- One ALIEN: Earth Star has compared his character with a really old iPhone
- Babou Ceesay says that Morrow is an “iPhone 1 in an iPhone 20s” world
- Cyborg is one of the many synthetic that fans will see in the program.
It is rare that you listen to an actor to describe a character who are playing as a really old iPhone, but that is exactly what one ALIEN: Earth The cast member has done before launch.
Talking to me before the arrival of the science fiction horror show, Babou Ceesay, who interprets the duplico Morrow, referred to his character as “an iPhone 1 in an iPhone 20s world.”
It is not such a strange comparison when you learn more about Morrow. In fact, it was originally 100% human but, without spoiling how or why, it became a cyborg by the Weyland-Yutani corporation, the multinational disastrous whose shadow has advanced on the Foreign Franchise since he was born in 1979.
With Morrow, Weyland-Yutani gave him a new lease of life, Ceesay agreed with me when I suggested that a “blind loyalty” to the Megacorp is crossed through the character’s veins, or whatever, whatever passes through the veins in people who are a human part, part-machine.
However, during the next original Hulu and Disney+ TV, he suggested that Morrow’s loyalties will be tested “to the limit”, and also caused parallels between the struggle that his character supports as his human and synthetic halves compete for supremacy and problems around the development of AI in the real world.
“I love that [observation]”Ceesay added.” What you just said about blind loyalty … I’ve been thinking about that more and more. I wish I would have thought about it at that time, but now there is a low pressure. It almost feels as if you are, you can never be enough and you must continue leveling.
“I have said frankly that Morrow is an iPhone 1 in an iPhone 20 world,” Ceesay continued. “You know, Kavalier boy [ played by Samuel Blenkin] He has invented synthetic bodies with human consciousness. That is the next level, right? Morrow too [an] improved [being] But it’s like ‘it’s fine, if that’s what I am, I have to go further in terms of my usefulness, to be relevant, [and] So that you still have a reason to maintain existing.
“I don’t know how far we are [humanity] They will go [in the real world]”He added.” If you are not really so connected to AI, I mean, perhaps, that is something good. We can all live again in CabaƱas! But, seriously, are we all going to the limit? I think that is something that Morrow continues to ask in this program. “
ALIEN: Earth It is launched with a two -episodes premiere on August 12 (North America and South) and August 13 (anywhere else). Before I do, read my ALIEN: Earth review and our dedicated guide on ALIEN: Earth.