{"id":1993972,"date":"2025-09-03T02:49:57","date_gmt":"2025-09-03T02:49:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/?p=1993972"},"modified":"2025-09-03T02:49:57","modified_gmt":"2025-09-03T02:49:57","slug":"its-always-been-our-meanest-sci-fi-franchise-and-our-most-honest","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/its-always-been-our-meanest-sci-fi-franchise-and-our-most-honest\/","title":{"rendered":"It\u2019s Always Been Our Meanest Sci-Fi Franchise\u2014and Our Most Honest"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><\/p>\n<div data-article-body=\"true\">\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\"><em>Alien: Earth<\/em> begins where most <em>Alien<\/em> stories end: with a crew of blue-collar workers realizing that they are, and have always been, doomed. Deemed expendable by their employers over the monsters in the cargo hold (at least the crew of the USCSS <em>Maginot<\/em>, unlike the <em>Nostromo<\/em>, knew the monsters were the mission), they are made mortally aware of their place at the bottom of several food chains at once. With the FX show\u2019s fifth episode, cheekily titled \u201cIn Space, No One \u2026,\u201d creator Noah Hawley takes us back to the <em>Maginot<\/em>\u2019s corridors to give viewers a rendition of <em>Alien<\/em> in miniature, retrofitting the sturdy bones of Ridley Scott\u2019s seminal film to his own ends.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">This may sound like a cynical enterprise, but it\u2019s par for the course for <em>Alien<\/em>. As <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.yahoo.com\/entertainment\/articles\/one-greatest-science-fiction-franchises-204531542.html\" data-ylk=\"slk:Slate\u2019s own Sam Adams has noted;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas;outcm:mb_qualified_link;_E:mb_qualified_link;ct:story;\" class=\"link  yahoo-link\">Slate\u2019s own Sam Adams has noted<\/a>, the series is Hollywood\u2019s greatest non-franchise, a collection of films (and comic books and video games) constantly remixing a few primary colors into compelling new shades. Their collective strength lies in just how audacious each revisitation can be while remaining recognizably <em>Alien<\/em>, as absurd a phrase as that is. There have been <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.yahoo.com\/entertainment\/big-twist-alien-romulus-already-193211239.html\" data-ylk=\"slk:diminishing returns to this of late;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas;outcm:mb_qualified_link;_E:mb_qualified_link;ct:story;\" class=\"link  yahoo-link\">diminishing returns to this of late<\/a>, but Hawley\u2019s wistful <em>Blade-Runner<\/em>-as-fairy-tale approach brings a lot to the table without sacrificing the most vital thread that runs through everything <em>Alien<\/em>: These movies are really fucking mean. And that\u2019s what keeps them honest.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">In <em>Alien<\/em>, there are no happy endings. A state of suspension is what usually qualifies as a win for the women (and sometimes men) who make it to the end of the story\u2014not quite alive, yet not quite dead, and sometimes accompanied by androids, who are neither. It is not given that humanity is a noble enterprise; that notion must be earned. Almost every <em>Alien<\/em> story finds it lacking.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">Ridley Scott made this subtext text in his 2012 return to the series, the prequel <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2012\/06\/prometheus-why-are-academics-so-obsessed-with-ridley-scotts-alien-and-its-sequels.html\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" data-ylk=\"slk:Prometheus;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas\" class=\"link \"><em>Prometheus<\/em><\/a>.\u00a0(Five years later, he would cantankerously highlight it again in Day-Glo yellow with <em>Alien: Covenant<\/em>.) Less a science-fiction film than a religious fable, <em>Prometheus <\/em>takes its protagonist, the archeologist Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) on a quest to meet her maker. Shaw\u2019s journey is bookmarked by the dispassionate cruelty of nature both known and unknown: She loses her father to Ebola as a girl, an event that both informs her Christian faith and crystallizes for her the precarity of humanity\u2019s mastery over the natural world. And then, in the film\u2019s climax, she meets a member of the progenitor race she was seeking, and he doesn\u2019t care for her questions. He just wants her dead. A god that regrets his creation, yet doesn\u2019t seem to spare it a second thought\u2014maybe the \u201cEngineers,\u201d as they\u2019re called, don\u2019t eat us, but they don\u2019t regard us any more highly than the Xenomorphs do. To them, we\u2019re just meat.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">Forgetting this fact is a cardinal sin in the world of <em>Alien<\/em> and its sequels. Each story is set in motion by an act of hubris: the assumption that a deadly extraterrestrial life-form can be understood or turned into a weapon; that our star-faring ancestors would care to speak with us; that wealthy men who bend worlds to their will can somehow cheat death as well. <em>Alien: Earth<\/em> takes this bleak prognosis of humanity as a given and asks its hybrid children-machines if any of it makes sense to them, if this Earth is one they feel any kinship with.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">It\u2019s tempting to regard such consistent and fundamental pessimism in the <em>Alien <\/em>movies as shallow, a sort of nihilistic Darwinism pining for some other species to come and clean house. But I find them a little more capacious than that, a little more elegiac and mournful. Really, they\u2019re about what happens when we forget how awesome and terrifying it is to be a living, conscious being, and how our tragedy begins when we fall so in love with ourselves and our own agency that we deny it to others, whether they share a species or not. In other words, you\u2019re only cooked if you lose respect for life.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">This is illustrated by a number of recurring franchise motifs, from the equal distribution of sexual violence represented by the facehugger to the recurring android antagonists that serve as the embodiment of corporate control in the initial films, to the more complicated synthetic beings from <em>Alien: Earth<\/em> and later films that gesture at our potential transhuman future, if only to wonder whether the human part even belongs at all.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\"><em>Alien: Earth<\/em> refracts all these ideas through the lens of a fairy tale. (This is a good shortcut to parsing Hawley\u2019s work: Whatever genre he appears to be working in, he\u2019s actually making a fairy tale.) This makes the series less an installment of the franchise and more a consideration of it\u2014another standard Hawley maneuver. <em>Alien: Earth<\/em> portrays our species on the precipice of great change, suspended between a tech baron\u2019s vision for a deathless future built on technology he doesn\u2019t fully understand and the reassertion of our brutal past as food for creatures we don\u2019t understand. It\u2019s a show built to process a real world in tremendous, violent flux, one that is continually met with hubris from governments and corporations, the grand achievements in our experiments in capitalism and democracy. The hybrid children of <em>Alien: Earth<\/em> are effectively taking in the sum total of 46 years of <em>Alien<\/em> stories, all told by people who seem to not have changed much in that time.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">It\u2019s fitting, then, that the film homage that opens the second half of <em>Alien: Earth<\/em>\u2019s season is built around Morrow (Babou Ceesay), a cyborg in the employ of Weyland-Yutani Corporation. Cyborgs are another addition that Hawley makes to this world, but he\u2019s not interested in the classic cyberpunk questions of whether augmentation makes a cyborg more or less human in an existential sense. Instead, the synthetic metaphor is about agency. A full-on android would, as in prior <em>Alien<\/em> stories, simply do Weyland-Yutani\u2019s bidding because it is programmed to. Morrow, however, <em>chooses<\/em> to. He buries the memory of the life he had and was coerced into abandoning and embraces the mission, even beyond the life of the CEO who gave it to him. He\u2019s become, as he says in the second episode, \u201cthe worst parts of a man.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"mb-4 text-lg md:leading-8 break-words\">This is the most monstrous transformation that one can go through in the <em>Alien<\/em> universe. There is a natural order to the Xenomorph\u2019s grotesque violence, a cosmic comeuppance to the arrogance of governments and corporations. Synthetic androids reflect the flaws and priorities of their makers, who are long gone in their appetites for money and power. But to work alongside others, to sweat and labor in tandem with your peers and still choose to be a company man? In this, Hawley echoes Portia\u2019s dismissal of one of her many suitors in <em>The Merchant of Venice<\/em>. It\u2019s a choice that makes you, at best, little worse than a man. Or little better than a beast.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><em> \u2018 The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties \u2019 <\/em><\/p>\n<p><em> \u2018 Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.yahoo.com \u2019 <\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Alien: Earth begins where most Alien stories end: with a crew of blue-collar workers realizing that they are, and have always been, doomed. Deemed expendable by their employers over the monsters in the cargo hold (at least the crew of the USCSS Maginot, unlike the Nostromo, knew the monsters were the mission), they are made [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":1993973,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"jnews-multi-image_gallery":[],"jnews_single_post":[],"jnews_primary_category":[],"jnews_social_meta":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[25172],"tags":[360893,342117,29325],"class_list":["post-1993972","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-entertainment","tag-alien-stories","tag-noah-hawley","tag-ridley-scott"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Its-Always-Been-Our-Meanest-Sci-Fi-Franchise\u2014and-Our-Most-Honest.jpeg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1993972","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1993972"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1993972\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1993973"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1993972"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1993972"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1993972"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}