By the time she took the group onto the moon landing set, I found myself sucked into the events, despite myself. Then, Calico (Leslie Grossman) started to tell her story. Then, Troy (Isaac Cole Powell) began to give birth. I don’t necessarily need the kids from today, because I’m much more interested in how the aliens set up roots in the United States than I am the troubles befalling pregnant men and kidnapped showgirls. For the most part, barring a few hiccups, that’s been the most effective part of Death Valley‘s split. As such, there’s been a difference in quality between the two sections, with most of the focus, thus far, being on the conspiracy theories of the 1950s and not as much on the trapped kids being held hostage by the Grays. Unlike the more cohesive Red Tide, the Death Valley segment of American Horror Story has been divided into things from the past and things from the present. However, they’ve got hundreds of failed experiments suspended in glass jars like exhibits at a circus sideshow, and they all had to come from somewhere. We’ve seen the early efforts the face-hugger monster from Amelia Earhart was horrifying, but they’re getting closer, if only from the fact that half of Angelica Ross’ Theta looks halfway human (and halfway alien). With every passing year, the human-alien hybrid efforts being undertaken by the mysterious aliens from the 1950s seem to be getting closer to something familiar. American Horror Story Season 10 Episode 9: Blue Moon This American Horror Story: Double Feature review contains spoilers.
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