'Alien: Earth's eyeball scares me way more than the Xenomorph

After episode 5 of "Alien: Earth," I'm that freaky eyeball's biggest fan.
 By 
Belen Edwards
 on 
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Erana James, Kit Young, and Timothy Olyphant in "Alien: Earth."
Everyone's admiring the hot new alien in town. Credit: Patrick Brown / FX

Xenomorphs, I love you. However, after watching you in action in seven Alien films (plus two Alien vs. Predator films), I'm not terrified of you anymore.

Don't worry, I'll never get tired of your facehugging and chestbursting and all-around murder sprees. Whenever you're onscreen, I always marvel at your creature design and think, "That's rad as hell!" But abject terror at the sight of you is no longer on the table.

Noah Hawley's Alien prequel series, Alien: Earth, understands that its audience's familiarity with Xenomorphs will dim the aliens' fear factor a little bit. That's why it introduces the Xenomorph in all its glory just halfway through its first episode. After all, why bother shrouding in total secrecy an alien we already know and love?


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Instead, Hawley brings four new parasitic aliens into the fray, including nasty blood ticks and the mysterious, plant-like D. Plumbicare. But there's one clear standout among the new crop of aliens, and it's none other than T. Ocellus, or as I like to call it, "the eyeball monster of my nightmares."

An eyeball with tentacles in "Alien: Earth."
I love it and I hate it. Credit: Screenshot: FX

Looking like what you'd get if you gave an eyeball octopus tentacles, T. Ocellus is nothing short of an alien menace. In episode 2, a screen in the USCSS Maginot's lab describes its parasitic capabilities. Its tentacles dislodge other organisms' eyeballs and then take over neural pathways to the brain, turning its victims into puppets. In a neat twist, it can also change the appearance of its pupil and iris to match that of its host.

T. Ocellus' brain-hijacking ability alone has already led to its fair share of showstopping moments throughout Alien: Earth's first few episodes. In episode 2, it crawled its way out a cat's skull, traumatizing animal lovers everywhere in the process. It then shot itself at hybrid Nibs (Lily Newmark), attempting to take her on as a new host. Then, in episode 4, it burrowed into a poor sheep's head. Someone, please, stop its trail of carnage!

However, in episode 5, T. Ocellus truly breaks out — literally and figuratively. Literally because it stages a daring prison break, and figuratively because it cements its dominance over Alien: Earth's other new extraterrestrial baddies.

Episode 5 of Alien: Earth, titled, "In Space, No One...," is basically a mini Alien movie. It turns back the clock to reveal how everyone on the USCSS Maginot died before the spaceship crashed on Earth. Culprits include sabotage from crew member Petrovich (Enzo Cilenti), those pesky blood ticks, the Xenomorph, and of course, T. Ocellus.

T. Ocellus begins the episode in a specimen container. However, when it realizes its container hasn't been properly secured to the wall, it manages to use its own body as a slingshot to force the container away from the wall and onto the ground, where it shatters. The lab screen in episode 2 states that "the Ocellus has shown remarkable problem solving abilities at a near-human measure," and this is proof of that problem solving. Not only did T. Ocellus have to figure out how to leverage its own body to escape, it also had to recognize that the locking mechanism hadn't operated properly. On top of that, it helped distract Chibuzo (Karen Aldridge) earlier in the episode so the blood ticks could stage an escape of their own. Collaborative, tech-savvy, and resourceful — that's one seriously smart eyeball! I want it nowhere near me!

Once it's free in the Maginot, T. Ocellus finds its next target. We've seen it take on a cat and a sheep, gradually leveling up in host size. Episode 5 brings the horror of T. Ocellus to the next level by putting it in a human body, that of the Maginot's engineer Shmuel (Michael Smiley). The visual of T. Ocellus' too-big eyeball in Shmuel's head would be nightmare enough, but wouldn't you believe it, it gets worse! A tentacle slithers out of his nose. He lets out a droning scream that sounds like it could never come from a human's vocal cords. Then, he charges the remaining Maginot crew members with an unnatural, herky-jerky motion, a reflection of T. Ocellus puppeteering his body.

That sense of being an alien's puppet ties into the Alien franchise's larger themes of the horror of losing bodily autonomy. Weyland-Yutani robs its workers of decades of their lives on Earth, then deems then expendable in the face of collecting specimens. And of course, Xenomorphs force hosts to carry and "birth" their embryos, drawing a clear connection to pregnancy and childbirth. T. Ocellus follows in this tradition, although its targeting of the brain in particular conjures up fears around loss of cognition and bodily function as opposed to reproductive anxieties.

You'd think T. Ocellus taking over a human's body would be the end of its terrifying run in "In Space, No One...," but it doesn't stop there. As Shmuel, it attacks the Xenomorph, as if it's trying to make the alien of all aliens its next host. (It feels almost Predator-like in how it keeps trying to find a bigger, stronger body to conquer.) While it doesn't actually take over the Xenomorph's body (although in the future, I would like to see it), it still manages to give the Xenomorph a big scare.

Their skirmish points to two very different kinds of monstrous physicality. The Xenomorph is a tank, massive and almost unwieldy when compared to T. Ocellus. (Notably, all of the new aliens in Alien: Earth are smaller than the Xenomorph.) T. Ocellus, on the other hand, is far smaller and more slippery, adept at squeezing through cracks in your defenses. While I wouldn't want to face either of them, there's something viscerally terrifying about having a small tentacled creature launching itself at my eyeball, knowing that if it gets there, it's game over.

T. Ocellus has been growing more and more prominent over the course of Alien: Earth, but it's episode 5 where it truly shines as the star it was meant to be. You know how there are multiple blood ticks and Xenomorph eggs onboard the Maginot? It seems like there was only ever one T. Ocellus specimen onboard the ship. That's right: It's one of one, a true alien superstar. And while I will always consider the Xenomorphs to be the greatest movie monsters of all time, I'll be the first to admit that when it comes to pure scares in Alien: Earth, that demon eyeball's got them beat.

Alien: Earth is now streaming on Hulu, with new episodes premiering Tuesdays at 8 p.m. ET on Hulu and FX.

Topics Alien: Earth

A woman in a white sweater with shoulder-length brown hair.
Belen Edwards
Entertainment Reporter

Belen Edwards is an Entertainment Reporter at Mashable. She covers movies and TV with a focus on fantasy and science fiction, adaptations, animation, and more nerdy goodness. She is a member of the Critics Choice Association and the Television Critics Association, as well as a Tomatometer-approved critic.

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