This Show Has Potential, And Several Glaring Problems

I was actually pretty excited when I first learned about Alien: Earth, not because I’m a huge Alien aficionado but because I was really curious to see what Fargo and Legion creator, Noah Hawley, would do with the franchise. Well, the first two episodes of Alien: Earth are out on Hulu now, and while that’s not enough to judge the entire season, I think it is enough to get a solid first impression.

First of all, no, Alien: Earth is not a nature documentary. You will not hear the narration of David Attenborough as he discusses how possible alien life forms could have come to our planet millions of years ago. It sure does sound like that, and I think this is the very first mistake Hawley/Hulu/FX made with this series. Earth is also just a super mundane word compared to, say, Covenant or even Romulus. I get that juxtaposing these two words “alien” and “earth” makes the whole thing sound ironic, but then I think irony is overrated, especially when it comes to marketable titles for TV programs.

All that aside, the show’s first two episodes are wildly uneven. The first episode sets up a really interesting premise and gives viewers some really terrific special effects, costumes and production design. There are scenes that look like they could have been plucked directly from the original film. The cassette futurism / analog-punk aesthetic is on full display here, though Hawley makes a couple grievous errors on this front as well. More on that in a moment.

We’re introduced to two separate storylines in the first episode that end up colliding during the second. The first involves a spaceship, the USCSS Maginot, a Weyland-Yutani C-class deep space research vessel and its crew which is – rather bafflingly – bringing back a number of alien specimens to Earth. Why the corporate bigwigs decide to bring these potentially deadly (okay, almost certainly deadly) alien lifeforms to Earth rather than research them in the research vessels in space remains a mystery.

Things go badly on the ship, though the way this is shown during the episode is quite strange and hard to follow. We get most of it in flashes and I suppose we’re just supposed to fill in the blanks, since we’ve seen Alien already. We get a little bit of the cyborg, Morrow (Babou Ceesay) working to fulfill his mission to return the specimens at all cost. I’m a little puzzled by Morrow’s character. He’s apparently a cyborg, which is a human with enhanced cybernetic anatomy, but he acts more like a full synthetic (or android) blindly following orders without any emotion.

There are also hybrids in this universe, which brings us to the second major storyline. This involves a terminally ill girl named Marcy (Florence Bensberg) who is taken by a trillionaire to his private island where she becomes the first human to have her consciousness transferred into a synthetic body. In this new body she becomes Wendy (Sydney Chandler) and soon the trillionaire, Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin) gives her companions, other very sick kids who are given new synthetic bodies: Children in adult form, essentially. They call themselves The Lost Boys. The research island is called Neverland. How we fail to get a single Michael Jackson track over any of this is beyond me (though we get some Tool).

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/erikkain/2025/08/19/alien-earth-review-this-show-has-potential-and-several-glaring-problems/