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In Alien Vs. Predator, we see the Yautja seeding Xenomorphs in the temples and pyramids that made up early civilizations. That film also demonstrated that even the Yautja are easily overwhelmed by the monsters, resorting to their self-destruct device to wipe out the infestation. The mainline Alien movies established that the only way to defeat the Xenomorph if you’re a human is with a desperate struggle to force it into the airlock or trap it inside industrial equipment. It’s the desperation that stems from the basics of survival and the fear that they would quickly overtake the Earth if they made it to the planet.
It’s a chilling thought, but it’s not the only reason Alien fans should be excited for the upcoming series. We’ve seen plenty of additions, detours, and retcons in the franchise to this point, and more changes might well be the shot in the arm the Alien series needs. Before we get into why it’s so exciting, here’s the trailer:
1) The Alien Franchise’s Fear Factor is Intact

Despite the setting being on the planet Earth and not in the coldness of space, the series still leans on the same claustrophobic fear as the franchise’s most successful films. The desperate need to keep the beast locked away or destroy it before it can escape into the wild appears to be still be intact, and it’s heightened because you can’t just blow it out of the airlock.
It’s a situation similar to what happens in John Carpenter’s The Thing, though the Xenomorphs are far more aggressive than the “thing” that took down Kurt Russell’s entire team. None of these creatures can escape, or else Earth is doomed, so how will the team in the film decide to handle the situation? It’s a good spot to be with plenty of episodes to watch it play out.
2) Noah Hawley Has A Strong Track Record

Another reason to be confident in Alien: Earth is creator and showrunner Noah Hawley. The Fargo creator and Emmy Award winner has had his hands in plenty of different franchises over the years, including the trippy Marvel series Legion for FX. The series follows the mentally unwell son of Charles Xavier as he struggles with his mental health and the influence of the Shadow King. Hawley took elements from the source material, like Legion, Professor X, and Shadow King, and melded them into an original story that stood apart from any of the larger X-Men projects at the time. There was never any confusion over David Haller showing up in the next X-Men blockbuster.
But if you’ve slept on Fargo or felt a need to be partial to the original Coen Brothers’ film, give it a chance. Across five seasons, Hawley and company have created a great crime story full of memorable personalities each time out. Each season is a self-contained entry that shares themes and tone, but covers a new story. He’s proven he can blend great writing with reverence for the past in both series, which should give plenty of confidence heading into the premiere of Alien: Earth.
3) Alien: Earth Brings Fresh Ideas

It also sounds like the new series is going in some interesting new directions; particularly how the Xenomorph will interact with other aliens that have also escaped within the crashed ship. Are these other creatures just as deadly? Were they creations from experiments similar to the Xenomorph? These are important details that will hopefully get addressed somehow in the first season, maybe in a passing mention or through the experiences of the surviving crew on the crashed ship housing the creature samples.
Hawley and his team have also revealed the introduction of a new type of synthetic being, led by Sydney Chandler’s Wendy, who is the first robotic hybrid with the body of a bot and the consciousness of a human. Specifically, Wendy was a child who had her mind placed in the hybrid body.










