Earth’ Episode 4 Recap And Review — Dreadfully Dull And Goofy

Alien: Earth continues to be a show I wish I loved, but keep having a hard time enjoying. The show’s production value remains (mostly) quite good, and a few of the performances are spellbinding. Babou Ceesay’s Morrow is a gripping antagonist. Timothy Olyphant’s Kirsh is a captivating synth whose motivations remain unclear.

But the extended Peter Pan metaphor drags the whole thing down. If it had been a subtle parallel that audiences had to work out on their own, it could have been quite brilliant. Instead, the whole thing is shoved in our faces relentlessly. Most of the Peter Pan characters are even given those character’s names. Wendy, Nibs, Curly, Slightly, Toodles, Smee.

Morrow is very obviously Captain Hook and Boy Kavalier, the techbro “genius who isn’t actually all that smart”, is quite obviously Peter Pan himself. They live on a research island called Neverland. Kavalier reads from the book, either to the children-in-adult-synth-bodies called the Lost Boys, or to record an audio book.

Kirsh is outside the fold, as are the various scientists and other adults at the facility; Arthur Sylvia and his wife, Dame Sylvia; Atom Eins, Kavalier’s advisor; the various guards. Are they pirates? Or do you have to be on Morrow’s side to be a pirate? But the only adults in Peter Pan are pirates, so . . .

Much of the tension the show tries to create is undermined by this Peter Pan framing and by the goofiness of the kids in adult bodies. Watching adults behave like children is inherently unserious. The lack of basic safeguards on these hybrids is also perplexing. Morrow continues to manipulate Slightly and even though Kirsh ends up listening in, he doesn’t inform Boy Kavalier or Prodigy security. One would think that some basic security protocols would be in place beyond a synth playing detective. Do they really not have security monitoring everything these kids do and say?

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/erikkain/2025/08/27/alien-earth-episode-4-recap-and-review—dreadfully-dull-and-goofy/