The world of FX’s Alien: Earth is one obsessed with a singular concept: immortality, and how humanity will achieve it. The show presents three very different “paths” in the “race to immortality”: enhanced Cyborgs, fully robotic Synthetics, and the newly created Hybrids—human minds transferred into synthetic bodies. Alien: Earth effectively portrays the differences between the three types through cyborg Morrow, the synthetic Kirsch, and the hybrid Wendy and her crew of Lost Boys.
Game Rant spoke to Sydney Chandler, who plays Wendy, Babou Ceesay, who plays Morrow, Timothy Olyphant, who plays Kirsh, and Samuel Blenkin, who plays the hybrids’ creator Boy Kavalier, about how they approached their roles and the question of their identity as a human, a robot, or something entirely different. Throughout Alien: Earth, these characters grapple with their identities while also fighting for survival against Xenomorphs and other brand-new creatures joining the Alien universe for the first time.
Synthetics Portray A Unique Intersection Of Child And Adult
At the beginning of Alien: Earth, several sick children, including Wendy, are put into fully adult, absurdly powerful synthetic bodies. Sydney Chandler discussed the process of embodying a character who is both child and adult, human and robot:
“Noah [Hawley] had us quite quickly steer away from the mechanics of the body and more towards the personality of the characters we were playing. Not so much playing a child, but playing a person. Playing a human.”
Samuel Blenkin felt that his character, the self-centered genius Boy Kavalier, saw his creation of the synthetics as “rejecting all kinds of moral ways of looking at the world.” He sees Wendy and the Lost Boys as above being human – more than and better than – and specifically chose to name them after Peter Pan characters to reflect the idea that they have the power to do what they want and can break the rules the ‘adult world’ forces on them.
Cyborgs And Synthetics In Alien: Earth Are Two Sides Of The Same Coin
Also working for Prodigy Corp is Kirsh, a fully robotic synthetic portrayed by Timothy Olyphant. Kirsh often finds himself forced to play the leader or “adult” role when dealing with the Lost Boys and the temperamental Boy Kavalier. Olyphant feels that Kirsh takes the role without complaint because he avoids feelings. “That would make him human, wouldn’t it?” he asked. Kirsh’s opinion of humanity is extremely low, something Olyphant compared to modern-day AI. “He’s trying to make things work, and has decided, perhaps, that this new thing is better than the old thing,” Olyphant explained – with “the new thing” referring to himself as a full synthetic and “the old thing” being humanity itself.
Morrow, on the other hand, is a cyborg: a human with cybernetic enhancements. The character faces bullying and prejudice from his Weyland-Yutani coworkers and struggles with his identity as a being with elements of both the robotic and the human. “He describes himself as ‘the worst parts of a man,'” Ceesay said of Morrow. “I think, on some level, he wishes he were more synthetic himself. More like Kirsh. More in control of his feelings, or to not even have feelings in the first place.”
Alien: Earth will air throughout August and September 2025 as an eight-episode series. In addition to pitting its cast against face-huggers, chest bursters, and some brand-new non-Xenomorph monsters, it will explore questions of humanity and how the three “paths to immortality” are both similar and different from one another. Ultimately, synthetics, hybrids, and cyborgs alike will be put to the test when they come into conflict with some of film and TV’s most terrifying monsters.
Alien: Earth
- Release Date
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August 12, 2025
- Network
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FX, Hulu

