Resident Alien Season 3 Instant
Alan Tudyk delivers his finest work yet. In one scene, he can be dissecting a dead Grey with surgical indifference, muttering about their inferior cloaking technology; in the next, he’s awkwardly teaching his young friend Max (Judah Prehn) how to throw a baseball, his alien face twisted into a hideous, genuine smile. Tudyk’s physicality—the too-stiff shoulders, the delayed blinks, the sudden, explosive rage—remains a masterclass, but now it’s layered with vulnerability. Harry is afraid. Not of the Greys, but of losing the messy, irrational, beautiful humans he has grown to tolerate.
Meanwhile, the B-plots—previously a weakness—find their footing. Deputy Liv (Elizabeth Bowen) and Sheriff Mike (Corey Reynolds) transition from comic relief into genuine investigators. Their discovery of a crashed Grey pod in the woods leads to a hilarious yet tense interrogation scene where Mike, channeling every cop show he’s ever watched, tries to get an alien to confess to "un-American activities." Reynolds’ deadpan delivery is a perfect foil to Tudyk’s chaos. Resident Alien Season 3
Given the dark turn, does the show remain funny? Surprisingly, yes—but the comedy has matured. The jokes are no longer about Harry misunderstanding a toaster. They are about the absurdity of war. In one scene, Harry tries to organize a town militia using alien weaponry, only to realize that half the volunteers are drunk, the other half are convinced he’s a performance artist, and the only person who can shoot straight is 80-year-old Judy (Jenaya Ross), who mistakes a plasma rifle for a leaf blower. Alan Tudyk delivers his finest work yet