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Scary Fun Trailer for 'Scurry' Underground Alien Monsters One-Take
Hollywood

Scary Fun Trailer for ‘Scurry’ Underground Alien Monsters One-Take

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Scary Fun Trailer for ‘Scurry’ Underground Alien Monsters One-Take

by Alex Billington
September 25, 2025
Source: YouTube

“No one is coming! They’re all dead!” Yep – probably true. Signature Ent. has launched an official trailer for a scary horror thriller creature feature called Scurry, made by Australian filmmaker Luke Sparke. This is the same guy who also made the dinosaurs in Vietnam War movie Primitive War also out this year. Though Scurry was actually made and premiered before that one – it opened in Australia last year. But it’s just now showing up outside of Australia and will be out on VOD in the UK soon + hopefully in the US, too. When an unthinkable attack devastates their city, two strangers find themselves trapped beneath the chaos, wounded and disoriented. As they fight to survive in a narrowing underground tunnel, their injuries worsen, and their chances of escape dwindle. But something else is lurking in the darkness, something relentless and hungry. Shot in real-time using a single continuous take, Scurry delivers a gripping, claustrophobic experience that will keep audiences on edge until the very last moment. Starring Jamie Costa and Emalia. As someone on YT commented, this kinda has a low budget Tremors vibe, but the creatures are even scarier in here. Enjoy.

Here’s the official UK trailer (+ poster) for Luke Sparke’s horror film Scurry, direct from YouTube:

“From the moment I first envisioned Scurry, I knew I wanted to create an experience that would keep audiences on the edge of their seats—something fast, relentless, and deeply immersive. Creature features have always held a special place in cinema, blending tension, survival, and awe-inspiring spectacle. With Scurry, I wanted to bring a fresh, visceral energy to the genre while staying true to what makes these films so thrilling: the fear of the unknown, the power of nature, and the resilience of the human spirit.” –Director Luke Sparke

Scurry Movie Poster

Scurry Movie Poster

When an unthinkable attack devastates a city, two strangers find themselves trapped beneath the chaos, wounded & disoriented. As they fight to survive in a narrowing underground tunnel, their injuries worsen, and their chances of escape dwindle. But the collapsing passageways aren’t their only threat—something else is lurking in the darkness, something relentless & hungry. Shot in real-time using a single continuous take, Scurry delivers a gripping, claustrophobic horror experience that will keep audiences on edge until the very last moment. Scurry is directed by the Australian genre filmmaker Luke Sparke, director of the films Red Billabong, Occupation, Occupation: Rainfall, Devil Beneath, Bring Him to Me, Primitive War previously. The screenplay is written by Tom Evans. It’s produced by Carmel Imrie and Carly Sparke. This first premiered at the 2024 Sydney Science Fiction Film Festival last year. Signature Ent. will debut Sparke’s Scurry movie direct-to-VOD in the UK starting on October 3rd, 2025 this fall. Who wants to watch this?

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Find more posts in: Horror, Indies, Sci-Fi, To Watch, Trailer

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez in
TV & Streaming

New Mysteries on ‘Only Murders,’ History of Black TV, ‘Alien’ Intrigue, Horror Meets Reality TV

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Disney / Patrick Harbron

Only Murders in the Building

The Emmy-nominated comedy-mystery returns for a fifth season, with the murder-prone Arconia apartment building once again the scene for mischievous and mirthful mayhem, courtesy of the podcasting trio of Charles (Steve Martin), Oliver (Martin Short) and Mabel (Selena Gomez). They’re not buying the “accidental death” ruling regarding the suspicious passing of their beloved doorman Lester (Teddy Coluca), found floating in a bloody fountain as last season ended. Their snooping includes physical comedy at Lester’s funeral. (“How can I count his fingers if he’s not doing the dead-man’s arm cross?” Charles wonders in a line that could only be heard on this show.) The investigation leads to connections between the Arconia and a missing mobster (Bobby Cannavale), his glamorous wife (Téa Leoni) and three shady billionaires (Oscar winners Renée Zellweger and Christoph Waltz, and Logan Lerman). Other guest stars include Keegan-Michael Key as New York’s blustery mayor and Dianne Weist, another Oscar winner, as Lester’s widow. The season launches with three episodes.

'Seen & Heard: The History of Black Television'

HBO

Seen and Heard: The History of Black Television

“It’s hard to feel seen,” reflects no less an eminence than Oprah Winfrey, who remembers growing up “with no images of myself being reflected back to me.” A two-part documentary, concluding Wednesday, from executive producer Issa Rae (Insecure) and director Giselle Bailey provides a sweeping cultural history of Black images and characters on TV from early stereotyping (Beulah, Amos ‘n’ Andy) to breakthroughs of the 1960s including Julia with Diahann Carroll and Nichelle Nichols‘ portrayal of Star Trek‘s Uhura (a favorite of Martin Luther King Jr.) through Norman Lear‘s topical comedies (Good Times, The Jeffersons, Sanford & Son) to a more modern era when shows were actually run by people of color (In Living Color, Girlfriends, black-ish). “My hope is that there will be more shows that show us as ourselves in our deep complexity,” Winfrey concludes.

Samuel Blenkin in 'Alien: Earth'

Patrick Brown / FX

Alien: Earth

The battle over the aliens that have crash-landed on Earth intensifies in a pivotal episode of the thrilling sci-fi/horror spinoff. While Prodigy’s “boy genius” Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin) spars with Weyland-Yutani CEO Yutani (Sandra Yi Sencindiver) over control and ownership of the deadly specimens, few seem to appreciate what it means that human/robot hybrid Wendy (Sydney Chandler) is bonding and empathizing with one of the Xenomorphs. Elsewhere, Maginot security chief and Weyland-Yutani loyalist Morrow (Babou Ceesay) continues manipulating “Lost Boy” Slightly (Adarsh Gourav) in his plot to gain access to one of the aliens. The suspense is considerable.

Greg Nicotero in 'Guts & Glory' on Shudder

Shudder

Guts & Glory

Leave it to The Walking Dead‘s award-winning special-effects guru and executive producer Greg Nicotero to concoct a horror-filled reality competition that makes Survivor look like child’s play (no, not the Chucky movie). The six-episode survival contest puts the players in an immersive scenario that unfolds like a real-life horror movie with zombies and other terrors lurking to force everyone involved to face their fears. Launches with two episodes.

James Norton in 'Playing Nice' on Britbox

BritBox

Playing Nice

The finale of the domestic drama, depicting the battle between two couples whose sons were switched at birth, cranks up the melodrama when Pete and Maddie (James Norton, Niahm Algar) are vilified in court, with the monstrous Miles (James McArdle) determined to gain custody of both boys. A surprise appearance at the courthouse could change the dynamic as the emotional tug of war goes to outrageous extremes.

INSIDE TUESDAY TV:

  • America’s Got Talent (8/7c, NBC): Among those scheduled to perform in the last of the quarterfinals, determining who’ll be represented in the semifinals starting next week: Birmingham Youth Fellowship Choir, which earned a Golden Buzzer from Simon Cowell, and two of Terry Crews‘ Golden Buzzer picks: The BoykinZ and The Funkateer Dancers.
  • Becoming Thurgood: America’s Social Architect (9/8c, PBS): A documentary profiles Thurgood Marshall, the pioneering civil-rights lawyer who successfully argued 29 of 32 cases before the Supreme Court before being appointed in 1967 to be the first African American justice on the highest court.
  • The Tech Bro Murders (10/9c, Investigation Discovery): Retired Palo Alto detective Sandra Brown leads a six-part true-crime series exploring deadly doings among Silicon Valley’s elite. First up: the case of a Google X exec found dead on his yacht.
  • Songs & Stories With Kelly Clarkson (10/9c, NBC): Lizzo opens up about her life and career and performs with Kelly in the season finale.
  • Thirst Trap: The Fame. The Fantasy. The Fallout (streaming on Paramount+): The dark side of social-media fame is the subject of a documentary about William White, a sensation at 21 when he posted sensual videos lip-syncing to retro hits like “Mandy.” His following, which included many middle-aged women, grew out of control, with stalking, bullying and doxxing among his obsessive fan club while White raked in a fortune.

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September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Richa Moorjani in
TV & Streaming

Noah Hawley Breaks Down Morrow’s Mission, ‘Alien’ Parallels, and More (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Alien: Earth, Season 1 Episode 5, “In Space, No One…”]

Alien: Earth took us back in time (and into space) mere days before the USCSS Maginot’s intended arrival date on the planet in the show’s riveting fifth installment, “In Space, No One…” which pays homage, not just in title, to Ridley Scott‘s 1979 film that started it all.

Written and directed by series creator Noah Hawley, Alien: Earth‘s latest episode tracks the events that led to the crash-landing of the USCSS Magino, as seen in the premiere episode, through Morrow’s (Babou Ceesay) eyes. As a security officer, the cyborg is alerted to a death aboard the ship caused by a breach in the containment of the species they’re transporting.

But as the events play out, Morrow realizes that sabotage is at play, and he begins to look at everyone suspiciously, including interim captain Zaveri (Richa Moorjani), who steps up after the ship’s captain dies. Still, the cyborg maintains his control and calm, even eliciting a curious comment from crewmate Rahim (Amir Boutros), who wonders how the cyborg doesn’t break a sweat despite the stress.

Realizing that navigation has also been lost, meaning the only potential outcome is a crash-landing, Morrow seeks answers and discovers a crew member has been tasked by Prodigy, Boy Kavalier’s (Samuel Blenkin) corp, to commandeer the ship and cargo. In other words, the seemingly random crash-landing had been orchestrated all along by the barefoot billionaire.

Patrick Brown / FX

And as Morrow roots out the sabatour, the creatures aboard are running amok, reducing the crew count drastically. When Morrow devises a plan to meet at the bridge, he decides that to preserve the cargo and deliver it to Weyland-Yutani, only he is needed to survive, and so he welds the door shut, leaving Zaveri to be massacred by the Xenomorph.

As he works to square away his tasks before closing himself in the emergency landing space, the calm and cool Morrow finally breaks a sweat. Is it due to the pressure of a 65-year-long mission during which he tragically lost his daughter? Hawley answers that question and many more, including which new species should scare viewers the most, in the Q&A below.

This episode pays homage to the story told in 1979’s Alien, but this time around, Morrow is at the center of it all. What made you want to reimagine this story, and what is driving Morrow to complete this mission?

Noah Hawley: I love the reversals for an audience in whom you’re rooting for, and who you’re rooting against. And I think those are some of the most meaningful moments as a viewer because it really is an active process that you go through. I remember in Season 2 of Fargo, Jesse Plemons and Kirsten Dunst, and they’re up against this Gerhardt family, and you think, “Well, I don’t care who they send, I’m rooting for Jesse and Kirsten.” And then they send the kid with cerebral palsy who wants to prove he’s a man. And the audience goes, “Well, hold on. I don’t want anything bad to happen to him.”

I think we’re trained to root for violence as a solution to a problem, and I always want the audience to have to wrestle with it a little bit and to look and to go, well, look at Morrow’s side of it. I mean, he has this mission he’s been tasked with, and he lost his ship. It was boarded, and they’ve stolen from him, and he’s the protagonist in his story, and his ethics are not our ethics, necessarily, but he’s not wrong on some level. When he says to Slightly, “If you took something from me, how is it wrong for me to take it back?”

Amir Boutrous in 'Alien: Earth'

Patrick Brown / FX

The biggest reveal in this episode is that Prodigy had infiltrated Weyland-Yutani’s USCSS Maginot with the intent to sabotage their mission. Does Morrow’s drive to go after Prodigy and Kavalier stem from wanting to give purpose to the time he lost with his daughter?

No, I think he articulates it in the third hour when he says, “I’ve been gone 65 years, this is my life’s work, and if I’ve lost this, then what was the point of those last 65 years?” And clearly, he made some choices. He sealed the door so that [Zaveri] couldn’t get in. I mean, he made these choices that are meaningful if you actually get the ends that justify the means. But if you don’t, then you just have the stuff that you did, and you have nothing to show for it.

This mostly contained episode builds up to an outcome we already knew. How did you approach that as a director and writer of the installment?

Well, you have to invest in all those people and think about how hard that is, to introduce this crew in 51 minutes, distinct and specific individuals whom you have feelings about. And then we’re also introducing and solving a sabotage mystery, and we’re playing out all these creature stories. So, on some level, why I wanted to do it was my mission overall was to try to turn Alien into something new. But if someone was going to get to also do classic Alien, I wanted that to be me. Right? I wanted to go, “I see what you did, Sir Ridley, and I see what you did, Mr. Cameron and Mr. Fincher, and here I am. Here’s my best effort at it.”

What’s interesting is that Morrow is technically in Ripley’s (Sigourney Weaver) shoes in this scenario, but he keeps his cool to the point that the crew questions why he isn’t sweating… until he is.

Then there’s that moment when Clem (Tom Moya) runs up and says something big, and you see for the first time Morrow doesn’t know what to do, everything is out of control. And that moment is everything to me. And Babou played it so brilliantly, but then he takes charge. There’s a moment she obviously can’t recover from that moment for herself, but he does, and that’s why he survives.

Richa Moorjani in 'Alien: Earth'

Patrick Brown / FX

In that final sequence aboard the USCSS Maginot, Morrow does begin to sweat. Is that a result of several different factors or merely the encroaching Xenomorph?

It’s a level of complexity. We all face it, right? You’re trying to get dinner on the table, there’s a flood in the bathroom, the cat’s throwing up in the other room. There’s a certain moment where you’re just like, I literally don’t know what to do right now. I don’t know which fire to put out. I don’t know what to do. Obviously, the stakes here are a lot higher, but I do think we all reach a moment where it’s just one thing too many, and he’s literally been carrying this crew; their priorities are weird, he’s got a drug addict for a doctor, it’s the island of misfit toys that’s on this ship. He’s been like, I’m going to get us through, and then at a certain point, he realizes I can get me through, I can’t get anybody else through, especially if they’re not going to help.

Babou Ceesay’s real-life daughter plays Morrow’s daughter in this episode’s flashback, and your son appeared alongside you earlier this season. What was it like incorporating real family members into the series, and how did that lend itself to more authentic moments onscreen? 

It’s only fair for him to get his kid onscreen, too. This is how I make things. I make things by hand and to the point of yeah, I record music for the show and my son asked if there was something for him, and I thought, well yeah, I can put him in, but he’s not one of the lost boys, so he could be the young Hermit, but I’m not going to write scenes for it. I was planning to shoot this flashback piece, and so I’d need a father and a mother, and I thought, there’s just going to be day players, and the best way to get any kind of performance out of him is to just get down on the floor and do it with him. And it was really meaningful for me personally, because, of course, that was two years ago. The difference between a 10-year-old and a 12-year-old is… he’s a different kid now, right?

And so for Babou, in that moment, I thought, we’ve all come all this way. He’s moved his family across the earth. Why wouldn’t I give him that lifelong memory and connection with his own child? That’s immortalized on film. I think that too often we look at these shows as some calculated act written by a cash register or something, but this is five years of my life. This is a very personal document for me,

We’ve known the Xenomorph for years, but you’ve introduced several new species into the Alien world with this series. Is there one we should be most terrified of?

Well, I think people are rightly focusing on the eye simply because it clearly has a larger agenda. And as you see, as the season goes on, this may not just be a parasite or a predator. This may be a rival. And I think that’s really interesting.

Alien: Earth, Tuesdays, 8/7c, FX and Hulu

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's Bugonia Trailer Is Out: Can She Outsmart Her Alien Captors? Watch To Find Out! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Emma Stone’s Bugonia Trailer Is Out: Can She Outsmart Her Alien Captors? Watch To Find Out! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Following the critical acclaim and box office success of The Favourite, Poor Things, and Kinds of Kindness, director Yorgos Lanthimos and actress Emma Stone join forces for a third time this time to collaborate on a bizarre, genre-defying sci-fi black comedy called Bugonia. A warped reinterpretation of the 2003 South Korean cult hit Save the Green Planet!

The movie opened at the Venice Film Festival on August 28 and will play in a limited release on October 24, expanding to a wide release on October 31.

A Daring Concept with a Darkly Humorous Twist

In Bugonia, Emma Stone stars as Michelle Fuller, a dominant CEO who is the target of two conspiracy-ridden young men (played by Jesse Plemons and newcomer Aidan Delbis). Believing she is an extraterrestrial sent to destroy the planet, the two abduct her, shave her head to stop “mothership communication,” and lock her away in an underground bunker. The offbeat premise plays out with the quirky tone typical of Lanthimos’ approach, mixing absurdity with psychological unease.

The cast also features Alicia Silverstone and comedian Stavros Halkias, both adding to the darkly comedic world of the film.

Creative Powerhouse Behind the Scenes

The script is by Will Tracy (Succession), with an all-star production team behind it including Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Ari Aster, Lars Knudsen, Miky Lee, Jerry Kyoungboum Ko, Lanthimos, and Stone herself. The international ensemble production ensures a visually creative and thematically complex cinematic experience.

The trailer, which landed on the same day the Venice premiere, boasts a new, striking look for Stone and opens to Chappell Roan’s viral song Good Luck, Babe!. The song reinforces the film’s campy yet queasy vibe and picks up on the uncanny tension between captor and captive.

Art Imitates Life in Lanthimos’ Dystopia

Lanthimos and Stone both explained the film’s themes at the Venice press conference. “Unfortunately, not much of the dystopia in this film is very fictional,” Lanthimos said, referencing such concerns as AI, climate change, and conspiracy culture as inspiration. Stone added some lighthearted, earnest flair, confessing, “I’m coming out with it — I believe in aliens!”

A Genre-Bending Must-See This Fall

With its satirical bite, daring performances, and genre-bending narrative, Bugonia is shaping up to be one of the most intriguing films of the fall. Equal parts disturbing and hilarious, it’s a cinematic reflection of modern anxieties—served with Lanthimos’ signature weirdness.

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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FX's Alien: Earth; Sheep.
TV & Streaming

Earth’ Boss Noah Hawley on That Creepy Eye-Sheep Alien

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s not easy to create an alien that can compete for your interest with a Xenomorph — which is arguably the greatest cinematic monster of all time.

But Alien: Earth writer-director-producer Noah Hawley hit a home run with at least one of his four original alien creations for his FX series with The Eye — an highly intelligent ever-starring eyeball with sucker-tipped tentacles that burrow’s into a victim’s head and then uses its body like a puppet.

And in the fourth episode of the show’s first season, “Observation,” Hawley managed to make the creature even more unsettling by having a scene where Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin) and Kirsh (Timothy Olyphant) conduct an experiment by letting The Eye infect a sheep — which now has a highly creepy all-knowing stare.

The sheep, by the way, was partly played by an actual sheep (which, of course, was not harmed).

We asked Hawley about his inspiration for the creature and the sequence.

“It’s one of the more disturbing things you’ll watch all year, I think,” he says of the sheep attack. “Every 5 percent improvement in visual effects made that sequence a 100 percent ‘worse’ in terms of its effectiveness — and by ‘worse,’ I mean better. I told director Ugla Hauksdóttir in London, ‘For me, the fact that you got the live sheep to back away from the camera [in seeming fear of The Eye], that made the whole sequence right. Because if that had been a CG sheep, there’s something about sheep — being like — us going ‘uh-huh!’ and backing away from camera really sold the gag.”

As for the creature’s design, The Eye was originally just the eye with little legs, until a visual effects supervisor suggested adding these suckers that it could shoot out and pull itself across a room.

“To me, there’s a relentlessness to this that is similar to the face hugger,” he says. “Certainly in James Cameron’s movie [Aliens] where Ripley [Sigourney Weaver] and Newt [Rebecca Jorden] are trying to get away from these things, and they just keep coming, and they’re fast, and they’re scrambling, and they’re spider like a crab. [The suckers] was a really great upgrade for the original conceit where before, it just had to run as fast as it could at you. Now it can fly. And here in Austin, we have the Palmetto bugs fly. A giant roach that flies is always worse than a giant roach that doesn’t. So the fact that it can propel itself, that it can stick to you, and you’re basically trying to fight it off, and it has all these arms and it’s relentlessly trying to get in.”

“Plus, it enters your face,” he adds. “The face hugger literally goes into your mouth, and there’s something really disturbing about that. But everyone has issues with eyeballs. It just felt like it’s designed just to play into that genetic revulsion.”

Speaking of Cameron, while Hawley has communicated with Alien director Ridley Scott about his project, the Aliens director hasn’t weighed in, even though Alien: Earth includes plenty of inspiration from the 1986 sequel, as well as the 1979 original. (Cameron called the franchise “trampled ground at this point” during an interview last year — though clearly the box office success of Alien: Romulus, and now the critical acclaim of Alien: Earth, has suggested a lot more life is still left.)

“I did not have any contact with James Cameron,” Hawley says. “Not because I didn’t want to, but I don’t know where James Cameron is or what he’s doing. And there’s certainly no obligation for him to talk to me about a movie he made 40 years ago.” (Cameron is likely jamming to finish post production on the upcoming release of Avatar: Fire and Ash, which is released Dec. 19.)

Alien: Earth airs Tuesdays on FX and streams on Hulu. Next week’s episode, titled In “Space, No One…” is directed by Hawley and one you won’t want to miss.

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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Alien: Earth release schedule – When is episode 4 out?
TV & Streaming

Alien: Earth release schedule – When is episode 4 out?

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Warning: Minor spoilers ahead for Alien: Earth episodes 1 and 2.

Alien: Earth has emerged as one of the buzziest shows of the year to date, wowing viewers with its high production value, atmospheric sequences and weighty sci-fi concepts.

So far, the first episode of the series has attracted more than 9 million views across Disney Plus and Hulu (according to Variety), with that number expected to grow as the hype continues to build.

The series stars Sugar’s Sydney Chandler in the lead role of Wendy – a human child’s consciousness in a synthetic adult body – who finds herself on a collision course with the franchise’s iconic monsters.

Fargo writer Noah Hawley has opted to largely ignore major canon changes from Prometheus, in favour of having free rein to imagine his own dystopian vision of the future.

If you can’t get enough of the ambitious new drama, here’s everything you need to know about when new episodes of Alien: Earth are out on Disney Plus.

When is Alien: Earth episode 4 released on Disney+?

Alien: Earth episode 4 will be released on Tuesday 26th August in the US and Wednesday 27th August in the UK.

The episode is titled Observation and is co-written by series creator Noah Hawley and former WandaVision scribe Bobak Esfarjani. Meanwhile, Icelandic director Ugla Hauksdóttir (The Power, Snowfall) helms the next instalment.

Alien: Earth release schedule – When are new episodes out?

New episodes of Alien: Earth are released every Wednesday in the UK.

You can find the full UK release schedule for Alien Earth below.

  • Alien: Earth episode 1 – Neverland – Wednesday 13th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 2 – Mr October – Wednesday 13th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 3 – Metamorphosis – Wednesday 20th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 4 – Observation – Wednesday 27th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 5 – In Space, No One… – Wednesday 3rd September 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 6 – The Fly – Wednesday 10th September 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 7 – Emergence – Wednesday 17th September 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 8 – The Real Monsters – Wednesday 24th September 2025

Timothy Olyphant as Kirsh in Alien: Earth. Patrick Brown/FX

In the US, the rollout is just one day ahead – that release schedule is as follows:

  • Alien: Earth episode 1 – Neverland – 12th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 2 – Mr October – 12th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 3 – Metamorphosis – 19th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 4 – Observation – 26th August 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 5 – In Space, No One… – 2nd September 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 6 – The Fly – 9th September 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 7 – Emergence – 16th September 2025
  • Alien: Earth episode 8 – The Real Monsters – 23rd September 2025

New episodes of Alien: Earth will be available to stream on Disney+ every Wednesday. You can sign up to Disney+ for £4.99 a month or £89.90 a year now.

Add Alien: Earth to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Sci-Fi coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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