Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth, a young woman and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet's greatest thr... Tout lireWhen a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth, a young woman and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet's greatest threat.When a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth, a young woman and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet's greatest threat.
- Création originale
- Vedettes
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 4 nominations au total
Sommaire
Avis en vedette
The journey began promisingly. The pilot episode was "okay," but Episode 2 truly sparked interest, introducing fascinating new ideas and broadening the scope of the established Xenomorph universe. The series touched on compelling philosophical themes-exploring the nature of humanity, the role of the creatures, and the hubris of those who "played God" with the scenario. For a brief moment, it felt like Alien Earth was poised to deliver the intellectual horror the franchise has often chased.
Unfortunately, that promise dissolved quickly. By the time we reached the Season 1 finale (Episode 8), the struggle to find positive elements became overwhelming. The central, unforgivable sin of the season was a plot that simply stopped making sense. Events unfolded illogically, narrative threads were either poorly executed or dropped entirely, leaving the viewer more confused than engaged.
However, the greatest source of viewer frustration lay in the characters. Simply put, the show featured zero likable characters. Every person on screen seemed determined to be irritating, incompetent, or morally bankrupt. The true failure of the season, and perhaps its most frustrating oversight, was the narrative's refusal to deliver satisfying consequences. The characters one desperately wanted to see killed in a suitably horrific manner were, bafflingly, spared, leaving the audience with an emotionally hollow and dissatisfying resolution.
Alien Earth Season 1 ultimately delivered a bad end product. Despite a few interesting concepts in the early episodes, the season failed on fundamental levels: coherent plotting and character investment. While the show has a second chance, it will need a radical overhaul to make anyone care about the world or the fate of its inhabitants.
Verdict: D- (Disappointing and Disingenuous)
This sucks, because I was really hoping this would be good. I mean I'm a huge Alien fan and I've even like the objectively lesser entries into the franchise but this... This is bad on a whole 'nother level.
Let's start with the dialogue. Everyone has to say what they're thinking or doing all the time. There's a moment in episode 7 when Smee (or whatever he's called) literally says to the camera "I only did x because I thought y!" And I facepalmed loud enough that my neighbors could hear it.
I'm not sitting on TikTok while watching the show, but the show is treating me like I am.
The characterizations here are also ridiculous. Nobody is consistent. Wendy changes motivations and intentions like 50 times throughout the season. People flip on a dime because the script needs them to. Hermit for example has a big problem with the alien killing soldiers... until the final episode when he's standing in the same room as the alien as it's killing three soldiers and doesn't even say a word. Doesn't even acknowledge that it's happening.
Also, plot armor. Everyone has it. Nobody dies. Nobody you care about at least. Why? I don't know. No idea. I mean we don't care about these characters at all so maybe the writers know that. The worst offender of this plot armor is once again... DING-DING-DING! Hermit. He survives a xenomorph encounter like three or four times in just the first two episodes. Which becomes more ridiculous the further into the show you get because the xenomorph can wipe out a room in like 1 second flat.
This show sucks. That's all there is to it. So disappointed in Noah Hawley and the crew. Did you guys even care about this at all?
They are super fast, they can jump from the moon, yeah yeah, action starts and I was surprised they didnt sit on the floor and cried.
It is kinda of fair their excuse to use kids because of the growing brain and so, but in a super future world where you have no clue a giant space ship is gonna hit your planet, and you have technology from a 90's future perspective gives me the impression that reasonability was not the priority, but rather extract money from every age group possible.
Aimed to please shareholders, not fans.
Renewed, Canceled, or Ending?
Renewed, Canceled, or Ending?
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThough Ridley Scott is a credited producer, Noah Hawley revealed that his involvement was limited, due to his preoccupation with other projects. Hawley said, "In the course of making a single season of television, that 87-year-old man made three or four huge films." Producer David W. Zucker added, "the last thing [Scott is] interested in doing is getting in front of another filmmaker's vision."
- Citations
Opening Crawl: In the future, the race for immortality will come in 3 guises:
Opening Crawl: Cybernetically enhanced humans: Cyborgs
Opening Crawl: Artificially intelligent beings: Synths
Opening Crawl: and
Opening Crawl: Synthetic beings downloaded with human consciousness: Hybrids
Opening Crawl: Which technology prevails will determine what corporation rules the universe
- ConnexionsFeatured in H-Cast: Episode dated 5 June 2025 (2025)
Meilleurs choix
Most Popular Stars of 2025: #7 Sydney Chandler
The Year in Posters
The Year in Posters
Détails
- Durée
- 55m
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1






