يحاول ذهب - حر
WORLD OF TROUBLE
August 13, 2025
|The Independent
'Alien: Earth', the Alien franchise's first TV show, is a stark warning against the erosion of humanity, says Nick Hilton
“All fiction is metaphor,” wrote Ursula K Le Guin. “Science fiction is metaphor.” The writer, most famous for her Earthsea fantasy novels, captured the civil rights movement, second-wave feminism and the rise of environmentalism in her fiction from the 1960s through to her death in 2018. “What sets it apart from older forms of fiction seems to be its use of new metaphors, drawn from certain great dominants of our contemporary life.” Now, as we live through the greatest acceleration in technological development since the advent of automation, it's on science fiction, once again, to probe and provoke. That's a role that Alien: Earth, the first TV instalment in the Alien franchise, takes very seriously.
A spaceship bearing alien specimens has mysteriously crash-landed on Earth, parking up unceremoniously in the fictional city of New Siam. Onboard, predatory creatures stalk the poorly lit hallways, offering the Prodigy Corporation - a shadowy multitrillion-dollar Really Big Tech firm, led by precocious CEO Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin) - a chance to test its new "hybrids". These aren't cyborgs (enhanced humans) or synths (humanoid robots) but a new breed: human consciousness in a perfect synthetic body. "We're something different," Wendy (Sydney Chandler), a 12-year-old girl piloting, in true Hollywood style, the body of a sexy adult, informs the audience. "Something special." Even with the huge teeth and drooling maws of the aliens wreaking havoc on the spaceship, there is nothing more chilling in Alien: Earth than these topical questions about the nature of being.
Science fiction has a long history of engaging in social commentary. Fritz Lang's 1927 expressionist masterpiece Metropolis, for example, sounds a warning about untrammelled industrialisation, a contentious political subject of the Twenties. In 1968, Stanley Kubrick released
هذه القصة من طبعة August 13, 2025 من The Independent.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The Independent
The Independent
Starmer finds extra £1bn for defence spending plan
Sir Keir Starmer has found an extra £1bn to fund Britain’s defence following John Healey’s resignation over the issue, promising the long-delayed plan for future-proofing the armed forces will keep the UK “safe and secure long into the future”.
3 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
Brazil score last-minute goal to break Japan hearts
So this was what Brazil hired Carlo Ancelotti to bring.
3 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
Stokes’s retirement reveals truth about great showman
Despite the chaos in Nottingham, the former England captain remained true to his beliefs in his final Test match
4 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
Phillipson hits back over council house sale ‘smear’
Tories attack education secretary over ‘class-war hypocrisy’
2 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
Meet the MP suing the richest man in the world
Earlier this year, online trolls used Grok, xAI’s chatbot, to create disturbing sexualised images of Jess Asato. She tells Radhika Sanghani about her decision to take on Elon Musk
5 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
How a fitness trainer can shape ‘normal’ people
Harry Bullmore gets workout advice from Tim Blakeley, who transformed the physique of ‘Gladiator 2’ star Paul Mescal
5 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
Burnham promises to steer Britain in a ‘new direction’
‘No 10 for North’ among plans laid out by by PM-in-waiting
4 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
Six dead after gunman opens fire at youth centre in Germany
Authorities described the incident as an ‘extremely cold-blooded act of violence’ but said it was not an extremist act
1 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
Resident doctors accept pay deal to end years of strikes
Resident doctors in England have voted to accept a government offer on pay and working conditions, bringing an end to a year of industrial action, the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) has confirmed.
1 mins
June 30, 2026
The Independent
The North is really sick and tired of being pushed around
A couple of years after moving to the North West of England – from London, where I’d lived for two decades – I sat and watched a giddy lobby journalist gallop behind an MP live on telly, shouting his name to try and get his attention.
5 mins
June 30, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
