What TV Shows are you watching? ι', a perfect I.

Please be good.
Seconded :)
Ripley on Netflix was excellent. It's an 8 episode series rather then a movie based on the books and more involved than the 1999 movie. Beautifully shot in B&W.
I keep almost watching it and then forget.

On another note:

Tubi (it's free) is a great place to catch older Brit series like Upstairs/Downstairs, which I highly recommend. For free, it does have quite a bit of good stuff for a change of pace, and I find some curiosities that I've never heard of before - old/recent movies and tv shows.
 
We'll see about the Alien series.

I'm a huge fan of the franchise, but I have to say, I don't love the idea of the xenomorph on Earth. I just don't think it is a legit threat to people with ranged weapons and a functioning brain. As a melee only species, it'd wreak some havoc, but not really existential. It'd get chokepointed, suffer extreme losses against fortified hard points, get shredded in the open, etc.

It works best in the Alien or Aliens setting. Close quarters, claustrophobic spaces, where effective ranged weapon use is effectively limited to 10 feet.

I get that they kinda have to go big? Make a splash? But yeah, I didn't love the Alien Earth idea as a comic. I'll still probably enjoy it despite the suboptimal setting, though.
 
We'll see about the Alien series.

I'm a huge fan of the franchise, but I have to say, I don't love the idea of the xenomorph on Earth. I just don't think it is a legit threat to people with ranged weapons and a functioning brain. As a melee only species, it'd wreak some havoc, but not really existential. It'd get chokepointed, suffer extreme losses against fortified hard points, get shredded in the open, etc.

It works best in the Alien or Aliens setting. Close quarters, claustrophobic spaces, where effective ranged weapon use is effectively limited to 10 feet.

I get that they kinda have to go big? Make a splash? But yeah, I didn't love the Alien Earth idea as a comic. I'll still probably enjoy it despite the suboptimal setting, though.
I haven't watched the trailer yet or read any summaries. However, I suspect that human v human conflict is going to be at the forefront. I'm thinking of the corporate themes in the movies. Greed, weaponization, science, etc. I'm assuming that the aliens and/or the "liquid" is brought to Earth intentionally.
 
Sig' Weaver was asked a long time ago about doing another movie with an earth setting, and she replied she couldnt think of anything more boring.

So the time they landed (crashed) on earth, it was the worst Aliens (and Predator) movie.
Rubbish b-budget horror.

But this show looks promising, both Aliens and Predator have bounced back recently (not at the 80s/90s level though)...the latter turning up in the show would be so sweet.
 
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Alien Earth reviews trickling in...

“@screentime
ALIEN: EARTH’ is the best the franchise has been since ‘Isolation’… this is what dreams (and nightmares) are made of”

@nerdist
Alien: Earth delivers one of the best entries in the whole Alien franchise.

@Variety
'Alien: Earth' Is a Terrifying Prequel With a Surprising Set of Interests: TV Review https://variety.com/2025/tv/review

@indiewire
‘Alien: Earth’ Review: Noah Hawley’s Freaky ‘Alien’ Series Bursts the Franchise Open https://indiewire.com/criticism/show

@discussingfilms
‘ALIEN: EARTH’ ignores the canon of previous movies to tell its own unique story on television, but does it succeed? Find out in our review... https://discussingfilm.net/2025/08/05/alien-earth-review-hulu-noah-hawley/

@DavidOpie
As a big Legion fan, I had total faith in Noah Hawley taking on Alien and he didn’t let me down. #AlienEarth is unmistakably Alien, but it’s also very much its own beast too, an earthbound twist on the classic horror that throws big questions and bigger critters your way. Love it
 
"Wednesday" Season 2 has finally arrived on Netflix. Think I'm gonna watch the first season again. Seems like so long ago. The first season is fantastic.
 
Wednesday 2, 'Nucky Thompson' joins the cast -

Wednesday season two review – Jenna Ortega’s charisma could power 1,000 hearses​

Tim Burton’s smash hit Addams spinoff is as wildly entertaining as ever – and now with added Steve Buscemi. Its hugely elaborate, joke-packed return sees its star on wonderful form


****

Hark! ’Tis the peal of baleful bells, for a new semester has befallen Nevermore Academy, and freshly minted celebrity Wednesday Addams (Jenna Ortega) is, naturally, having none of it. “I liked it better when I was feared and hated,” she monotones as a flock of awestruck fellow students scrabbles around her ankles, autograph books a-flap.

Alas, her newfound fame is inescapable. “You’re kind of a big deal now after the whole saving the school from the demon pilgrim thing”, “It girl” Bianca (Joy Sunday) explains, as much to the viewer as to Wednesday, who is perhaps too busy administering icily efficient death-stares to her swooning fanbase to fully appreciate the ramifications of last season’s finale. The demon pilgrim thing? Ah, yes. The demon pilgrim thing. This, you may recall, was the climactic first-series kerfuffle surrounding one Joseph Crackstone, a bloodthirsty 17th-century pilgrim resurrected by dastardly botany teacher/beastmaster Marilyn Thornhill (Christina Ricci). Having already manipulated barista/actual monster Tyler Galpin (Hunter Doohan) into killing a series of pupils, police and local therapists, Thornhill planned on using the reanimated Crackstone to help her snuff out everyone else. Anyway, thanks to Wednesday the evildoers are now either exploded (Crackstone) or banged up (Thornhill and Galpin) and Nevermore, finally, is safe. Let joy – or at least guarded relief – be unconfined.

And now? Peace descends and the second series of this most deliciously macabre of smash-hit murder-mystery/high-school comedy dramas – or at least the four episodes available prior to the second half of the series being launched in September – can proceed in orderly fashion. Or not, as the case may be, because – ruh-roh – here comes another baddie! Specifically, here comes the Kansas City Scalper, a serial-killing, doll-collecting professional dog groomer in a velour tracksuit played, with much oleaginous glee, by Haley Joel Osment (of The Sixth Sense fame). In a breakneck pre-title sequence, we learn that Wednesday has spent her summer vacation tracking down the Scalper, being tied up by the Scalper, turning the tables on the Scalper, relieving the Scalper of his scalp and, finally, delivering the Scalper to justice. The ultimate significance of all this is moot (certainly the incident is, at least in this first episode, not referred to again) although only a berk would bet against the scalpless sod popping up at a later date and putting everyone off their Weetos.

It is, all in all, a very Wednesday introduction to the new season of Wednesday. That is; a hugely elaborate and wildly entertaining thing that happens very quickly and at great budgetary expense only to be promptly buried under the demands of a more immediately pressing plot strand. Which is, in this instance, Wednesday’s mystery stalker. Having emerged at the end of the last series, he/she/it has decided that our peerlessly nihilistic heroine must pay for something or other and has begun to leave her a series of increasingly shouty cryptic notes demanding she DO SOMETHING or other ABOUT THIS. Who is this irate foe? And what, precisely, is the nature of his/her/its beef?

Further unusualness abounds. A local private investigator is pecked to death by a distinctly murderous murder of crows. Wednesday has horrifying visions of ditzy roommate Enid (Emma Myers)’s imminent demise.

Nevermore, meanwhile, has an enthusiastic new principal in the Ned Flanders-y form of Barry Dort (Steve Buscemi, complete with statement knitwear and a moustache that follows you around the room). Dort is a Bruce Springsteen fan and is Not To Be Trusted.

Also straddling the tantalising first-episode divide between “seems quite nice, actually” and “is almost certainly a shapeshifting necromancer” is wispy new music teacher Isadora Capri (Billie Piper, clearly having a blast).

Similar fun is to be had in the return of Catherine Zeta-Jones’s, woozy, pillowy Morticia Addams if not in Luis Guzmán’s lumpy, grinning Gomez, whose character, as ever, seems oddly unfinished, as if he’d abandoned rehearsals halfway through, having been distracted, perhaps, by a scotch egg.

Minor quibbles aside, the season opener is wonderfully skittish and dense with jokes and plot. Tim Burton’s brisk direction ensures any embryonic wibbles of seriousness or sentimentality are swiftly squished by a shot of a rotting corpse, say, or a scene in which a flotilla of CGI caterpillars assemble themselves, apropos nothing, into the legend “BUG OFF”.

In the middle of it all, meanwhile, is Ortega’s Wednesday, whose charisma could power a thousand hearses. Not that she’d appreciate our enthusiasm. “Do not put me on a pedestal,” she warns her besotted schoolmates during her guest of honour speech at the disastrous inaugural Nevermore gala. “The only place I will lead you is off a cliff.”

The sensible among us are already preparing our parachutes.

Wednesday season two is on Netflix

Jenna Ortega, Emma Myers and Joy Sunday join BBC Radio 1's film critic Ali Plumb to talk about Wednesday Season 2, alongside a legendary supporting cast of Catherine Zeta-Jones, Luis Guzmán, Fred Armisen and Steve Buscemi. They discuss meeting fans who don't recognise them, when they felt most ridiculous during shooting and Season 1's hilarious bloopers, including the time Jenna accidentally hit Emma in the face with a flashlight.

The Wednesday Season 2 official podcast is here! And it’s as twisted, stylish, and unmissable as the show itself. Hosted by Caitlin Reilly, the Woecast is your backstage pass to Nevermore Academy and beyond, with exclusive interviews, behind-the-scenes secrets, and episode-by-episode breakdowns.Each week, we dive deep into the making of Wednesday Season 2 with cast members like Jenna Ortega, Emma Myers, Hunter Doohan, Joy Sunday, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and other surprise guests you’ll be dying to meet. We’ll also talk with the visionary minds behind the show, including creators Al Gough and Miles Millar, costume legends Colleen Atwood and Mark Sutherland, directors Paco Cabezas and Angela Robinson, and more.All episodes of The Wednesday Season 2 Official Woecast will be available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also see episodes early on Tudum.com

GtKj99KbMAAXkh7.jpg:large
 
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I've been watching Sneaky Pete

and I loved the whole first season, except the final episode got too convoluted and gotcha-y for me. I was hoping for a more natural resolution, but on the other hand, the way they did it leaned even harder into the whole premise of the show, and that's sort of how every episode was like until then (so, can I fault them for that then, really?). Dialing that whole deal up to 11 sort of makes sense in hindsight, but in the moment I wanted a more low-key tie-up of the storylines that didn't involve a big twist we knew nothing about going in. Either way, that was a very solid engaging season.

Somehow I didn't find Bryan Cranston believable enough as the character he was playing. At first I loved seeing him as a baddie again, this time a in yo face baddie.. but.. something seemed off. Almost like he was trying too hard? Or that the character was written too cartoony villainy? I'm not sure but his presence was almost distracting at times. You see him, you get excited to see him play a baddie again, this time somebody who didn't only break bad during a midlife crisis, but has been a baddie for a while.. but.. I don't know, yeah, something was missing from that performance, as much as I am an absolute fan of the actor.

If I loved the first season, as I say, why so many criticisms? Well, there's 2 criticisms there, and not really big ones. It's not like Cranston crapped the bed. He did a good job, it's just that something seemed off.. and I should have probably been tuned into the show enough to expect a big twist at the end.

I'm on episode 6 of season 2 right now, and it's not as good, BUT I am liking the way the story continues. I assumed every season would be a new start for the main character, but nope! The new baddie is better than Cranston's character as well, I am sad to say. He also seems cartoony, but it seems to work better somehow. Maybe I just expected Cranston's character to basically be a badarse Heisenberg and it was just a different character.

Anyway, this show has been good. I put it on randomly and was pleasantly surprised. The grandmother is my fav character somehow, I think. I don't like the choices she's making about half the time, but I have connected with her, and think it's refreshing that in a show like this a grandmother who you'd assume is a pushover can play an important part.
 
Fan-made Animated Knight-Rider and cross-overs (Air Wolf, Street Hawk etc...) mini eps -


The mix of AI and a creative human mind.

Ep 2-7


---------------


To me he was 'Electric-man', got checked by another kid that he was in-fact 'Auto-man'
 
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Cool it is on Hulu!
 
oh .wow...this is out today! edit: ah..tomorrow it seems, though IMDB says today

edit: Same creator as the "Fargo" and "Legion" series..that some excellent cred

edit3: It is today but at 8 PM EST
 
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I caught the first epi of "Alien: Earth" last night. It was excellent. The production quality is superb. From the summary, one knows that a ship crashes into Earth, but you do get to spend some time with the ship and its crew before that event. The episode has everything from creepy crawlers and a xenomorph, to Tim Olyphant doing his best Andy Warhol and Flea impression lol. I am most intrigued by the synthetics, which I don't believe were represented in the movies before. It's not a new concept..think Altered Carbon, but it gave me a lot to think about. We have a cyborg too, and I think one android on the ship. Basically, those 3 different technologies represent a big part of the corporate competition present on this future Earth. (One thing to note about the synthetics here is who they were/are now, and what they will do later...it may be a little hard to reconcile that, but it is early to tell how that will work out.)

IMO, the aesthetic and feel of the show is unique to TV. One can quickly feel the influence of the creator who also did "Fargo" and "Legion". The first two epis were released last night. I expect we get one new one each Wednesday.

Lastly, I can't help but point out the closing credit song of this epi. We have "Mob Rules" by Black Sabbath (Dio's era).

Meanwhile, I am rewatching season 1 of "Wednesday" before watching season 2. I remember back when I first watched that show thinking I'd probably not like it, as it basically appears to be a teen show. However, it is so well done with snappy and funny dialogue that it transcends the genre. It quickly pulls you in.
 
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I've been watching Silo. I read the "books" when they first came out. I'm enjoying the show but most of of takes place in low light and dark so half of what is going on is hard if not impossible to see. I understand the artistic and realism values, but WTH, seeing what is going on should be a higher priority.
 
Caught the second epi of "Alien: Earth" last night...only two available. My question I posed above, was answered in the first few minutes about the synths. Very good episode with plenty of action, blood, and gory bits...and pieces. Nice and effective reunion for Joe and Wendy/Marcy. We run into a weird party of Baroque Fops...that party gets...um...ruined by a you know what. A few more strange alien things.

And two for two on the closing credit music. This time with one of my favorite bands ever, with Tool and their tune "Stinkfist" from Aenima (great album).
 
^^^ Haha i wonder what other styles they tried out.

---------

I've been watching Silo. I read the "books" when they first came out. I'm enjoying the show but most of of takes place in low light and dark so half of what is going on is hard if not impossible to see. I understand the artistic and realism values, but WTH, seeing what is going on should be a higher priority.

I had that problem recently with Aliens: Romulus.
I had to pause and annoyingly change from a custom setting to mess about with the other screen options, until i could see like i suddenly developed night cat vision...made a huge difference.

-----------------

Sir Ridly Scott on Alien Earth -

‘‘F*** me, that’s my set!”

It was confirmed they did get the actual plans of his set out from the Disney vaults for the show.
 
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