I'm the first person to say Alien and Aliens are two great films, each for different reasons. And while I understand people love Alien3, I just wasn't onboard. And it's safe to say, I've wrestled with the subsequent sequels, including Prometheus and Alien: Covenant. The desire to combine the Alien storyline with the Predator franchise, with the wink-wink connections to Blade Runner strikes me as a curious obsession in sci-fi fandom - even if I shared the excitement of everyone else when Predator 2 came out.
And then I saw Aliens vs. Predator, and I thought "never mind".
I'd skipped the last Alien movie. If Ridley Scott couldn't make me care, I'm not sure who could.
But part of that was, even as Romulus was in post-production, I heard Noah Hawley got his hands on the franchise and had a TV show coming.
For those unfamiliar, Hawley is the person responsible for Legion, maybe the most interesting superhero adaptation (loosely based on the Marvel X-character Legion) to hit a screen, big or small, and which ran on FX for three seasons. But, more important, Hawley has helmed Fargo for five seasons and across ten years. And, in this blog's opinion, it's one of the best shows to have graced screens, full stop.
Fargo is an oddball spin-off of the Coen Bros. film of the same name. And I won't get into it here, but if Legion showed Hawley knew how to take a nut of an idea from source material and grow something fascinating with it, Fargo took the well-defined themes and characters of a Coen Bros. movie as inspiration and exploded their stories into multi-faceted noir epics, borrowing elements and ideas from across the Coen Bros. filmography.
So... yeah, I was jazzed when I heard Hawley was getting his hands on Alien. And eight episodes later, I feel like my trust was warranted.