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 Premiere Review | Noah Hawley finds inspired take on Sci-Fi franchise through Peter Pan

Chris Lee by Chris Lee
August 19, 2025
in TV Reviews
0 0
0
Alien: Earth Premiere Review | Noah Hawley finds inspired take on Sci-Fi franchise through Peter Pan
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

After the franchise found new life with 2024’s Alien: Romulus, Noah Hawley takes a bold swing in Alien: Earth, grounding the horror on our planet and leaning on a younger cast. Strong performances from Timothy Olyphant, Sydney Chandler and Alex Lawther, paired with striking visuals and a fresh Earth-bound premise, give the series real promise. That said, while the grotesque imagery delivers, the opening two episodes lack the nail-biting tension that defines the best of the franchise.

Alien: Earth Overview

Alien: Earth unfolds two years before Ridley Scott’s 1979 Alien. Hawley delivers a fresh, thoughtful expansion of the franchise.

The story follows Wendy (Chandler), Prodigy’s first hybrid, created by implanting a child’s consciousness into an adult synthetic body. These hybrids, known as “The Lost Boys,” never age. Chandler’s performance captures youthful naivety while showing maturity beyond her fellow hybrids.

The group is overseen by three figures: Kirsh (Olyphant), Boy Cavalier (Samuel Blenkin), and Dame Sylvia (Essie Davis).

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 Season 1 Finale Review: Power Changes Hands in Satisfying Salvo

September 24, 2025

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

September 11, 2025

Olyphant brings cold calculation, showing contempt for the still lingering human emotions in the hybrids. Blenkin embodies arrogance as a reckless genius CEO, treating experiments as toys. Davis offers maternal warmth, softening the corporate cruelty with compassion. Her presence grounds the hybrids emotionally in an otherwise hostile world.

The Maginot vessel’s crash on Earth unleashes a Xenomorph and other horrors, shifting the conflict from deep space to skyscraper halls. This setting expands beyond spaceship corridors yet keeps the series tense and claustrophobic, echoing Alien’s roots while upping the danger.

Visually, Alien: Earth impresses. Hawley’s pilot boasts film-quality production, strong editing, and a retro style evoking the late 1970s. The second episode falters with uneven CGI but maintains suspense through clever editing that provides the few thrills.

Hawley starts strong. If he balances world-building with deeper scares and surprises, Alien: Earth could become one of 2025’s best shows.

Alien: Earth is streaming on FX by Hulu.

The Maginot Crew Status

Before shifting into its bold Earth-based story, Alien: Earth opens in a familiar setting: deep space aboard the Maginot vessel. Hawley wastes no time establishing the archetypal crew—an unsettling lurker, a restless malcontent, and the commanding cyborg Morrow (Babou Ceesay). As the Weyland-Yutani Corporation representative, Morrow quietly drives the narrative, concealing motives that ultimately bring the Maginot down to Earth.

The vessel also harbors a Xenomorph and other unnerving lifeforms, setting the stage for corporate meddling in mankind’s survival. Morrow’s role isn’t simply to keep the crew aligned; it’s to let the crew die and allow the ship to crash to Earth. Hawley resists spelling out the full scope of Morrow’s agenda, instead hinting at deeper layers that promise intrigue well beyond the crash.

Neverland in Alien: Earth

The series opens with a crawl framing humanity’s fight for immortality through three paths: Cyborgs (enhanced humans), Synths (artificially intelligent beings), and Hybrids (synthetic bodies carrying human consciousness). Hawley’s most brilliant move is presenting the hybrids as futuristic Peter Pan Lost Boys, a metaphor that gives the show emotional weight.

Marcy, an 11-year-old with a terminal illness, becomes the first to transition. Her procedure, conducted in a hidden facility named Neverland, is completed as she drifts off watching Peter Pan. She awakens in an adult body but retains her child’s mind, adopting the name Wendy.

Wendy becomes a guide to the other children turned hybrids, never aging, unable to return to their families, and reduced to property of the corporation Prodigy. The Peter Pan parallel sharpens their tragedy: like the Lost Boys, they are stuck in perpetual youth, but their battles are against Xenomorphs rather than Captain Hook.

When Wendy’s human brother, Joseph Hermit, enters the tower after a crash, she convinces Boy Cavalier, Kirsh, and the other hybrids to join him in the recovery mission. This decision binds the children to a larger fight, blending their haunting innocence with the brutal survival stakes of the Alien universe.

The Lost Boys Rescue Mission

Episode two builds on the pilot’s rescue setup, devoting most of its runtime to the search-and-recovery mission. Hawley punctuates the action with two key detours. First, Yutani, CEO of Weyland-Yutani, contacts Boy Cavalier after the crash, asking him to steer clear of her company’s wreckage. Cavalier refuses, arguing that since the Maginot crashed into his skyscraper, the vessel is now his property. The clash sets up the season’s corporate standoff.

The second detour introduces Hermit, the series’s secondary lead. Before the crash, he wanted to go to medical school and sought to resign from his medic role. His sister, Wendy, watches through surveillance feeds and accidentally discovers she can manipulate code, even rewriting the system to block his resignation. Her choice, born of fear of losing him, deepens the emotional core of the show.

Once the Maginot plummets to Earth, Hermit endures a brutal day inside Cavalier’s tower, narrowly surviving repeated encounters with the Xenomorph. The eventual reunion with his sister delivers genuine emotional weight before the episode erupts into a tense finale. Meanwhile, Kirsh and the other Lost Boys explore the wreck’s cargo hold and uncover additional alien specimens, widening the scope of threats yet to come.

Alien: Earth Final Thoughts

With Alien: Earth, Hawley boldly reimagines the franchise by taking it out of deep space and rooting its horror on Earth. The series mixes fresh world-building, corporate rivalries and hybrids as modern Lost Boys with familiar franchise staples like claustrophobic tension and corporate greed. Performances from Chandler, Olyphant, and Lawther anchor the drama, each bringing dimension to characters.

Visually, the show impresses, blending retro design with high production values. What’s missing, at least in the first two episodes, is the relentless, suffocating tension that makes the best entries in this franchise unforgettable.

The integration of Peter Pan mythology through the hybrids is Hawley’s masterstroke. It lends the series emotional resonance that sets it apart from earlier installments, making the tragedy of eternal youth as frightening as any Xenomorph encounter. By grounding the terror in skyscrapers and surveillance feeds instead of starships and derelict planets, Alien: Earth both honors and expands the franchise’s DNA.

If Hawley can dial up the suspense to match his ambition, Alien: Earth could be one of 2025’s standout shows—an Alien story that feels both mythic and human.

Donation

Buy author a coffee

Donate
Alien: Earth
  • 7.5/10
    Very Good - 7.5/10
7.5/10
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: Earth
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
Alex Lawther, Sydney Chandler, and Lily Newmark in Alien: Earth (2025)
TV Reviews

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

by Chris Lee
September 24, 2025
Next Post
John Cena in Peacemaker (2022)

Peacemaker Season 2 Review: John Cena's Terrific Performance Carries Uneven Season Premiere

Recommended

Tom Hiddleston in The Night Manager (2016)

The Night Manager Review: Hugh Laurie Dominates Season 2’s Final Episodes

February 7, 2026
Chris Hemsworth in Crime 101 (2026)

Crime 101 Review: Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo elevate crime thriller

February 14, 2026
Harrison Ford and Michael J. Fox in Shrinking

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

February 16, 2026
John Cena and Freddie Stroma in Peacemaker (2022)

Peacemaker Review: Murn After Reading is heartbreaking, brilliant storytelling by James Gunn

Zach Braff, Sarah Chalke, Donald Faison, Christopher Turk, Elliot Reid, and Brian Bowen Smith in My Return (2026)

Scrubs Revival Review Episodes 1-2: A welcome return to Sacred Heart

February 27, 2026
Dexter Sol Ansell and Peter Claffey in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms (2026)

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Review: A Welcome, Lighter return to Westeros

February 23, 2026
Harrison Ford and Michael J. Fox in Shrinking

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

February 16, 2026
Chris Hemsworth in Crime 101 (2026)

Crime 101 Review: Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo elevate crime thriller

February 14, 2026

Independent movie and television coverage

Recent Posts

  • Scrubs Revival Review Episodes 1-2: A welcome return to Sacred Heart
  • A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Review: A Welcome, Lighter return to Westeros
  • Shriking Season 3 Review in Progress: Harrison Ford Powers Bill Lawrence’s Series to New Heights

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.