There are times when Resident Alien is an alien comedy, and there are times when it’s a full-blown existential drama hidden inside a body-snatching farce.
Resident Alien Season 4 Episode 2 is both.
It is about betrayal, loss, what it means to be human, and what it costs to try. And somehow, poor, weird alien hybrid Joseph takes the biggest brunt of it all.

We’re All Lying to Ourselves
The episode opens with a flashback to a young General McCallister in the 1970s, watching something fall from an alien ship onto the beach.
We’ll come back to that later. More urgently, Harry’s voiceover kicks things off with a bang: humans, he says, are flawed because they lie to themselves.
Of course, Harry insists he doesn’t have that flaw, which is the biggest lie of all.
He’s wounded, still reeling from being impersonated by a mantid and stripped of his alien form. He insists to Max and Samira that he’s still strong, still powerful, still alien.
But then he curls up on the couch, naked, scared, and softly chanting, “I am a strong alien. I am a strong alien,” as he trembles under a blanket. Welcome to humanity, my friend.
Funniest bit: Nekkid Harry bending over before Asta and D’arcy, hoping they can spot any alien implants. I need the blooper reel for that scene.

Asta and Joseph: It Was Never That Deep
Speaking of denial, Asta has to deal with Joseph, who is deeply convinced they were soulmates. He stages a full-on Italian serenade in her clinic with a violinist in tow, channeling When Harry Met Sally energy like he’s starring in a very warped Hallmark special.
I admit it. I felt so sorry for the guy. Anybody who has lost at love knows the embarrassment of putting too many cards on the table.
Asta tried to explain that they were never anything more than the occasional Tuesday night, but Joseph was heartbroken. He found the perfect comeback. “Maybe you’re the one who’s only half human.” Oh, SNAP!
Yet just when I was feeling awful for him, two scenes later, he volunteered to kill the mantid to win her back. He knows too much about humans and yet nothing at all about human behavior.

D’arcy’s Not-So-Secret Attachment Issues
D’arcy, meanwhile, was spiraling. She misses baby Daisy with every cell in her body, and she’s not even pretending to be casual about it anymore.
When she realized Harry was using Daisy’s blanket as a neck warmer, she grabbed it and clutched it like she was drawing breath from it. It was both funny and devastating — two things Alice Wetterlund is great at playing at the same time.
D’arcy has always been vulnerable, but she’s just beginning to unpack what that means. Every season, she grows farther from the persona she relied on.
She’s not a party girl anymore. She’s someone who almost died trying to be a hero and found her sense of worth in a stolen baby. That’s a lot to carry, even for someone who can ski drunk.

Harry, Human and Horrified
Harry is dealing with his own identity crisis. He can’t shapeshift. He can’t digest milk. He can be tickled. And for the first time, he’s scared, not just of mantids or implants or the Gray’s glowing orbs haunting Kate’s living room — but of who he’s becoming.
He’s also desperate — desperate enough to betray Bruce, the adorable, oozy Gray who broke him out of space jail. Harry shoves Bruce’s melting body into a tote bag, ready to trade him for information.
This may be the Harry we know, but it’s not the Harry he wants to be.
And yet, even as Bruce’s face is literally all that’s left, he’s grateful. He tells Harry their time on Earth gave him the best day and a half of his entire life.
Harry recognizes that he’s got some growing to do, but if he gets his essence back, will what he’s learning stick? I’m willing to bet we’ll find out.

Mike, Liv, and the Cyborg in the Cave
On the human cop front, Liv mistakenly leads Mike up the mountain, where he meets Peter Bach.Mike’s first reaction? “Holy shit, a cyborg man!” Which is… valid. But it’s not at all the reaction Liv was hoping for.
Everyone needs to accept aliens in their own time. You can’t force it.
Watching Mike slowly unravel his skepticism is one of the show’s best slow-burns. He normally follows where Liv’s investigative skills lead, but this is a significant leap.
I think what drove Mike to look further (into the discarded duffle bag in his trunk) was how Peter nailed the government response. Mike loves a good conspiracy, but he’s not keen on being played a fool, either.
Also, props to Mike for helping repair Peter’s go-kart legs, even if he did suggest painting flames on the side.

Ben and Kate: Romance in Ruins, Still Funny Though
Ben and Kate are doing that thing again — you know, where they circle each other like exasperated soulmates one bad metaphor away from divorce court. He’s trying to be brave. She’s trying to be tactical. Neither is quite succeeding, but I admire the effort.
At one point, Kate proposed using Ben as bait to catch Joseph, and Ben — adorably alarmed — didn’t love the direction things were heading. Who could blame him?
When they interrogated a florist for Joseph’s whereabouts, Ben tried to look tough by knocking over a vase. It shattered, and he sheepishly admitted he thought it was plastic. That’s our Ben.
And then comes the real gut punch: the florist remembers when Ben used to buy flowers for Kate all the time. What happened?
That stings because we’ve watched this couple fracture piece by piece, and it’s never been about not loving each other. It’s about the weight of grief, secrets, and aliens. So many aliens.
Their dynamic is frayed, funny, and painfully familiar. Here’s hoping they can find their way back to each other — and maybe even start talking to their kid about the whole “he sees aliens” thing. That’d be nice.

The Lonely Man Himself
Joseph’s downward spiral is so exquisitely awkward I can barely talk about it.
First, his face was hanging in shreds after fighting the mantid. Then he proudly declared he “strategically relieved himself” to distract the enemy. Finally, with his arm half-ripped off and his dignity nowhere to be found, he showed up at Asta’s again — because of course he did.
Joseph tried every play in the book to connect with someone, and my humanity was screaming for him to catch a break.
Asta told him he wasn’t in love with her; he was just afraid. He was lost, vulnerable, and clinging to the one person who made him feel less like a monster. It’s incredibly sad. But also… dude. Take the hint.
Still, when he left Asta and stuck a note on the door for Ben and Kate — letting them know their baby is safe, even if he doesn’t know where — he earned redemption three-fold.

He’s a hybrid, probably created in much the same way Kate’s baby was born, alone on a spaceship without a human parent to care for him. Of course he took the evil path. He had no choice. And they wouldn’t even let him use the espresso machine. Monsters.
That final sequence, set to a ballad reminiscent of The Incredible Hulk TV series, with Joseph as Resident Alien’s Bruce Banner, walking down the road, thumb out, bloody and alone, was absurd and moving, which is kind of Resident Alien‘s whole deal.
If that was Envar Gjokaj’s swan song, I’m going to miss him!
Humanity Is Infectious
Bruce’s parting gift to Harry was knowledge. The Grays want the alien tech Harry brought to Earth, and he remembers where some of it is. We ended full circle, back on the beach with General McCallister.
Something wasn’t quite right about that scene, though. She was a child half a century ago, and she plucked the tech off the beach like it had just landed. Are we going on a time-bending road trip?

The takeaway of the episode is spelled out through Harry’s voiceover: humanity is infectious. If you let it, it’ll get into your blood and travel all the way to your heart.
That’s what happened to Bruce. That’s what’s happening to Harry. And that’s what Joseph wants more than anything — to feel like he belongs to something human, even if his face is falling off.
When Resident Alien was renewed, it was banished from Syfy (which is still weird to me), and its budget was cut. But you wouldn’t know it. It’s the same hilarious, surprisingly emotional show we fell in love with.
It’s funny, and it’s weird. And it’s still a better therapy session than anything Mike’s insurance will approve.
Your turn! Drop a comment below to let me know how you’re feeling about the season so far, and share this article with your friends if you think it’s worth a look.
Watch Resident Alien Online
-
Resident Alien Season 4 Episode 2 Review: The Lonely Man
Resident Alien Season 4 episode gets snarky and soulful, as Joseph takes a beating, Harry questions everything, and humanity proves contagious.
-
Resident Alien Season 4 Premiere Review: “Prison” Locks Everyone in More Ways Than One
The Resident Alien Season 4 premiere explores identity, isolation, and pizza-fueled deception in an episode that proves no one sees Harry like we do.
-
Resident Alien Stars Meredith Garretson and Sara Tomko on Motherhood, Growth, and the Power of Self-Discovery
Meredith Garretson & Sara Tomko explore Resident Alien Season 4’s emotional depths, from alien trauma to self-love, and what it all means for Kate and Asta.
TV Fanatic is searching for passionate contributors to share their voices across a variety of different articles. Do you think you have what it takes to be a TV Fanatic? Click here for more information and next steps.
The post Resident Alien Season 4 Episode 2 Review: The Lonely Man appeared first on TV Fanatic.