The Intersection
  • Login
  • Home
  • Movie Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Special Features
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Special Features
No Result
View All Result
The Intersection
No Result
View All Result
Home TV Reviews

Alien: Earth Season 1 Finale Review: Power Changes Hands in Satisfying Salvo

Chris Lee by Chris Lee
September 24, 2025
in TV Reviews
0 0
0
Alex Lawther, Sydney Chandler, and Lily Newmark in Alien: Earth (2025)

Alex Lawther, Sydney Chandler, and Lily Newmark in Alien: Earth (2025)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Noah Hawley crafts a gripping Alien: Earth Season 1 finale. The hybrids finally rise and seize control of Prodigy with help from deadly Xenomorphs. While not the show’s strongest episode, a few storylines end without satisfying payoffs, the setup for Season 2 is excellent and Sydney Chandler delivers a standout performance that anchors the drama.

Alien: Earth Season 1 Finale Overview

The Alien: Earth Season 1 finale cranks up the stakes as the hybrids launch their long-awaited revolt, unleashing Xenomorphs upon Prodigy leadership.

Chandler’s portrayal of hybrid leader Wendy is magnetic throughout. She dominates scenes without ever feeling overplayed in moments of confrontation with Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin).

The show doesn’t dodge carnage: Xenomorphs burst through vents, corridors flood with panic. Yet not every tension thread is tied. Subplots involving side characters, which hint at future internal dissent or secret agendas, often conclude too abruptly or remain tantalizingly unresolved. The moral dilemmas, too, never quite land with full weight in all cases. Specifically, Wendy’s relationship with her brother is never particularly interesting and Wendy’s defeat of Kavalier is too easily earned.

Related Post

Mon Mothma in Andor

Countdown to the Best TV Shows of 2025: Top 10 Must-Watch Series

December 28, 2025
Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi and Elle Fanning in Predator: Badlands (2025)

Predator: Badlands Review | Dan Trachtenberg Continues to Find Winning Formula

November 7, 2025

Alien: Earth The Fly Review: Human Intelligence Goes Awry in Weakest Episode

September 11, 2025

Alien: Earth Flashback Episode Review: Noah Hawley’s Most Direct, Loving Homeage to 1979’s Alien

September 4, 2025

Still, the finale’s setup for Season 2 is excellent. The hybrids control Prodigy, but with Yutani en route and a new leadership approach, there’s plenty of conflict in store for season two. While the episode isn’t flawless, it finishes on a note of dangerous possibility. Chandler’s performance ensures next season can’t come soon enough.

Alien: Earth is streaming on FX by Hulu.

The Lost Boys Rise up in Alien: Earth Season 1 Final

The finale’s turning point arrives when the hybrids finally strike back. Wendy, now fully embracing her abilities, overrides Prodigy’s security systems. She unlocks doors, cuts power and even communicates with the Xenomorphs to turn them loose against Kavalier, Dame Sylvia and the rest of the adults in power. Freed from containment, the Lost Boys surge through the facility, capturing key figures one by one.

The hybrids allow Morrow to go after Kirsh. The cyborg and synth clash violently with Kirsh barely getting the upper hand, but is badly damaged and captured alongside the other adults. The hybrids use the aliens running wild to surround the adults and crumble Kavalier’s empire.

By the end, Kavalier, Sylvia, Kirsh and Morrow are thrown into cells. The hybrids stand triumphant, with Wendy at their center, delivering the cold, decisive line: “Now, we rule.” It’s a dramatic reversal that shifts the entire balance of power heading into Season 2.

Sibling Drama

The finale also leans heavily on the complicated relationship between Wendy and her brother, Hermit. After rescuing him from the eye-sucking creature, Wendy confronts both him and his choices. Their uneasy reunion is quickly interrupted when Atom Eins (Adrian Edmondson) attempts to attack Hermit, only for Wendy to paralyze the synth with her growing control over Prodigy’s systems.

What follows is a frank exchange. Hermit defends his decision to subdue Nibs in the previous episode, claiming he was protecting the humans and suggesting that a hybrid life isn’t equal to a human one. Wendy admits she no longer knows what she is — a child, an adult, or a hybrid — but finds clarity in her mission to take control of Prodigy.

On paper, this dynamic should carry emotional weight. In practice, it falls flat. Wendy and Hermit rarely feel like siblings, and their interactions lack the warmth or volatility that might lend texture to their bond. Hermit occasionally shows flashes of guilt, but Alex Lawther’s withdrawn performance renders him more aloof than compelling. The result is a storyline that feels underdeveloped, draining energy from a finale that otherwise thrives on tension and momentum.

Alien: Earth Season 1 Finale Final Thoughts

As finales go, Alien: Earth ends its debut season with both triumphs and shortcomings. Hawley deserves credit for steering the series into bold territory, allowing the hybrids to finally step into their own and flipping the power dynamic that has defined the show so far. Watching Wendy and the Lost Boys take Prodigy by force delivers on the season’s long-teased promise, and the image of once-powerful figures like Boy Kavalier and Dame Sylvia reduced to prisoners is as striking as it is satisfying.

The episode also showcases Hawley’s trademark ambition. Thematically, the finale revolves around questions of identity, control, and survival that have long fueled Alien stories.

Yet for all its strengths, the episode leaves noticeable gaps. Character arcs, especially Wendy and Hermit’s, never land with the emotional resonance they’re meant to. Their sibling bond feels distant, almost perfunctory, undermining what could have been a grounding counterweight to the chaos. Likewise, Kavalier’s downfall happens too quickly for a character who has loomed so large throughout the season, robbing his defeat of the impact it deserves.

Even so, the path forward is enticing. With the hybrids in control and Yutani forces bearing down, the stage is set for a second season full of fresh conflicts and uneasy alliances. Chandler’s commanding performance ensures that whatever happens next, Wendy remains the show’s magnetic center. Imperfect but undeniably bold, the finale closes one chapter of Alien: Earth while promising an even more volatile one to come.

Donation

Buy author a coffee

Donate
Alien: Earth Season 1 Finale
  • 7/10
    Good - 7/10
7/10
Liked it? Take a second to support Chris Lee on Patreon!
Become a patron at Patreon!

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
Tags: AlienAlien: EarthFXHulu by FX
Chris Lee

Chris Lee

Related Posts

Mon Mothma in Andor
Special Features

Countdown to the Best TV Shows of 2025: Top 10 Must-Watch Series

by Chris Lee
December 28, 2025
Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi and Elle Fanning in Predator: Badlands (2025)
TV Reviews

Predator: Badlands Review | Dan Trachtenberg Continues to Find Winning Formula

by Chris Lee
November 7, 2025
Adrian Edmondson, Timothy Olyphant, and Samuel Blenkin in The Fly (2025)
TV Reviews

Alien: Earth The Fly Review: Human Intelligence Goes Awry in Weakest Episode

by Chris Lee
September 11, 2025
Next Post
Peacemaker Season 2 Ignorance is Chris Review: A Trip to Racistville

Peacemaker Season 2 Ignorance is Chris Review: A Trip to Racistville

Recommended

Best films of 2020

Best 2020 Films

January 8, 2021
Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda and Paul Bettany as Vision In a Special Episode...

On A Very Special Episode… Review: MoVision Work in Different Phases to Solve the Mystery of ‘WandaVision’

Jason Segel in Shrinking

Shrinking Season 3 Finale Review: Excellent finale heals scars of the past

April 8, 2026
Harrison Ford and Michael J. Fox in Shrinking

Shrinking Season 3 Review in Progress: Harrison Ford Powers Bill Lawrence’s Series to New Heights

March 11, 2026
Zach Braff and Donald Faison in My Angel (2026)

Scrubs Season 10 Review: Zach Braff and Donald Faison find the cure for reboot fatigue

April 16, 2026
Jason Segel in Shrinking

Shrinking Season 3 Finale Review: Excellent finale heals scars of the past

April 8, 2026
The Super Mario Galaxy Moview Review: Stunning visuals and star-studded cast can’t overcome a thin story

The Super Mario Galaxy Moview Review: Stunning visuals and star-studded cast can’t overcome a thin story

April 2, 2026
Charlie Cox in Daredevil: Born Again (2025)

Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Review — Episodes 1–3 Blend Focused Storytelling With Brutal Action

April 1, 2026

Independent movie and television coverage

Recent Posts

  • Scrubs Season 10 Review: Zach Braff and Donald Faison find the cure for reboot fatigue
  • Shrinking Season 3 Finale Review: Excellent finale heals scars of the past
  • The Super Mario Galaxy Moview Review: Stunning visuals and star-studded cast can’t overcome a thin story

Categories

  • Brooklyn 99
  • Lists and Features
  • Movie Reviews
  • Scrubs
  • Smallville
  • Special Features
  • TV Reviews
  • Uncategorized

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Lists and Features

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.