
Given that Hollywood has apparently given up on summer blockbusters about space aliens and similar science fiction, we need to look to television. The summer has already been a lot of fun given the new series Murderbot, as well as the new seasons of Foundation and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.
But wait, there’s more.
Ridley Scott’s Alien franchise is coming to a television near you. That’s right, some things cannot be contained to the screen.
The new series Alien: Earth will premiere on FX, Hulu, and Disney+ on August 12th. The latest trailer will show you that the screaming and running has just started. But instead of a two hour movie, you now have eight hours of terror spread over eight episodes.
So what is the spin this time? It’s in the title. Hell has come to our planet.
It is basically a tale of childlike super soldiers taking on the Xenomorph, or Alien creature. This future Earth is more advanced and nothing like ours, but it does not seem advanced enough to understand what just crash-landed onto the planet.
Here is the plot summary from FX:
When the mysterious deep space research vessel USCSS Maginot crash-lands on Earth, “Wendy” (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat in FX’s Alien: Earth.
In the year 2120, the Earth is governed by five corporations: Prodigy, Weyland-Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold. In this Corporate Era, cyborgs (humans with both biological and artificial parts) and synthetics (humanoid robots with artificial intelligence) exist alongside humans. But the game is changed when the wunderkind Founder and CEO of Prodigy Corporation unlocks a new technological advancement: hybrids (humanoid robots infused with human consciousness). The first hybrid prototype named “Wendy” marks a new dawn in the race for immortality. After Weyland-Yutani’s spaceship collides into Prodigy City, “Wendy” and the other hybrids encounter mysterious life forms more terrifying than anyone could have ever imagined.
The Alien story was always about the hubris of humanity, corporate greed, and scary technological “improvements”. It is all here again in this television series.
We seem to be slow learners, even with our technology.