Space Australia.So did the Maginot get all those creatures from just one planet? Must've been a hell of a planet. We heard they lost some crew collecting the specimens, but it's amazing any of them survived.

Space Australia.So did the Maginot get all those creatures from just one planet? Must've been a hell of a planet. We heard they lost some crew collecting the specimens, but it's amazing any of them survived.

Yeah, it's starting to look like The Eye might not be so bad afterall. It warned her about The Tick that escaped, and while it took over the engineer we don't know for a fact it killed him since it had already taken him over when we saw it, it didn't kill the captain when it had the opportunity, and then it attacked the Xenomorph and allowed the captain to get away.Also...I found it quite curious that the eyeball octopus tried to warn foolish Chibuzo that the tick was breaking free from its capsule. I wonder why...
I was wondering what city that was.So Weyland Yutani is based in Chicago. (That was Chicago, right?) I can dig it. And speaking of digging it, Yutani's personal guards were wild looking. What headgear!
I had assumed it picked them up at different points throughout the 65 years they were out.So did the Maginot get all those creatures from just one planet? Must've been a hell of a planet. We heard they lost some crew collecting the specimens, but it's amazing any of them survived. Modern 2025 thinking would probably just have drones and robots collecting the specimens, while the humans waited safely back at the ship.
I doubt it, it looked like the Xenomorph was doing some pretty serious damage when it attacked her at the end.I wonder if the acting Captain is still alive. They spent a lot of time with her and we never saw the alien kill her.
She died in a fire.I missed, what did the Marrow's message from Wayland-Yutani say? From his reaction I'm assuming something happened to his daughter?
At age 18, a mere 8 years (I think) into his mission.She died in a fire.
OK, thanks.She died in a fire.
They could have avoided this question entirely if they had transferred the brains over.Oh, in-universe I don’t think there’s any question that the kids are conscious. The question is whether they are the kids, or are they new beings with identical memories that several kids were murdered to create?
Makes sense.kitik said:Weyland Yutani is based in Chicago.

That's the only way it works in my mind. That the life they can give their family is way beyond anything they could do on Earth.Maybe they get an advance so their families can have a good life while they're gone? I can't imagine deciding to do a mission like this unless you are desperate and/or don't have any real family back home.
Right. But Morrow seems to adjust to it quite well and be able to survive and get around by himself.And also imagine the culture shock, the equivalent would be the difference between 1965 and 2025. The change in culture, politics, entertainment, technology, values. By the time you came back, the world you left would have all but gone.
I imagine all of those who were upset that they didn't get to see the slaughtering the Maginot crew are happy now, even if the xenomorph didn't do all of the killing.
I will say I was surprised we got a full flashback episode that showed the fates of the Maginot but the show used that opportunity well. It wasn't quite Alien redux (in fact, it had touches of people's least favorite part of Prometheus, dumb scientists) because the driving force of the episode was to understand Morrow and his motivations. My heart went out to him about his daughter dying young and early into his mission...although with this show, I wouldn't be surprised if that turns out to be a lie to manipulate Morrow.
The rest of the crew were pretty worthless in their own special ways but I enjoyed watching them nonetheless if only because of character actors Richa Moorjani, Karen Aldridge, and Michael Smiley.
My skin absolutely shivered at the sight of the ticks crawling over Malachite's lungs in his open chest. That was almost as bad as the cat!
Speaking of which...I loved watching our favorite eyeball octopus wrecking havoc and facing off against the xenomorph! I don't remember who said it in this thread earlier, but they're probably right that this is why the xenomorph doesn't have eyes!![]()
Also...I found it quite curious that the eyeball octopus tried to warn foolish Chibuzo that the tick was breaking free from its capsule. I wonder why...

I wonder if the acting Captain is still alive. They spent a lot of time with her and we never saw the alien kill her.

Seems like that ship was still doomed even without the saboteur because the science officer apparently studied at the School of Prometheus.
These space missions must pay well. 60 years in the void!
Even if Morrow's daughter had survived, when he returns she'd be 70.
Shmuel left his wife behind on Earth aged 30, when he returns she'd be 90, if she even lived that long.
Maybe they get an advance so their families can have a good life while they're gone? I can't imagine deciding to do a mission like this unless you are desperate and/or don't have any real family back home.
And also imagine the culture shock, the equivalent would be the difference between 1965 and 2025. The change in culture, politics, entertainment, technology, values. By the time you came back, the world you left would have all but gone.

looking at you, Five HandsIt had good scenes but this show is suffering from Andor Disease.. Your concept doesnt fill the time, and your filler sucks.
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