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In Alien: Earth Episode 5, we finally take a step back and learn what actually happened on the doomed Weyland-Yutani ship USCSS Maginot before it crashed on Earth. In filling in that key gap in backstory, Hawley also pulls the surprise twist of revealing the biggest “villains” in the series โ and surprisingly enough, it’s not the xenomorphs that have been stalking unlucky victims.
WARNING: MAJOR SPOILERS FOLLOW!
Alien: Earth’s True Villain(s) Revealed

“In Space, No One…” tells the story of the Maginot‘s crash largely from the point of view of cyborg security officer Morrow (Babou Ceesay). Morrow is awoken from cryosleep to learn that Captain Dinsdale (Tanapol Chuksrida) and another crew member have been attacked by facehuggers during willful acts of sabotage that include arson, breaking the ship’s navigation controls, and opening the cargo hold with the facehugger eggs in it. The captain dies during the surgical attempt to remove the parasite, while the other infected crew member is placed back in cryosleep until a solution can be found back on Earth. Meanwhile, Morrow locks things down and begins to hunt for the traitor in their midst.
The big turn in the episode comes when Morrow’s interrogations of the crew reach creepy Mr. Teng (Andy Yu), who gets Morrow to realize that a member of the non-essential crew hasn’t been asleep in his cryopod like everyone believes. When Morrow checks the message logs between crew members and those back on Earth, he discovers that one man, Petrovich (Enzo Cilenti), is indeed awake before scheduled, and has been bribed and turned by none other than Prodigy Corp. CEO, Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin). As it turns out, Boy has known about the specimens Weyland-Yutani collected โ and their bio-research value โ for months (if not years), and always planned to hijack the find.
The Maginot’s crash landing into the Prodigy city of New Siam was therefore a planned act, so that Boy could circumvent the power hierarchy of the megacorporation council and claim the ship and its holdings as his own, creating a legal tug-of-war just long enough to study the creatures and steal any valuable samples and data for himself. We’ve gotten hints of Boy Kavalier’s true sociopathic nature leading up to this (earned) moment, but knowing he was willing to endanger an entire ship’s crew, an entire city population, and potentially the entire Earth to get these alien lieforms tells you he may have less human empathy inside him than a synth does.

However, Boy Kavalier is not the only major foe that steps into the spotlight in Alien: Earth Episode 5. When the situation aboard the Maginot starts to spiral out of control, the crew gets understandably vexed. That stress starts leading to small mistakes, which is all the creatures they’ve captured need to exploit the situation. Science officer Chibuzo (Karen Aldrige) makes two big slip-ups: she doesn’t properly seal the container holding the ‘blood bug’ specimens designated “ticks,” allowing one tick to shoot a school of larvae into her open water container. Medical officer Rahim (Amir Boutrous) manages to recapture the bug (no one notices the infected water), but when the crew learns of a xenomorph outbreak, Chibuzo rushes out of the lab too quickly and neglects to lock the containment shelf holding the dreaded ‘Eyeball Octopus,’ allowing the creature to finally break loose and escape.








