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'I have great plans and ambitions': Noah Hawley's multi-season vision for 'Alien: Earth' has me counting down like it's Christmas

'I have great plans and ambitions': Noah Hawley's multi-season vision for 'Alien: Earth' has me counting down like it's Christmas

Tom's Guide5 days ago
Ask literally anyone in my life what I talk about most, and I'd bet 100 facehuggers they'll say 'Alien.' Considering this is my favorite franchise and a full-blown obsession at this point, 'Alien: Earth' is naturally my most anticipated series of the year.
The sci-fi horror show is fast approaching. We're now just under a month out and with the world premiere happening at San Diego Comic-Con next week, the marketing has kicked into high gear.
That includes the latest issue of SFX magazine, which features 'Alien: Earth' on the cover and showrunner Noah Hawley sharing more about his vision for the series' future.
He said (h/t GamesRadar Plus): 'With Legion, I had a three-act structure. I didn't know if that was going to take three seasons or five seasons, but I knew what the three major thoughts of the story were. And here, I feel like I have that as well."
Hawley continued: 'We created it as a recurring series, and I have great plans and ambitions for it as such. On the film side, I've had some conversations with them.
'This is not a Kevin Feige Marvel Universe moment. I'm not saying that in success, that we shouldn't be coordinating or thinking big picture about that – the show has to be a hit before you can really have those conversations.'
I didn't know my excitement could grow for 'Alien: Earth,' but here we are. The fact that Hawley has long-term plans already shows he has faith in the series, where it's headed, and how it can tie into the larger universe.
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In fact, when speaking with Vanity Fair about the possibility of it merging with the original source material, he stated, 'I do know that at a certain point, the Weyland-Yutani Corporation is going to divert the Nostromo to that planet [LV-426].' You know, the charming little rock where curiosity gets you violently killed.
Honestly, I feel like a kid counting down to Christmas. Only instead of presents, I'm waiting for Xenomorphs, corporate cover-ups, and even more otherworldly threats. If I could climb into a hypersleep pod and wake up on release day, I would.
'Alien: Earth' is set to premiere on FX on Hulu in the U.S. on August 12, and Disney Plus in the U.K on August 13.
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time2 days ago

  • Tom's Guide

‘Alien: Earth' is my most anticipated new TV show in years — here's 3 reasons I'm excited, and 2 I'm worried

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Initially, people would say, 'But that doesn't sell things,' but it did sell things. ED: I've always asked writers to avoid the second person: You've got this problem, here's how you can fix it. You can only use second person if you're celebrating the chicness of the reader. Remember when you were at Le Club 55 and Kate Moss stole your sunscreen? My philosophy at ELLE, and in life: The reader is never flawed. The reader is never broken. We are all perfect just the way we are. Here are just some interesting things to make your life more fun. Or here's an interesting read about a technology that's absolutely kooky but also incredibly promising. So many publications had the assumption that the reader is lesser. I remember working at other places where you would use a word like 'molecule,' and they would say, 'Do we need to explain what a molecule is?' At ELLE, we would take six to nine months to research a story, even just a short 500-word piece—I had a network of researchers at universities, cosmetic chemists, and dermatologists on call. At no time, would someone say, 'Do they know what a molecule is?' The criticism I got, which was also the biggest compliment, was 'Oh, it's too brainy. It goes too much into the research.' ELLE is about science. If you don't want that depth, that's okay—there are tons of other places you can go. JGJ: Men's magazines at the time always spoke to a smart reader; GQ was never like, 'Oh, will this truck driver get it?' But those were the questions people asked about women reading magazines. 'Oh, maybe this is too big of a word for the little ladies!' 2000s Open Gallery ED: ELLE has also always been about personal style. That word is overused nowadays, but back then, it wasn't a thing. Gilles would deconstruct a fashion look, combine it with a bikini on a beach. I promoted the same ethos for beauty. There's no such thing as an in-and-out list. If you want to get a perm, get a perm. If you want to shave your head, do it. If you want to wear black lipstick, do it. JGJ: You didn't need to be in the club, on the inside, to be glamorous. My first-person column, Godfrey's Guide, was from an outsider's perspective, and the idea was, oh, you can come with me to this crazy fashion show . 2010s Open Gallery What was a story you remember fighting for? JGJ: I wanted to do one on people snooping in medicine cabinets at parties, and I was challenged. [Someone asked], 'Is that even interesting?' But [our editor-in-chief] got it and was just like, 'Call Fran Lebowitz, Nan Kempner.' Of course, everybody looks in the medicine cabinet at a party: They're looking for drugs, beauty products and God knows what else. That was a fun one—that got at the fascination around what someone actually has in their cabinet—which is just perennially interesting. Look at Into the Gloss , years later! 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HD cameras. Beauty culture was obsessed with the micro—every square inch of skin, tiny millimeters mattered. The challenge was, How do we stay with readers who are looking for that kind of information, but provide them something that maybe is empowering and positive? There was a constant beat of, How do we do better for our readers? How do we do better for women? For the world? JGJ: Science certainly powers a lot of beauty, and a lot of the innovation in beauty. But there's also a big part of beauty and certainly fashion that is fun, silly, and just for pleasure. The combination of those two things—the science and the fun—is really interesting. ED It's still what makes ELLE such a great read today. Outside of ELLE, I feel like we have lost a bit of the pleasure of beauty in the past couple of years, and we've gone back to more of beauty feeling like a job or just another thing on a to-do list. ELLE gives us the permission to enjoy the beauty of a red nail polish or a new fragrance, and says that it's okay to indulge, to feel pleasure, to enjoy life through beauty. 2020s Open Gallery

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