“Alien” has at all times been, firstly, a horror franchise. The science fiction side of the movie could shine brighter for these of us extra inclined to that exact style (responsible), however the suspense, scares, and monsters loom bigger than the in depth sci-fi worldbuilding, which tends to occupy the background of the films greater than the foreground. Maybe the explanation why Ridley Scott’s “Prometheus” break up the fan base so considerably is as a result of it introduced the extra sci-fi storylines like artificial consciousness, company politics, and historic aliens to the forefront.
FX’s new series “Alien: Earth” does that as nicely, with the meat of its story specializing in androids, cyborgs, and the experimental “hybrids” of the Prodigy corporation. Scares nonetheless play a key position, nevertheless it is not till episode 5 — a flashback episode explaining what occurred aboard the Maginot — that we get a full-blown horror story within the model of the films.
Episode 5 is principally an standalone “Alien” brief movie, and it is one of many present’s greatest episodes but. The episode primarily follows Maginot safety officer Morrow (Babou Ceesay) as he works to uncover the id of a saboteur aboard the ship’s crew, all whereas that sabotage begins to let the varied alien specimens out of their cages. Whereas we get loads of traditional spooks and gory kills, the actual horror of the episode is within the additional exploration of the present’s company society. With Morrow as our eyes, we see in new element simply how brutal life is underneath the present’s autocratic company rule, which basically turns staff into slaves on the whim of their rich overlords. After all, you’ll have missed a few of these particulars, as they’re included on the letters from Morrow’s daughter — requiring a number of pauses to completely course of.
Morrow’s tragic life reveals Alien’s company brutality
In the midst of “Alien: Earth” episode 5, Morrow takes a second to himself in his quarters, the place he reads over what seem like letters from his daughter Estelle faxed by house to the Maginot. As a result of it is a 65-year mission, he would have missed most of her life regardless, however the letters reveal that she died in a hearth only a few years into the voyage, shedding some gentle on Morrow’s state of perpetual anger. Whereas that is clearly a tragedy, the opposite particulars hidden within the letters are arguably the extra horrifying bits.
“Mother says that Weyland-Yutani pays for all my college,” Estelle writes in a single letter, the place she talks about schools. “That is IF I am going to a Wey-Yu sanctioned college.” In the identical letter, she mentions studying that her classmates solely get partial scholarships, revealing Morrow’s significance inside the firm.
On its face, this will not sound too loopy, however give it some thought for a minute. That is basically taking the damaged U.S. healthcare system — one the place coverages are continuously denied and the precise care appears to at all times be “out of community” — and making use of it to a different fundamental want: training. We have seen within the present-day “Alien: Earth” timeline that medical money owed and work contracts can principally enslave individuals to their respective companies for his or her complete lives. How costly would a school training be for somebody whose father hadn’t dedicated 65 years of his life to outer house? What about households who don’t have any company contracts in any respect? It is secure to imagine that housing, healthcare, possibly even entry to meals and clear water are all depending on company allegiance. In spite of everything, when the corps personal all the things, why not demand all the things from their residents in trade?
The Maginot crew are indentured servants, not staff
The letters from Estelle paint a grim image of Earth underneath company rule, however the crew of the Maginot present an excellent worse aspect of issues. They do not get paid in cash, per se, however in shares of the corporate. And what number of shares, you may ask? For somebody low down the chain of command, one quarter share for 65 years of their life. It is a horrific, nearly laughable compensation, however hey, it is cash, proper?
Here is the factor, although: Paying an worker in shares, reasonably than money, successfully retains them indentured in perpetuity. What good is the worth of a Weyland-Yutani share for those who had been to maneuver to a metropolis run by a special company? It is the last word extrapolation of the corporate city, the place employees are given tokens to spend on the firm retailer and put up in firm housing, however with no actual technique of ever escaping, as Rick and Morty would put it, slavery with additional steps.
As the companies spend trillions of {dollars} making an attempt to make life artificial, natural life suffers, squeezed out by outrageous prices of residing and a society that has eliminated all margins for upward momentum. It is a cyberpunk dystopia which may really feel a bit extra fantastical if it weren’t so depressingly akin to our current second.