I love that the show is starting to dig into transhumanism and questioning whether or not human consciousness can actually be transferred to a synthetic body and still be the same individual. There are a lot of avenues for that discussion to take and I hope the show seriously considers them. Granted, I know this show is called
Alien so there's going to a fair amount of violence and gore, but I hope the latter episodes of the season don't overly focus on that aspect at the expense of the metaphysical themes.
I'm continuing to enjoy more exploration of the mental stability of each of the hybrids, although Curly falls on the short side this time with Tootles/Isaac getting a bit more than last week.
Like I said last week, I'm especially concerned about Nibs and her outburst at Sylvia heightens those concerns. However, I can't help but wonder, after seeing what the eyeball octopus did to the sheep, if perhaps some kind of transference occurred with Nibs. True, it didn't bore into her like it did with the sheep but the thought still lingers, especially considering Nibs' sharp turn in mental stability that might not be entirely explained by trauma.
I live for the exposition. I admit I'm a niche audience.
I long for the same. But, as I just explored, I fear we might be expecting a little too much in that regard for a show like this. But I've been pretty impressed so far.
So now that the show has established that the Five basically did away with the old political order on Earth, does that wipe away previous non-dialogue background stuff about the United States/United Americas, the Union of Progressive Peoples, the Three World Empire (which I’m pretty sure was originally intended to be the Third World Empire) etc, or was that stuff never “really” canon anyway? (Though Aliens did have the United States Colonial Marines.)
Regardless of non-dialogue information, I'm actually more curious to learn more about a purely corporate leadership. We've already gotten glimpses of that in both this show and
Romulus, but I'm intrigued to see how five corporations balance control and power. But perhaps that's one bulky idea too many for this show.