I like that that the Yutani lead is still a woman. That was taken from AvP: Requiem
I like to imagine the Ms.Yutani seen in AVPR was the grandmother that sent the Maginot out. She'd be in her late 70s, but it kinda fits.I like that that the Yutani lead is still a woman. That was taken from AvP: Requiem
Wondered that too. They moved on quickly from the crashed ship. I was expecting things to spiral more out of control once Weyland Yutani mercs showed up.What I want to know is, why haven't any Weyland-Yutani mercs shown up? Too far behind enemy lines, so to speak? Were they hitchhiking?
And there is nothing in this series that has [or will?] contradict those movies. And I'm not defending them. They annoy the hell out of me.Wrong. The only thing the showrunners stated is that they are mostly ignoring the prequels Prometheus and Covenant ( rightfully so), otherwise it's deeply connected to the Alien franchise but expands on its scope and lore.
Now that I've rewatched it, it looks like Yutani held back because boygenius threatened her.Wondered that too. They moved on quickly from the crashed ship. I was expecting things to spiral more out of control once Weyland Yutani mercs showed up.
Ripley had promised Amanda that she would be back in time for her eleventh birthday.I know this is a deleted plot/scene that was later reinserted into Aliens but did Ripley leave Earth knowing her daughter would be much older by the time she returned?
That would depend on whether or not the Xenomorphs were around before David created the one in Covenant, which is kind of vague. I've seen stuff that interpreted things both ways. I know there is a carving on one in the temple, but I was kind of impression that even if they existed before, they didn't exist any more until David recreated them.And there is nothing in this series that has [or will?] contradict those movies. And I'm not defending them. They annoy the hell out of me.
Right now i am pleasantly suprised that the Alien franchise can still grab me, this show is amazing right now with all those new concepts and expansion of the universe. There are enough balls in the air and plot hooks to keep me guessing where it will al lead and the characters are fascinating to watch from the creepy prodigy trillionaire wunderkind corporate leader to the children in highly advanced synthetical bodies up to the messed up security chief cyborg who's on a mission of his own.
Nor the Ships crews deaths, glossed over too, could have been a great opening hour if they showed the ship more the first episode and show the death.
Wrong. The only thing the showrunners stated is that they are mostly ignoring the prequels Prometheus and Covenant ( rightfully so), otherwise it's deeply connected to the Alien franchise but expands on its scope and lore.
Why is it rightly so to skip those?
I don't remember that specifically, but I do remember it was marketed as if it was a totally separate thing, which is probably at least partly responsible for my not seeing it theatrically.Does anyone else remember Ridley Scott saying, around the time of Prometheus, that he wasn't calling it Alien: Prometheus because it was its own thing and wasn't necessarily part of the Alien series?
Either IGN did an interview with Noah Hawley and he addressed the sprayer guys, and he said that rising water levels moisture is seeping in everywhere, and mold is big problem in for Neverland, and those are guys are just trying to keep it under control.Yeah, I'm now fully invested in this show. It is not the same old Alien story we've seen so much of before. The kids are getting much more interesting. (Seriously, who the hell sends kids to a crash site full of dead bodies?)
And I need to know what those rubber suited cleanup crew guys are spraying down. What the hell are they doing? Is it something as simple as there being some sort of mold or fungus problem at that facility, due to it being so tropical or something? Towards the end of the episode, we saw Wendy walking between two rectangular pools of water(?), and one of those guys was cleaning there too. The cleaners don't seem to be synths, because we saw that one guy with a cigarette hanging out of his mouth this time.
The interview is about the worldbuilding that went into the show's version of Earth is worth readWhile the show’s threats are clear to see, there’s another subtle destroyer of worlds lurking in the background: climate change. The Earth of Alien: Earth is hotter than our present-day one, and the oceans have risen. The architecture of 2120 accommodates that, partially because “technology hates water.” Combine that with the show’s very different focal point – a boy genius CEO – and naturally the scenes set at Prodigy HQ have a very different feel to what’s come before.
“You've moved up from the grunt space, trucker engine room feel of it,” says Hawley. “Now we're with the trillionaire. But even so, they're still fighting the mold. They're still fighting off the water intrusion. The fungus and mold scrubber characters that we brought in, all of that stuff is in order to bring the identity of Alien. Where something's always dripping into the Neverland world.”
I definitely think that was the intention. She would have been an old woman by the time the Maginot left, but people in their 70s now can still be pretty hale and hearty, so I don't see why one couldn't be in the mid-21st century, especially a wealthy one with access to the best medical care (and also advanced alien technology).I like to imagine the Ms.Yutani seen in AVPR was the grandmother that sent the Maginot out. She'd be in her late 70s, but it kinda fits.
I'm glad the rest of the kids are now becoming more distinguishable characters with this episode and all it took was for Wendy to be sidelined for most of it. Curly and Nibs are the ones that are grabbing my attention the most at the moment, between Curly's struggles with her traumatic experience with the eyeball squid and Nibs' growing intellectual curiosity. I also love how that all of the kids came out of the search and rescue mission distinctively effected and I'm intrigued to see where each of their character arcs will go.
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Huh, I could've sworn I looked up the names correctly but I guess I read it wrong. I trust you're right.I think you have those characters mixed up? Nibs is the one who had the traumatic experience with the eyeball squid (and dear lord that might be the most terrifying thing in the show!)
The alien was acting very erratically throughout. Just killing everything and not capturing anyone for those eggs.Why didn't the alien kill Joe when it had the chance? Just to lure in Marcy/Wendy?
Nibs is definitely the red head.Huh, I could've sworn I looked up the names correctly but I guess I read it wrong. I trust you're right.
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