From Doctor Who to Star Trek, there have been plenty of great alien invasions in TV history
Think of alien invasions, and the chances are it’s films that come to mind first –
Independence Day,
Avengers,
Edge Of Tomorrow, perhaps even
Mars Attacks! However, with the new adaptation of HG Wells seminal alien invasion story
The War Of The Worlds
coming to the BBC now, it’s worth remembering that there are some great
stories about alien invasions of our little blue-green planet told on
the small screen too.
There are a few classic tropes that recur over and over again in
alien invasion stories. There are their spaceships, usually roughly
saucer-shaped; alien infiltrators disguised as humans; humans who have
been taken over by, or in extreme cases turned into, aliens; aliens who
have landed briefly before, usually at Roswell in 1947, and depending
how how successful the invasion is, post-apocalyptic wastelands where a
few scattered survivors struggle to scrape a living and fight off
attacks. We’ve highlighted just a few of our favourites, including a
pretty wide variety of different types of alien invasion in which the
aliens have met with varying degrees of success – let us know your
favorites below!
Doctor Who (Classic), "The Dalek Invasion Of Earth"
Choosing just one of Classic
Doctor Who’s
many, many alien invasions seemed like it might be quite a challenge,
but in the end it was a surprisingly easy choice, for several reasons.
The Dalek Invasion Of Earth was
a watershed moment for the series, as it saw the very first departure
of a series regular actor – the Doctor’s grand-daughter, Susan (played
by Carol Ann Ford) left, as a number of early female companions did, to
get married. And what better reason than to help rebuild Earth following
a devastating invasion by the Doctor’s oldest and deadliest enemy, the
Daleks?
This serial was beautifully filmed with genuinely impressive
production values. By filming in the early hours of Sunday mornings
(back in the days when that meant no traffic and few people around) the
show was able to give us the spectacle of Daleks rampaging the streets
of London, trundling around Trafalgar Square and chasing our heroes in
front of Big Ben without any need for greenscreen. Barbara desperately
pushing a wheelchair-bound companion up the streets with Daleks in hot
pursuit is genuinely thrilling, only matched by the slow rise of the
first Dalek from out of the waters of the Thames. The Dalek invasion
offers a suitably horrifying view of Earth under the control of the
Daleks, while also offering modern viewers a fascinating glimpse of
now-historical 1960s London.
What if Jeff Goldblum and Will Smith hadn’t saved the world in the wake of the alien invasion in
Independence Day?
That’s more or less the core concept for this series, which ran for
five seasons before concluding in 2015. At the beginning of the series, a
violent alien invasion kills off much of Earth’s population, complete
with huge spaceships that are more or less a straight cross between the
enormous hovering UFOs of
Independence Day and the Martian tripods (though here they have four legs instead of three) from
War Of The Worlds.
The show follows a group of survivors and their attempts to resist
the now-ensconced alien invaders. This includes tackling classic
problems including humans who have been taken over by the aliens
alongside more complex plot developments involving rebel forces within
the aliens’ attack force. The series is led by Noah Wyle (of
The Librarians and
ER)
and has a pretty decent special effects budget for TV. Thanks to
advances in CGI, it’s a lot easier to do a convincing alien invasion
with convincingly rendered non-humanoid aliens these days, and this show
takes full advantage of that, to impressive visual effect.
Stargate SG-1, "2010"
There were several alien attacks on Earth and attempted invasions over the course of
Stargate SG-1’s
10-year run, some more spectacular ("Nemesis"), some quieter, in more
fun and low-key episodes ("Foothold"). This episode stands out largely
because the method of invasion is quite unexpected, and the invasion
itself is almost entirely successful, and only defeated using time
travel (which is cheating, really!)."2010" was made in the long-ago year 2000, when anything looking forward
into the new millennium seemed exciting in itself. However, it came
with a warning, as all was not well in this Earth’s future. It turns out
that the apparently friendly and helpful – and, importantly, long-lived
– alien group the Aschen are very slowly killing off the human race by
making almost all humans infertile, and then simply waiting until all
the humans die and the planet is theirs. It’s a fiendishly clever and
very effective plan, and it takes a moving sacrifice from all our heroes
to correct it.
Threshold
Threshold was a sadly short-lived 2005-6 series – only thirteen episodes, four of them unaired. It was produced by
Star Trek’s Brannon Braga but what really stands out is its impressive cast. Headed up by
The Haunting Of Hill House’s Carla Gugino, the regulars include Brent Spiner, Peter Dinklage, and Rob Benedict.
Threshold views alien invasion through the
perspective of Gugino’s government consultant in contingency plans for
worst case scenarios. Having expected to be called in due to an epidemic
or nuclear war, Gugino’s Dr. Caffrey is rather surprised when it’s her
plan for dealing with alien first contact that has her called to
Washington in the middle of the night and briefed even before the
President. The series starts to develop some the usual plot
developments, such as humans being assimilated and becoming aliens,
before it was sadly cut short. Spiner’s microbiologist owes a clear debt
to his similarly employed character from
Independence Day, Benedict’s engineer has a lot in common with the early days of his Chuck Shurley from
Supernatural,
and Dinklage’s mathematician is Tyrion Lannister with an American
accent. In other words, it may not have been a hit with audiences but
it’s great fun.
The Twilight Zone, "Will The Real Martian Please Stand Up?"
In terms of quality, "The Invaders" might seem a clear pick for a great
Twilight Zone
episode about alien invasion. Most of the episode plays out without
dialogue, as Agnes Moorehead fights off tiny invaders in a classic (but
tiny) saucer-style spaceship. However, the twist ending (spoiler ahead!)
reveals that the invaders are not aliens, but a US Air Force team from
the future. How they travelled back in time or got shrunk is never
explained, but they are neither aliens nor invaders, and for this list,
we’ve tended to stick to invasions by actual non-human space aliens who
attack Earth with malicious intent.
"Will The Real Martian Please Stand Up?" is much cheesier than "The
Invaders," with its focus on aliens identifiable by their three arms or
three eyes and thoroughly tongue-in-cheek tone. However, it’s a fun
little story. It also comes with a twist – in this case, the twist
doesn’t have the classic gut-punch of "The Invaders" much-imitated
conclusion, but it is an entertaining flip of the story and brings up a
good point. Thanks to HG Wells and whoever named the Red Planet after
the Roman god of war, we all tend to worry about Martians invading, but
there are other unexplored planets in our solar system…
Doctor Who (New), "Doomsday"
Oddly enough, one of New
Who’s most
memorable Earth invasion stories also saw the departure of the rebooted
series’ first female companion, which may have been a deliberate homage
to "The Dalek Invasion Of Earth" on the part of Russell T Davis. It even
features the Daleks again, though in this case they are not the only
alien invaders; both Daleks and Cybermen attack the Earth at the same
time, before turning on each other.
Now it’s fair to say that the Cybermen should, in theory, be
discounted as these Cybermen are “upgraded” humans from another
dimension, not space aliens. But the Daleks are most definitely aliens
and they are the far more successful invaders. The face-off between
Daleks and Cybermen may be a bit silly and feel a bit like enthusiastic
fan fiction, but it is no less joyous for that, as four Daleks tell an
army of Cybermen that destroying them is not war, but pest control. The
main aim of invading Earth is almost forgotten as we watch them deal
with each other – but unfortunately for Rose and the Doctor, the Earth
still needed saving, and these days companions are most likely to
sacrifice themselves in some way than run off and get married…
Star Trek: The Next Generation, "The Best Of Both Worlds"
Technically, the Borg don’t get as far as Earth in this invasion attempt (they would have to wait until the film
Star Trek: First Contact
for that) but they are clearly invading Earth’s area of space with the
intention of invading Earth and assimilating its inhabitants, so it
seems fair to include this attempt. This two-parter is also one of the
top contenders for
the best episode of The Next Generation, so it’s always worth watching.
While this space-battle-based invasion may look different to the more
common spaceships-landing or alien infiltrators, this two-parter does
feature one classic trope of alien invasion stories. Locutus of Borg
does not infiltrate Starfleet – he stands out a bit too much for that –
but he does represent the classic alien invaders’ method of turning an
Earthling into one of their own. It’s easy to forget that in their first
appearance (in 'Q Who?'), the Borg do not assimilate anyone, nor do
they ever suggest they intend to do so (they threaten “punishment”, but
no assimilation). The development of the Borg’s entire modus operandi in
later
Star Trek instalments across the
franchise is partly thanks to the use of that particular invasion trope
in their attempted invasion of Earth(‘s star system) in this two-parter,
and to that fantastically chilling cliff-hanger in which we see Picard
transformed into Locutus and fired on by his own First Officer.
The Simpsons, "Treehouse Of Horror VII"
Green many-tentacled alien duo Kodos and Kang have appeared in several
Simpsons
episodes over the years, but this one was probably their sharpest and
most memorable appearance, as well as their most successful invasion.
This was the third story in "Treehouse Of Horror VII," the seventh
collection of short horror stories for Halloween (following a story about Bart’s evil twin and one about Lisa becoming the goddess of a miniature civilization).
During the Presidential election race between Bill Clinton and Bob
Dole in 1996, Kang and Kodos take them over. Eventually, the alien
intruders are revealed, but by then they have already been chosen as the
Republican and Democrat nominees for the Presidential election and the
public are forced to choose between them, leaving one of them President
no matter what. When someone suggests voting for someone else this is
greeted with the usual suggestion that it would be throwing your vote
away, and the pair end up running the United States. The political
satire is still sharp, though the individual politicians may have faded
into the background now, and it’s Kodos and Kang’s most entertaining
invasion attempt, as well as their most successful.
Agents Of Shield Season 5
As alien invasion storylines go, it’s fair to say this one is
unusual. It only just qualifies as an invasion of Earth, since Earth has
been mostly destroyed and it’s the remnants of the planet that have
been conquered by the blue-skinned Kree. Because the story is also about
time travel, although our heroes do start a rebellion in the conquered
future, they actually end up focusing on preventing the invasion rather
than fighting it off, and taking certain actions in the show’s present
that will change the timeline in such a way that the invasion never
happens.
The episodes set in the dystopian future in which the remains of
Earth are under the rule of the Kree are very well done and offer a nice
change of pace. With
Avengers: Infinity War on the horizon it’s surprising that
Agents of SHIELD
didn’t stay there all season to avoid clashing with it, but returning
to the present allows them to play with some classic timey-wimey tropes
as well, and do it well. There are deaths of varying degrees of
permanence, a wedding, a unique family connection, and the moment when
poor Yoyo’s bad future starts to catch up to her is genuinely shocking.
This may look a bit different from other alien invasions, but it’s just
as much worth your time.
Arrowverse Crossover: Invasion!
The Arrowverse has done several crossover events, but for the first to cross over four series, and an event that incorporated
Arrow’s
100th episode, they went all out with an alien-invasion-of-Earth
storyline. Between bringing an impressive team of characters together
and bringing back some
Arrow
characters for their 100th episode celebrations, this was the big DC
team-up we’ve all been waiting for (and a lot more fun than the
big-screen effort in
Justice League).
The actual alien invasion is a fairly standard plot – spaceship lands, aliens (
the Dominators)
emerge, they’ve already visited in the 1950s and now they’re back to
wreak havoc, and so on. The inclusion of Supergirl is a nice touch
though (who better to help fight aliens than a different alien?) and the
whole thing was generally better received than some of the earlier
crossovers. Alien invasion is the perfect storyline to bring together a
large group of super-powered characters, and there’s even an
Avengers-like team hero shot to enjoy as well.
Juliette Harrison
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