Alien has a very specific look and feel that is as important to the story as a xenomorph bursting through someone’s chest. It’s created a set of expectations for anything related to the franchise. Dark gothic-like spaceships, the hive resin that spreads over the walls once a Queen settles in and starts laying eggs, and the sci-fi retro style that connects each film back to the original Ridley Scott classic. They all make up the Alien experience.
By taking the Xenomorphs out of space and into our planet, Alien: Earth will face a very different challenge regarding the franchise’s aesthetic, perhaps its very identity. Trailers show a more vibrant color palette and some uncharacteristically open locations (with Prometheus being the exception, though the movie’s still quite claustrophobic).
Those lucky enough to have not only been at San Diego Comic Con this year but also braved the brutally long lines for the Alien: Earth got a very real taste of what the upcoming series has to offer in the form of a fairly elaborate activation next to the Hilton Bayfront Hotel.
I’m glad to say that, based on the things I saw at the activation, Alien: Earth will certainly capture everything fans love about the license, albeit in a new setting (one which shouldn’t come as a surprise for those who read the original Dark Horse comics that served as a direct sequel to James Cameron’s Aliens).
Here are a few observations from the activation that hinted at the potential successes the Xenomorphs’ invasion of Earth has in store for fans when the series premiers on August 12th, 2025 on Disney+.
- Corporate ambition gone wrong: the activation was essentially a linear walkthrough of a spacecraft crash site. The craft was carrying facehugger eggs and now they’re littered all over, some of them showing signs that the creatures inside have left in search of hosts. Different stops offer the chance for photo opps, but also a whiff as to what might’ve caused the crash. The Weyland-Yutani logo is plastered on several parts of wreckage along with logos from another company that might be involved in securing and studying the site. A sense of corporate exploitation is felt throughout. It’s like a reminder of humanity’s incapability to learn its lesson, rushing to take ownership of something they don’t understand. Like the classic movies, the activation suggests dangerous science will once more lead to the demise of many. Though this time around, it’s not just the fate of an isolated crew in a spaceship. It’s an entire world.
- Military Xenomorph Complex: Colonial space marines are a staple of the Alien franchise, and it looks like the series will deal with some version of the military mindset that was explored in Aliens. Giant cargo containers looked like they were brought over to the wreckage site in a hurry to secure whatever was found there for the megacorp that sent them over. The Alien franchise tends to portray soldiers as the disgruntled workers of a system that’s too big and too abstract to rebel against. They’re the result of a military industrial complex that’s made it nearly impossible for them to rise through the ranks. They’re products made in an assembly line with the exact purpose of furthering the megacorps’ acquisitive agenda.
- Delusional science vs. violent nature: In a sense, Alien can be taken as a meditation on humanity’s desperate and misguided attempt to be the superior lifeform in every category. The Xenomorph has always been the reality check, the reminder that humans are incapable of ever being at the top of the food chain at an existential level. The activation made sure to frame the wreckage as a monument to humanity’s continued failure in that mission, the kind we’ve long been accustomed to seeing on the big screen. Though the Xenomorph was only featured at the very last stop of the experience, atop a specimen container, those who waited for the VR Headset experience got to see more of it as they walked through the wreckage site. In fact, the activation was turned into haunt late in the afternoon, offering an augmented terror session through the same site. Overall, one left the activation with a strong sense of impending doom. Humanity doesn’t stand a chance.
Stay tuned to The Beat for more coverage from SDCC ’25.