Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Smart Again
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Politics
  • Law & Defense
  • Community
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Smart Again
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Politics
  • Law & Defense
  • Community
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Smart Again
No Result
View All Result
Home Community

“Alien: Earth” sees our robot future

September 8, 2025
in Community
Reading Time: 7 mins read
0 0
A A
0
“Alien: Earth” sees our robot future
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


When asked to recall the earliest movie that defined robots for him, “Alien: Earth” star Timothy Olyphant leapt from Ridley Scott’s universe into an entirely different sector of space. “I certainly remember ‘Star Wars’ as a kid. I certainly remember those droids being so vivid and lovable and memorable,” he shared in a recent video interview. “And boy, if my memory serves, those droids were there just to serve humanity; so docile, nothing frightening about them.”

“I don’t feel like that’s where we’re headed,” he added.

On that, Olyphant and his co-star Babou Ceesay agree. For Ceesay, the relationship between humans and robots was solidified in his mind by 1991’s “Terminator 2: Judgment Day.”

“When I watched that, I remember feeling actual dread at the idea that there’s, in the future, artificial intelligence that has become strong enough to send someone back in time to kill someone who’s fighting it in the future,” Ceesay said in a separate Zoom interview. “My first understanding of artificial intelligence is that it is a threat to human life.”

Along with being one of cinema’s most durable monster franchises, “Alien” constantly assesses what it means to be human, and whether our confidence in our supposedly superior intelligence is justified. Pitted against the relentless prey drive of its xenomorphs, all the brains in the galaxy are useless; the bugs find ways to survive, breed and come at us from new angles.

(FX) Babou Ceesay as Morrow in “Alien: Earth”

“My first understanding of artificial intelligence is that it is a threat to human life.”

If the space roaches don’t kill us, a malfunctioning, ticked-off droid might. Noah Hawley’s TV series expands that part of the conversation through Olyphant’s chilly synth, Kirsh, and Ceesay’s determined cyborg, Morrow. Each embodies facets of the ongoing debate about the role robots should play in society.

Next to ChatGPT’s incursion into daily life, which succeeded without our permission or, just as likely, our notice, a culture-wide robot invasion seems much farther down the road. But right now, bipedal ‘bots are getting a test run at an Amazon warehouse in Oregon, tromping around labs and a few tech headquarters. The same Washington Post story reporting those developments also takes readers inside a robot fight club in San Francisco.

So let’s not fool ourselves — a “Terminator” ending is much more plausible today than it was in the ’80s and ’90s. Given the extensive abuse to which we subject mechanical helpers that aren’t endowed with consciousness, why wouldn’t they turn on us if they were?

That question adds to the dramatic tension in Kirsh’s arc, since it’s not only self-aware but confident in its superiority to humankind. Some of the show’s most delicious moments feature Olyphant’s android responding to its bratty creator’s slight by simply staring at him with a tinge of menace before acknowledging his demand.

The events of “Alien: Earth” stem from a proprietary battle between Weyland-Yutani, the film franchise’s star corporation, and Prodigy, introduced in the show. Kirsh is a Prodigy scientist working beside Hybrids, a proprietary invention that involves downloading human consciousnesses into synthetic bodies.

Given the extensive abuse to which we subject mechanical helpers that aren’t endowed with consciousness, why wouldn’t they turn on us if they were?

Morrow was the chief security officer on the Maginot, the Weyland-Yutani deep space research vessel that crash-lands in Prodigy territory and carries several lethal extraterrestrial species. In their first confrontation, which occurs inside the wrecked ship and near a clutch of xenomorph eggs, Kirsh and the Hybrids have the upper hand. Morrow is only part machine, you see, and the android notices that the specimens react to him as Morrow insists that the alien species belong to Yutani. As the eggs threaten to open, the android smoothly warns the talking meat in front of him, “If you’re not careful, you’re going to belong to them.”

(FX) Timothy Olyphant as Kirsh in “Alien: Earth”

Speculative fiction has wondered what robots can do for us, or to us, since the dawn of the industrial age. Over the years, movies and TV have provided a range of images and scenarios determining what intelligent robots can look like. “Star Wars” is a space opera and a series of family movies made, in part, with toy licensing in mind. Friendly droids sell a lot more action figures than, say, frightening ones like Maximillian, the security robot turned murder machine in Disney’s 1979 sci-fi movie “The Black Hole.”

Sharing with Olyphant that this was my earliest memory of what robots might be capable of resurfaced an equivalent fright in his memory: The Robot from “Lost In Space.” Granted, the many years between his childhood and now haze the picture. “Was he ever particularly scary?” Olyphant asked. “My childhood memory of it was that it was a bit scary, certainly, as opposed to the ‘Star Wars’ droids.”

That depends on how a young kid might feel about a clunky appliance with flexible duct hose for arms, and whose main claim to fame is screaming, “Danger, Will Robinson!”

Synthetics in the “Alien” realm blend in with humans, although Kirsh’s shocking white hair and eyebrows immediately identify him as not like the others. Hawley and the actor jointly decided to assign this physical trait to Kirsh, a visual ode to Roy Batty, Rutger Hauer’s formidable Replicant from “Blade Runner,” another of Scott’s futuristic fables.

Roy’s heartbreaking flaw, shared with models like him, is the ability to artificially develop self-awareness. His human creator programmed this into them, giving Roy and the Replicants who join him in rebellion a reason to despise mankind. The cruelest thing someone can visit on a being born to be exploited is to give them the ability to feel.

It’s unclear whether that’s in Kirsh’s programming. He’s also a Prodigy innovation, although in the franchise’s long Weyland-Yutani corporation history, he has many predecessors. Ash, Ian Holm’s science officer in “Alien,” was the first, and inspired Olyphant’s performance. Subsequent synthetics display a range of temperaments, from Lance Henriksen’s Bishop, realistic enough to pass for human, to Michael Fassbender’s David 8, the earliest Weyland-Yutani invention to achieve a lifelike version of artificial intelligence. Like Roy Batty, he also came to despise his maker.

Ceesay likens Morrow’s plight to our current fears of A.I. replacing us.

Film and TV mechanical beings should warn us about everything that could go wrong when we try to program artificial intelligence to think and feel like us, only better, since our brains can’t move at the speed of a supercomputer. Not without implanted hardware, anyway.

Enter Ceesay’s Morrow, a cyborg with a mechanical arm and other technological augmentations, such as the ability to download a starship’s files into his brain. Organically speaking, Morrow is still human but enhanced. That does a number on his moral compass. He’s stronger than someone who isn’t augmented. That also means he doesn’t die as easily. Not like his loved ones.

(FX) Babou Ceesay as Morrow in “Alien: Earth”

“When is a machine not a machine?” Morrow poses this riddle to an unsuspecting Hybrid once he figures out their adult bodies are governed by the malleable, gullible minds of children. The cyborg has yet to reveal a specific answer. Maybe Morrow is living his way toward it. The Maginot’s fiery return to Earth happens 65 years after his mission originally launched. Since his family is gone, nothing tethers him to his human life. Therefore, the mission — or the program — is all he has.

Ceesay likens Morrow’s plight to our current fears of A.I. replacing us. Morrow, he said, “has to be as efficient and as synthetic as he possibly could be, and push away all the human weaknesses that he has, so that he remains useful. Ultimately, that’s the fear with A.I. Will it make us obsolete? How can you be useful? In the end, maybe man always wins.”

Kirsh wouldn’t bet on that, but the actor playing him hopes so. “I don’t lose a lot of sleep over it,” Olyphant told me, “but I mean, if I take a beat and give it some thought, I’m not sure about this whole direction we’re headed in. Like the show’s themes, this pursuit of it, it’s hard for me to wrap my head around what’s so appealing about it.”

Start your day with essential news from Salon.Sign up for our free morning newsletter, Crash Course.

Ceesay seconds that. “My hope is that A.I. never becomes so sentient that it knows that we’re destroying the planet,” he said. “My hope is that even when it does, it’s got a benevolence to it, a desire to help us, you know, [to be] some sort of extension of us rather than something separate to us.”

Does that mean we could see a day when Morrow and Kirsh find common cause? Ceesay thinks it’s possible. He views his mechanized human and his co-star’s android as opposites with an equal vision.

“If they see into a future that they feel they need to create, especially with these creatures on Earth, I can see them standing side by side,” he concluded, adding with a grin, “Who’s going to be in charge, is the question.”

New episodes of “Alien: Earth” debut Tuesdays on FX and Hulu.

Read more

about androids and cyborgs



Source link

Tags: AlienEarthfutureRobotSees
Previous Post

10 fall biographies you won’t want to miss

Next Post

Impeach RFK Jr.

Related Posts

“This is not the Red Scare”: Colbert shrugs off blacklist comparisons, takes shot at Paramount
Community

“This is not the Red Scare”: Colbert shrugs off blacklist comparisons, takes shot at Paramount

March 9, 2026
Tracey Emin turned her messy life into radical art
Community

Tracey Emin turned her messy life into radical art

March 9, 2026
Why the “Love Is Blind” experiment was doomed from the start
Community

Why the “Love Is Blind” experiment was doomed from the start

March 8, 2026
“Frankenstein” needed a woman’s touch
Community

“Frankenstein” needed a woman’s touch

March 8, 2026
“Saturday Night Live” comes to bury Kristi Noem
Community

“Saturday Night Live” comes to bury Kristi Noem

March 8, 2026
Morrissey was always a jerk
Community

Morrissey was always a jerk

March 7, 2026
Next Post
Impeach RFK Jr.

Impeach RFK Jr.

E. Jean Carroll Beats Trump Again As Appeals Court Rejects Presidential Immunity Claim

E. Jean Carroll Beats Trump Again As Appeals Court Rejects Presidential Immunity Claim

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Expelliarmus! How to enjoy Harry Potter while disarming J.K. Rowling.

Expelliarmus! How to enjoy Harry Potter while disarming J.K. Rowling.

October 12, 2025
A “suicide pod” in Switzerland roils the right-to-die debate.

A “suicide pod” in Switzerland roils the right-to-die debate.

December 26, 2024
Judge Blocks Trump’s Funding Freeze, Saying White House Put Itself ‘Above Congress’

Judge Blocks Trump’s Funding Freeze, Saying White House Put Itself ‘Above Congress’

March 6, 2025
Plant-based meat has been relentlessly — and unfairly — attacked as “ultra-processed.” Can the industry save itself?

Plant-based meat has been relentlessly — and unfairly — attacked as “ultra-processed.” Can the industry save itself?

August 14, 2025
Here’s What The Shutdown Is REALLY About

Here’s What The Shutdown Is REALLY About

October 8, 2025
“Boots” shows us what training warriors looks like

“Boots” shows us what training warriors looks like

October 10, 2025
“They stole an election”: Former Florida senator found guilty in “ghost candidates” scandal

“They stole an election”: Former Florida senator found guilty in “ghost candidates” scandal

0
The prime of Dame Maggie Smith is a gift

The prime of Dame Maggie Smith is a gift

0
The Hawaii senator who faced down racism and ableism—and killed Nazis

The Hawaii senator who faced down racism and ableism—and killed Nazis

0
The murder rate fell at the fastest-ever pace last year—and it’s still falling

The murder rate fell at the fastest-ever pace last year—and it’s still falling

0
Trump used the site of the first assassination attempt to spew falsehoods

Trump used the site of the first assassination attempt to spew falsehoods

0
MAGA church plans to raffle a Trump AR-15 at Second Amendment rally

MAGA church plans to raffle a Trump AR-15 at Second Amendment rally

0
Trump’s Iran War is driving sky-high energy prices. Here’s who is profiting.

Trump’s Iran War is driving sky-high energy prices. Here’s who is profiting.

March 10, 2026
Everyone Hates Live Nation’s ‘Backroom Deal’ Except Live Nation

Everyone Hates Live Nation’s ‘Backroom Deal’ Except Live Nation

March 10, 2026
The strange reason why bears are attacking people in Japan

The strange reason why bears are attacking people in Japan

March 10, 2026
Questions To Ask The Trump Gang Of Corrupt Characters.

Questions To Ask The Trump Gang Of Corrupt Characters.

March 10, 2026
New Study: Taking A Daily Multivitamin Slows The Ticking Of Epigenetic Clocks

New Study: Taking A Daily Multivitamin Slows The Ticking Of Epigenetic Clocks

March 10, 2026
Trump Holds Insane Press Conference As He Fails In Iran

Trump Holds Insane Press Conference As He Fails In Iran

March 9, 2026
Smart Again

Stay informed with Smart Again, the go-to news source for liberal perspectives and in-depth analysis on politics, social justice, and more. Join us in making news smart again.

CATEGORIES

  • Community
  • Law & Defense
  • Politics
  • Trending
  • Uncategorized
No Result
View All Result

LATEST UPDATES

  • Trump’s Iran War is driving sky-high energy prices. Here’s who is profiting.
  • Everyone Hates Live Nation’s ‘Backroom Deal’ Except Live Nation
  • The strange reason why bears are attacking people in Japan
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 Smart Again.
Smart Again is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Politics
  • Law & Defense
  • Community
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 Smart Again.
Smart Again is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Go to mobile version