant’s Kirsh. Curly challenges Boy Kavalier over his favoritism toward Wendy. While he doesn’t demote Wendy, Kavalier is intrigued by Curly’s confidence and curiosity.

Nibs brings a different tension, voicing her frustration with the Peter Pan-inspired labels of “Lost Boys.” Her resistance to these names underscores the group’s growing struggle for autonomy.

Meanwhile, Smee and Slightly share one of the quieter but more poignant scenes. Recounting their encounter with Morrow to Atom Eins (Adrian Edmondson), Slightly’s anxiety contrasts with Smee’s steady reassurance. The moment is brief, but it reveals a deepening bond and highlights the Lost Boys’ gradual evolution into more than experiments. They’re becoming individuals with friendships, fears, and emotional depth.

Purpose vs Creator

Before leaving the skyscraper, Morrow crosses paths with Smee and Slightly. Mistaking them at first for Synths, he’s surprised when they reveal themselves as hybrids. Intrigued but undeterred from his mission, Morrow resumes uploading Prodigy’s data. Kirsh arrives to confront him, and the tension between the two is palpable. Kirsh stays calm and measured, while Morrow grows increasingly agitated before making his escape.

Afterward, Morrow contacts the Weyland-Yutani CEO, who congratulates him and requests a debrief. Instead of complying, Morrow refuses. His function for decades has been simple: collect and safeguard specimens. But now, the beings he’s long watched over are gone. Morrow redefines his purpose — reclaiming what was lost. His determination to infiltrate Neverland adds a compelling wrinkle, reframing him less as a corporate instrument and more as a wild card whose loyalty lies with his mission, not his masters.

Metamorphosis Final Thoughts

With Metamorphosis, Alien: Earth truly hits its stride. The episode balances pulse-pounding action with thoughtful character work. Wendy remains a powerful anchor, but the shift to developing the Lost Boys broadens the emotional stakes and adds new layers to Prodigy’s fractured ecosystem.

What makes this episode resonate is its willingness to slow down and let relationships, loyalties, and identities take shape. From Curly’s bold challenge to Boy Kavalier, to Nibs’ frustration with imposed labels, to the quiet bond between Smee and Slightly, the Lost Boys emerge as more than experiments; they feel more human. Meanwhile, Morrow’s transformation from dutiful agent to unpredictable force sets up one of the show’s most intriguing arcs.

The only issue continues to be Boy Kavalier. Nothing that’s happened on-screen corroborates with him being a genius, at least not yet. Samuel Blenkin is doing a great job portraying the arrogance.

By expanding the narrative beyond survival horror and into the messy, human consequences of corporate ambition, Metamorphosis elevates Alien: Earth into compelling, must-watch television. If the first two episodes laid the foundation, this one proves the series is ready to stand tall.

 

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Tags: AlienAlien: EarthFXHulu
Chris Lee

Chris Lee

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