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SYFY’S ‘RESIDENT ALIEN’ INVADER GETS LIFT-OFF WITH VIEWERS

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“Resident Alien,” a new Syfy series that caught the attention of veteran TV critic Rob Owen and approving viewers, is evidence that inventive shows exist outside premium cable and streaming services.

“It’s been a while since there’s been a cable show, a basic cable show on USA or Syfy or another one of those channels, that’s struck me as something I would go back and give another look,” Owen, a Pittsburgh Tribune-review columnist, said of the comic book-inspired series that arrived in January.

An hour-long dramady about an extraterre­strial being stuck in a small town, “Resident Alien” gained early traction in the ratings. It pulled in a bigger audience for its second episode than its first, a rarity in the peak-tv era of dizzying decisions about what’s worth your time and money.

The numbers are on a modest scale but with promise enough to gladden the heart of Syfy’s parent company, Nbcunivers­al, which gave the series a robust blastoff that included a NBC network promotiona­l spot starring a UFO.

“We launch shows all the time and we want to pretend that every show can be the next big hit,” said Nbcunivers­al executive Jeff Bader, who heads its TV programmin­g strategy group. “But it’s actually rare that you have a show that people seem to respond to ... and this is one of those shows.”

The Rotten Tomatoes website tallied robust approval from critics and viewers, both in the 90th percentile. “Resident Alien” airs 10 p.m.

EST Wednesday.

A key element: Alan Tudyk’s deftly layered comic performanc­e as stranded alien Capt. Ha Re, who takes a crash course in human conduct and speech from “Law & Order” reruns. His otherworld­ly appearance is mostly cloaked with the appearance of an Earthling he killed, the memorably named

Dr. Harry Vanderspei­gle.

Tudyk (“Firefly,” “suburgator­y” and numerous TV and movie voice roles) milks such abundant nuance out of Harry’s often heavy-lidded, deadpan expression that it begs comparison to the master, classic film star Buster Keaton.

Series creator Chris Sheridan gladly raves about Tudyk’s work, but he was determined that the quirky residents of fictional Patience, Colorado, be as compelling as the alien in their midst.

The cast includes Sara Tomko (“Sneaky Pete”) as Asta Twelvetree­s, assistant to Vanderspei­gle; Corey Reynolds (“Selma”) as town sheriff Mike Thompson, and Judah Prehn as Max, the boy who sees Harry as the menacing interloper he is. (Spoiler alert: Ha Re’s mission is to wipe out humans.)

“If the alien never showed in Patience, there was enough going on in town and the characters are three-dimensiona­l enough that people would want to watch it,” Sheridan said. “Then if you take that and drop this alien layer over the top of it you have something real that the alien is observing.”

The show’s escapist comedy and Harry’s grudging attitude shift toward Earthlings suit a pandemic-weary country grappling with political and social divisions,

Sheridan said.

Superficia­lly, “it looks like it’s just a show about an alien coming down and trying to destroy people,” he said. “But when you really follow it, it becomes a show about unity and how humans are stronger when they work together, and how connected we all are.”

For TV critic Owen, “Resident Alien” recalls the “Blue Sky” label that USA Network, Syfy’s Nbcunivers­al cable sibling, gave its lightheart­ed dramas that aired circa 2005 to 2016. Among them: “Psych” and “Suits,” the latter now best known for co-starring future Duchess of Sussex Meghan Markle.

Such “Blue-sky DNA” largely vanished from basic cable as it gravitated toward darker dramas, Owen said, with “Mr. Robot” an example of subsequent efforts to compete in a TV world flooded by edgy fare on streaming platforms. So how can a series on a niche channel like Syfy compete? With the heft of Comcast-subsidiary Nbcunivers­al behind it. The creative strengths of “Resident Alien” aside, its promising start demonstrat­es that even the right series at the right time benefits from a juggernaut promotiona­l and scheduling effort. Pre-pandemic, the series enjoyed a fall 2019 preview at New York Comic Con, an early-bird approach to stoking enthusiasm employed by other movie and TV projects. In January, NFL Sports was enlisted to air a series trailer the Baltimore-buffalo NFL playoff game. Preceding the clip: a narrator announceme­nt of a “special flyover” — not by a Stealth jet, but a visual effectsgen­erated UFO swooping over Bills Stadium. Then came repeated airings of the pilot, including a whopping 10 times on Syfy and a simulcast on USA, and showings on Nbcunivers­al’s E! and Bravo channels to introduce the series to different TV audiences. In ratings for the first two episodes of “Resident Alien” in their initial Syfy airings combined with the next three days — an extended window that media companies say more accurately reflects today’s on-demand viewing — the second episode drew 581,000 more viewers than the first (2.765 million vs. 2.184 million). That’s the biggest week-over-week increase for a cable or broadcast drama debut since “Outlander” in 2014.

With the sci-fi genre a growing part of all TV platforms (“The Mandaloria­n” on Disney+ among the examples), could that be a key part of the appeal?

“I think that contribute­s,” Bader said. “But there’s something different with this show, because Syfy has launched other genre shows that have not launched like this. So there’s just something in this that people are liking.”

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