
‘Alien: Earth’ teaser: Noah Hawley’s FX series teases its viscious xenomorph
The Hindu
"Alien: Earth, a new sci-fi horror series from Noah Hawley, brings Xenomorphs to Earth in a thrilling chapter."
FX’s highly anticipated series Alien: Earth from Noah Hawley has unveiled its official logline and a thrilling teaser trailer. The series, set to premiere on Hulu in 2025, brings the iconic Xenomorphs to Earth in a new and terrifying chapter of the Alien franchise.
The show centers on a young woman, played by Sydney Chandler, who, along with a group of tactical soldiers, encounters an unprecedented threat when a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth. The teaser offers a glimpse of a feral Xenomorph, ijaws agape, dripping a sinister ooze.
The cast includes Alex Lawther, Timothy Olyphant, Essie Davis, and Babou Ceesay, among others, promising a strong ensemble for the sci-fi horror series.
FX chief John Landgraf has described Alien: Earth as a “big imaginative reimagining” of the franchise, drawing parallels to Hawley’s acclaimed work on Fargo. Landgraf also confirmed that the show is designed to be an ongoing series, hinting at multiple seasons of extraterrestrial terror.

Inspired by deeply personal memories, says maker of Telugu short selected for Sundance Film Festival
Telugu short film "O’sey Balamma," inspired by childhood memories, selected for Sundance Film Festival 2026, says creator Nimmala Raman.

In Episode 13 of Frequently Made Mistakes, we tackle one of the biggest traps in modern action filmmaking: confusing scale for stakes. Explosions get bigger. The threat goes global. But the emotional cost never changes. Using examples from Tiger 3, Casino Royale, Mission Impossible: Fallout, and Bajrangi Bhaijaan, this episode breaks down why raising scale does not automatically raise stakes — and how it often dilutes drama instead. We look at:

In a few days, there would be a burst of greetings. They would resonate with different wavelengths of emotion and effort. Simple and insincere. Simple but sincere. Complex yet insincere. Complex and sincere. That last category would encompass physical greeting cards that come at some price to the sender, the cost more hidden than revealed. These are customised and handcrafted cards; if the reader fancies sending them when 2026 dawns, they might want to pick the brains of these two residents of Chennai, one a corporate professional and the other yet to outgrow the school uniform

‘Pharma’ series review: Despite strong performances and solid premise, the narrative misses the mark
Pharma offers strong performances but falters in storytelling, making it a passable watch despite its intriguing premise.









