Alien, Earth
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Alien: Earth has finally hatched on TV screens across the globe. Noah Hawley's eagerly-awaited Alien TV show made its debut on August 12 (North and South America) and August 13 (everywhere else), and it seems like it's going down a treat with the sci-fi horror franchise's global fanbase.
Like Ridley Scott’s Alien, Hawley’s new series takes its time building up terror and suspense. In true reverence to its predecessor, Alien: Earth crafts a dark, chilling atmosphere as it turns the Maginot into another haunted house in space. This is a sharp contrast to the bright, lush “paradise” of Neverland.
In space, no one can hear you scream, but they can sure hear you scratching your head as you try to make sense of the sprawling “Alien” universe.
Earth doesn’t settle for unleashing the franchise’s signature acid-blooded terror on a new stage. It drags an entire menagerie of extraterrestrial nightmares down to our planet.
Alien: Earth might have already done something that the folk at Lumon Industries in Severance have been building towards.
A miles-wide entity hurtling through space at 37 miles per second could be an alien spaceship, scientists have warned. It was spotted by NASA in early July, with the agency dubbing it 3I/ATLAS. They,
See EW's top pop culture picks for the week, including Spike Lee's new film 'Highest 2 Lowest,' an 'Alien' TV series, and a Jonathan Groff Broadway recording.
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The crab is known locally as the princess crab in a nod to Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, Thailand's princess, but is more commonly called the panda crab, according to Popular Science, which described the animal as "alien-looking."