Alien: Earth is bringing the Alien universe into a space it has never fully occupied before: a long-form television story. The name attached to the creative lead is Noah Hawley, familiar to many through Fargo and Legion. Alongside him is Ridley Scott, the original 1979 film’s director, serving as executive producer. That detail links the new series directly back to its starting point.
It arrives in the United States on August 12, 2025. FX is set for the broadcast, while Hulu takes care of streaming. Beyond US borders, Disney+ will stream it under the Star label. The change in format from cinema to a weekly release alters the pace entirely. It opens up moments that can stretch, linger, and breathe a little more. Scenes can hold back instead of rushing to the next shock, and settings have time to become part of the tension.
There is also a shift in how the audience will enter this world. The weekly structure allows more speculation between chapters, something that rarely happens with a two-hour film.
Watching Alien: Earth in the US
Two clear routes cover the American audience. FX will air episodes live in prime time, matching the traditional television model. Hulu will release them at exactly the same time, making them available for on-demand viewing. The standard Hulu plan, with ads included, starts at $9.99 per month.
The premiere night is unusual: it begins with two episodes back-to-back. At 8 p.m. Eastern Time, or 5 p.m. Pacific, Neverland and Mr. October will appear for the first time. That means the moment the broadcast starts, the streaming version is there too.
The premise and its setting
The timeline is the year 2120. By then, five giant corporations dominate almost everything: governance, technology, and daily life. Wendy, played by Sydney Chandler, stands at the center of this world. She is unlike any other lead in the series so far. A child’s mind, placed inside an adult synthetic body. The result is a character who bridges human emotional depth with the processing power of artificial intelligence.
The turning point comes when a spacecraft crashes on Earth. A military expedition is sent to investigate, with Wendy among them. The expectation of finding a single alien form quickly disappears. The ship carries multiple alien species, each collected from different corners of the galaxy. Each is a danger on its own terms.

Cast and production team
Sydney Chandler leads the cast, joined by Alex Lawther, Kit Young, Timothy Olyphant, Essie Davis, and Adarsh Gourav. The mix of backgrounds, from psychological drama to action roles, shapes the tone and pace.
Behind the scenes, the production is handled by David W. Zucker, Joseph Iberti, Dana Gonzales, and Clayton Krueger. Their track records in large-scale series support the ambition to make Alien: Earth both cinematic and character-focused.
Early critical reception
Before its official release, Alien: Earth has already been shown to critics. The early approval rating is above 90 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. Reviews highlight Hawley’s ability to work in reflective ideas about human identity without losing the raw tension the Alien name implies. Shifting the focus to Earth is seen not as a break from the past but as a way to examine survival, fear, and corporate ambition under a new light.

Release order and episode timing
Eight episodes make up the first season, airing weekly on Tuesdays:
August 12 – Neverland and Mr. October
August 19 – Metamorphosis
August 26 – Observation
September 2 – Emergence
September 9 – The Fly
September 16 – In Space, No One
September 23 – The Real Monsters, finale
Each Tuesday’s release holds the same time slot, keeping a rhythm once the season starts. The choice to begin with a double episode sets a faster opening before settling into the weekly flow.
Alien: Earth streaming details outside the US
Disney+ will handle the series internationally under its Star banner. The start date shifts depending on the region. In the UK and Australia, the first episodes appear on August 13, with new ones every Wednesday. In places like Canada, the premiere will align with the US schedule on August 12. Regional rights and time zones create small variations, but the pattern of weekly drops stays consistent.

The significance of this release
Alien: Earth is more than an extension of the film series. It is the first time the story will unfold across hours instead of minutes. That opens the door for subplots, for quieter scenes, and for gradual buildups that the big-screen versions rarely allow. Setting the story on Earth changes the balance. Suddenly, politics matter more, and so does the pull of corporate power.
There are moments when a choice made by a person can match, or even outweigh, the danger of anything alien. Around it all is a crew that knows the craft, with names with long credits beside newer ones stepping into the spotlight. Early reactions have been solid, giving the feeling that this could land among the more talked-about sci-fi shows of the year. Maybe it stops at one season, maybe it builds something larger, but from the start, it already feels like the way this franchise tells its stories is shifting.