San Diego Comic‑Con’s Hall H audience got the first full taste of Alien: Earth when creator Noah Hawley and his cast screened the pilot on Friday, revealing new life‑forms, a 2120 timeline and a premiere set for August 12 on FX and Hulu.
Hawley said he opens the series “exactly where the 1979 film starts—cryosleep and morning chatter—so viewers know we understand the franchise’s atmosphere before crashing the Maginot freighter into a future megacity.” The showrunner added that multiple seasons could inch toward the moment Weyland‑Yutani diverts the Nostromo, hinting at eventual overlap with the original film’s events.
Instant reactions from the pilot screening called the episode “smart” and “huge,” praising Hawley’s Fargo-style ensemble work while a two‑minute sizzle reel teased five alien species—one a tentacled creature that attacks through its victim’s eyes. The footage drew cheers each time a Xenomorph lunged, and the panel confirmed the eight‑episode season will feature more screen time for the iconic monster than any previous entry.
The story centers on Wendy (Sydney Chandler), a synthetic body housing the mind of a once‑ill child, who leads fellow “Lost Boys” hybrids after a Weyland‑Yutani crash spills cargo into Prodigy City. Five rival corporations—Prodigy, Weyland‑Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold—rule the planet, while cyborgs and synthetics blur the line between human and machine.
Timothy Olyphant plays Kirsh, a mentor synth; Essie Davis, Alex Lawther and Babou Ceesay headline a supporting roster that Hawley says will “question whether humanity deserves to survive.”
Production began in Bangkok in July 2023, halted during the Hollywood strikes with much of the first episode shot, then resumed in April 2024 and wrapped that July. FX plans a two‑episode launch followed by weekly installments, positioning the series just two years before Ellen Ripley boards the Nostromo and expanding the franchise onto its home planet for the first time.





















































