Ridley Scott, the director who launched the Xenomorphs into cinema history 46 years ago, says he is finished directing further entries in the Alien franchise—even as new films and a series head to screens. Scott told ScreenRant he has “done enough” and hopes other storytellers can “take it further.”
He argued that the saga “deadened after Alien Resurrection,” praising only his 1979 original and James Cameron’s 1986 sequel before declaring, “F***, that’s the end of a franchise which should be as important as Star Trek or Star Wars.”
Scott remains a hands-on producer: after steering Prometheus (2012) and Alien: Covenant (2017), he continues to advise on future installments through Scott Free Productions. Last summer’s back-to-basics feature Alien: Romulus, directed by Fede Álvarez, took in $350 million worldwide on an $80 million budget, restoring box-office confidence in the property. Álvarez told the Marea Nocturna podcast this week that cameras could roll on a sequel as early as October, indicating fresh momentum at 20th Century Studios.
Television now joins the expansion: Noah Hawley’s eight-episode Alien: Earth arrives 12 August on FX and Hulu, shifting the action to near-future Earth with Scott listed as executive producer. Hawley says the series returns to the retro-futurist look of the 1979 film while exploring synthetic consciousness themes introduced in Scott’s prequels.
Fans note the contrast between Scott’s public fatigue and his ongoing backstage role; the filmmaker himself concedes he “just hope[s] it goes further.” Studio appetite suggests that wish will be granted: insiders already float a Predator cameo for Álvarez’s next film, hinting at new crossovers once considered improbable. For now, the Alien universe advances without its original captain in the director’s chair, though Scott’s name still tops every call sheet as producer.