Premiering On August 12, FX’s Alien: Earth First Look – New Photos, Poster And Details Have Landed

August 12 – mark your calendars. FX’s Alien: Earth has finally received a release date. The original series, with 8 episodes, premieres on FX Networks and Hulu this summer at 8PM est and we have new official photos from the series. Check out the official site too.

https://www.fxnetworks.com/shows/alien-earth

When the mysterious deep space research vessel USCSS Maginot crash-lands on Earth, “Wendy” (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat in FX’s Alien: Earth.

In the year 2120, the Earth is governed by five corporations: Prodigy, Weyland-Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold. In this Corporate Era, cyborgs (humans with both biological and artificial parts) and synthetics (humanoid robots with artificial intelligence) exist alongside humans. But the game is changed when the wunderkind Founder and CEO of Prodigy Corporation unlocks a new technological advancement: hybrids (humanoid robots infused with human consciousness). The first hybrid prototype named “Wendy” marks a new dawn in the race for immortality. After Weyland-Yutani’s spaceship collides into Prodigy City, “Wendy” and the other hybrids encounter mysterious life forms more terrifying than anyone could have ever imagined.

Led by Chandler, the series showcases an expansive international cast, which includes Timothy Olyphant (“Kirsh”), Alex Lawther (“Hermit”), Samuel Blenkin (“Boy Kavalier”), Babou Ceesay (“Morrow”), Adrian Edmondson (“Atom Eins”), David Rysdahl (“Arthur Sylvia”), Essie Davis (“Dame Sylvia”), Lily Newmark (“Nibs”), Erana James (“Curly”), Adarsh Gourav (“Slightly”), Jonathan Ajayi (“Smee”), Kit Young (“Tootles”), Diêm Camille (“Siberian”), Moe Bar-El (“Rashidi”) and Sandra Yi Sencindiver (“Yutani”).

FX’s Alien: Earth is created for television and executive produced by Peabody and Emmy® Award-winning Noah Hawley. Ridley Scott, David W. Zucker, Joseph Iberti, Dana Gonzales and Clayton Krueger also serve as executive producers. Alien: Earth is produced by FX Productions.

“The Wreckage,” a uniquely immersive experience which allows fans to step into the terrifying world of Alien: Earth, will arrive in Las Vegas on Friday, May 16 and Saturday, May 17.

Guests will be able to explore the mysterious debris to unearth new details from the highly anticipated series, alongside exclusive giveaways and photo opportunities. Entry is free and open to the public, and more details can be found here

Check out our Austin SXSW coverage: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2025/03/run-fxs-alien-earth-immersive-experience-is-a-relentless-and-terrifying-chase-and-fans-will-love-it/

Photos: Patrick Brown/FX

ALIEN: EARTH Trailer And Synopsis Have Landed

When a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth, a young woman (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat in FX’s highly anticipated TV series Alien: Earth from creator Noah Hawley.

Lead by Chandler, the series showcases an expansive international cast which includes Alex Lawther, Timothy Olyphant, Essie Davis, Samuel Blenkin, Babou Ceesay, David Rysdahl, Adrian Edmondson, Adarsh Gourav, Jonathan Ajayi, Erana James, Lily Newmark, Diem Camille and Moe Bar-El.

What is this eye??!!! Guess we will find out next year. Alien: Earth arrives Summer 2025. Only on Hulu.

https://www.fxnetworks.com/shows/alien-earth

Watch the Trailer For NITRAM starring Caleb Landry Jones and Anthony LaPaglia – In Theaters/Digital/AMC+ on March 30th

Caleb Landry Jones, Judy Davis, Essie Davis, and Anthony LaPaglia in NITRAM will be In Theaters, on Digital Rental and AMC+MARCH 30

Here’s the trailer:

Directed by Justin Kurzel (TRUE HISTORY OF THE KELLY GANG, SNOWTOWN MURDERS, MACBETH) and written by Shaun Grant (TRUE HISTORY OF THE KELLY GANG, BERLIN SYNDROME), NITRAM stars Caleb Landry Jones (THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING MISSOURI, GET OUT, HEAVEN KNOWS WHAT), Essie Davis (THE BABADOOK, TRUE HISTORY OF THE KELLY GANG), Oscar Nominee Judy Davis (HUSBANDS AND WIVES, BARTON FINK, NAKED LUNCH), and Anthony LaPaglia (EMPIRE RECORDS, WITHOUT A TRACE).

Nitram (Caleb Landry Jones) lives with his mother (Judy Davis) and father (Anthony LaPaglia) in suburban Australia in the Mid 1990s. He lives a life of isolation and frustration at never being able to fit in. That is until he unexpectedly finds a close friend in a reclusive heiress, Helen (Essie Davis). However, when that relationship meets a tragic end, and Nitram’s loneliness and anger grow, he begins a slow descent that leads to disaster.

BABYTEETH – Review

Okay, enough with the somber serious stuff, we’re finally getting into some real Summer cinema subject matter. No, it’s not a big bombastic superhero epic, nor an action thriller, or even a raunchy slapstick comedy. This one’s a story of young people in love, and though it’s based on a play it does incorporate several themes from movies based on YA or Young Adult novels. There’s the impending disease doom of THE FAULT IN OUR STARS and FIVE FEET APART and the opposites attract vibe of THE SPECTACULAR NOW. But unlike many “YA-based” films, the parents (one set at least) pretty much get major “screen time” (mmm, maybe not “equal”). Oh, and then there’s the setting: the suburbs of Australia (and a lot of cities like New South Wales and Sydney). Combine all those elements and you get the sweet and sour “dramedy” dish called BABYTEETH.


It all starts at a commuter platform, where sixteen-year-old Milla Finlay (Eliza Scanlen) opts not to join her classmates on the current train. Instead, she encounters a motor-mouthed twenty-something street hustler named Moses (Toby Wallace). When she gets a nosebleed, he’s quick to doff his shirt and calm her. After he asks her for some spare changes, Milla gets him to agree to cut her hair (she digs Moses’ self-styling). Meanwhile, in the office of her father, therapist Henry Finlay (Ben Mendelsohn) has his lunch interrupted by wife Anna (Essie Davis), as it is their scheduled hour for sex (one of the couple’s many quirks). That evening, Milla brings along Moses for the family dinner. Henry is stunned while the horrified Ana (“He’s 24!”) turns him away (and the smitten Ella follows). Later she takes her weekly violin lesson with Eastern European emigree Shaun (Arka Das) who still has a crush on Anna. Speaking of crushes, Henry becomes “distracted” by his very pregnant across the street neighbor Toby (Emily Barclay) who spends most days yelling for her dog, also named Henry. As the days pass we learn that Milla has been battling cancer, which soon takes her hair prompting her to wear a wispy blonde wig to school. This is where she continually meets up with Moses and gets drawn into his “low rent” downtown drug-dealing life (he’s long banished from his family home). All this takes a toll on the emotionally fragile medicated Anna. When Milla takes a turn for the worse, Henry makes the radical decision to bring Moses into their home (and give him access to his prescription pad) to provide some happiness for his daughter in what may be her last days. But will Moses “man up” and be a dependable final romance to Milla?

The story’s tragic and comedic elements are balanced by the brave confident performance of Scanlen as the complex heroine Milla. At times she veers close to the almost cliche portrayal of teens in films ( surly, disrespectful), but steers away in unexpected nuance. Yes, Milla wants to dance to her own inner song (which occurs a few times), but she yearns for the warmth of her homes and her sometimes too ‘clingy’ parents. Scanlen presents her character’s vulnerable side in a powerful scene set in the school’s lavatory. A pushy classmate barges in on Milla and insists on trying on her blonde wig (“to see how I’d like in a different style”) trapping Milla in a mix of righteous anger and humiliation. Her assured work somehow melds with the naturalistic unpredictable acting of Wallace as the free-spirit that’s difficult to embrace or trust which puts us with the elder Finlays. Near the third act, we see that Moses is in a constant battle between his mercenary instincts and his own need for family (a separated by patio glass door reunion with his adoring kid brother is heartwrenching). He frustrates us by making bad choices (leaving a sleeping Milla at the top of a city building), but we root for him to comfort Milla. One who can’t seem to do that, despite her fevered attempts is mother Anna played with fragile despair by the quivery Davis. At any moment her prescription pill produced panic will melt her into a shrieking shrike. Which agitates her devoted but addled hubby Henry, who’s played by screen vet Mendelsohn as a sweaty everyman overwhelmed at all that life has thrown at him. It’s a testament to his range that he expertly can go from a Star Wars villain and a Marvel “movie-verse” mainstay to a fellow desperately trying to keep from falling apart as he tries to plug the holes of his rapidly sinking ship that is his life (his water bailing can’t hold it afloat). He’s solid as are the eccentric comedy turns by Barclay and Das.

Shannon Murphy directs the screenplay from Rita Kalejais (based on her stage play) with a light touch, knowing when to get “tight” on the actors for an emotional close-up and when to take several steps back so we can drink in all the actions and their surroundings (the Aussie locales are quite inviting). Unfortunately, the leisurely pacing begins to wear out the viewer as the film lurches from one big kitchen table shouting match to the next. Attempts are made to lighten the mood with the Toby and Shaun subplots which never really “pay off”. Plus the film wraps up with a “twist-around” flashback whose purpose seems to try and end the tale on an upbeat note but feels like a frustrating falsehood for the characters we’ve followed for nearly two hours. In that sense, despite some good performances, BABYTEETH just doesn’t have much “bite”.

2 Out of 4

BABYTEETH opens in selected theatres and is available as a Video-On-Demand on most cable and satellite systems along with many streaming apps and platforms

THE BABADOOK – The Review

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Originally reviewed at Fantastic Fest 2014.

On the surface, THE BABADOOK is about a mysterious children’s book character that comes to life to haunt a mother and her child. The dark creature almost has no distinguishable characteristics aside from a ghastly grin, long, sharp fingers and a top hat. It may sound like a straightforward idea but it is writer and director Jennifer Kent’s handling of the material that makes this film so memorable.

THE BABADOOK may be the scariest horror film of the year, but at the same time it is so much more. Beneath the slow-building dread lies a classic tale of a woman coming to terms with her own demons. Depression, regret, and life as a single mother are all examined in a thoughtful manner that elevates the film to a Polanski level of horror – especially in a way that recalls Catherine Deneuve in REPULSION or Mia Farrow in ROSEMARY’S BABY.

Essie Davis as the forlorn widow is a revelation. Every step and look she displays carries a heavy sadness. As the storybook creature becomes more of a burden on her and her child, she delivers an even more complex performance. A third act that could have easily gone too far in the realm of hysteria feels all the more disquieting in the hands of Davis. It’s not an exaggeration when I say that Essie Davis delivers one of the best female performances I’ve seen in a horror film.

Cinematographer Radek Ladczuk is careful not to let the Babadook himself overstay his welcome. Most of the time, the dark creature is barely seen emerging from a shadow or a dark corner. There are even a few clever sequences where Ladczuk and Kent hint at just the shape of the creature through everyday items and clothing – like an unnerving sequence involving Davis going to a police station. The simple silhouette and unsettling sound effect that emits from the creature is the stuff of nightmares.

Between the cold, almost black and white photography, and slow building dread, THE BABADOOK feels like a classic tale of psychological horror. Jennifer Kent brings out a strong performance from the talented Essie Davis, but it’s her approach to real life anxieties and everyday horror that makes THE BABADOOK a must-see for non-horror fans and horror fans alike.

Overall rating: 4 out of 5

NOW PLAYING EXCLUSIVELY AT THE CHASE PARK PLAZA CINEMAS

the babadook

Fantastic Fest 2014: THE BABADOOK – The Review

the_babadook-620x435

On the surface, THE BABADOOK is about a mysterious children’s book character that come to life to haunt a mother and her child. The dark creature almost has no distinguishable characteristics aside from a ghastly grin, long, sharp fingers and a top hat. It may sound like a straightforward idea but it is writer and director Jennifer Kent’s handling of the material that makes this film so memorable. THE BABADOOK may be the scariest horror film of the year, but at the same time it is so much more. Beneath the slow-building dread lies a classic tale of a woman coming to terms with her own demons. Depression, regret, and life as a single mother are all examined in a thoughtful manner that elevates the film to a Polanski level of horror – especially in a way that recalls Catherine Deneuve in REPULSION or Mia Farrow in ROSEMARY’S BABY.

Essie Davis as the forlorn widow is a revelation. Every step and look she displays carries a heavy sadness. As the storybook creature becomes more of a burden on her and her child, she delivers an even more complex performance. A third act that could have easily gone too far in the realm of hysteria feels all the more disquieting in the hands of Davis. It’s not an exaggeration when I say that Essie Davis delivers one of the best female performances I’ve seen in a horror film.

Cinematographer Radek Ladczuk is careful not to let the Babadook himself overstay his welcome. Most of the time, the dark creature is barely seen emerging from a shadow or a dark corner. There are even a few clever sequences where Ladczuk and Kent hint at just the shape of the creature through everyday items and clothing – like an unnerving sequence involving Davis going to a police station. The simple silhouette and unsettling sound effect that emits from the creature is the stuff of nightmares.

Between the cold, almost black and white photography, and slow building dread, THE BABADOOK feels like a classic tale of psychological horror. Jennifer Kent brings out a strong performance from the talented Essie Davis, but it’s her approach to real life anxieties and everyday horror that makes THE BABADOOK a must-see for non-horror fans and horror fans alike.

 

Overall rating: 4 out of 5

babadook