The formula is kind of spend because of Cameron's movie. I've read a lot of Alien comic books and 90% of them is basically the same - either WY wants a speciment retrieved from somewhere and all goes to hell or there is Xenomorph surprise infestation and everything goes to hell.
Alien - Single Xenomorph rampage, WY wants Xenomorph
Aliens - WY wants Xenomorph from Xenomorph infestation
Alien 3 - Single Xenomorph rampage, WY shows up and wants Queen Xenomorph
Alien Resurrection - WY still wants Queen Xenomorph which leads to Xenomorph infestation
Alien Romulus - WY wanted Xenomorph now there is Xenomorph infestation
Alien:Covenant was kind of break from it but it was stupid in it's own way.
I'm a little late here Fixed a bit for accuracy, but yeah pretty much what you said.
zenux wrote:
Prometheus also follows another premise.
Or it doesn't count since there's barely a xenomorph in it?
WY wants something, they just still don't know it's a Xenomorph.
Interesting read, thanks. The writer dedicated too much characters to explain that Sydney Chandler doesn't stick to PR rules, but besides that some great points were shown.
Now here comes Noah Hawley's "Alien: Earth," the first "Alien" franchise TV series, boasting impressive production design and not much else. Like "Romulus," "Alien: Earth" seems hellbent on referencing stuff that happened in the films. The opening scene of the show alone more or less recreates the opening of Scott's first film shot for shot, with underwhelming results. I've seen the first six episodes of "Alien: Earth," and while I'll fully admit the show looks great (and expensive!), it also ends up feeling like a lifeless slog that's a chore to sit through. Maybe it's time to put the "Alien" series back in hypersleep for a few decades.
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