Sam and Wally standing in the middle of Sam's living room looking at the display left behind by the exploding alien DNA for The Boroughs Review.
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The Boroughs Review 2026: An Entertaining 7/10 Amblin-Style Sci-Fi Thriller

A promo poster for The Boroughs Review showing Wally and Sam wearing protective goggles to shield their eyes from the aftermath of an alien DNA experiment.

The Boroughs Review 2026: Old-School Sci-Fi Fires Up the Desert

If you think moving into a quiet retirement community in the New Mexico desert means your exciting days are behind you, think again. Sometimes, it just means you’ve walked straight into the perfect cosmic buffet.

The Verdict Box

The Perfect Victims: Monsters, TV Frequencies, and Spinal Fluid

At the heart of this The Boroughs Review is a brilliantly sinister premise: if you are an immortal hidden elite looking to harvest human life, a retirement village is the ultimate corporate cover. If a senior resident dies suddenly, no one questions it. And if anyone manages to escape and babbles to the police about pale, subterranean monsters sucking spinal fluid out of people’s mouths, the world will simply dismiss it as a tragic case of Alzheimer’s or dementia.

Enter Sam Cooper (Alfred Molina). Forced into the community by his daughter Claire after the sudden death of his wife, Sam is a grumpy, bitter, but fiercely intelligent former engineer.

A four image grid for The Boroughs Review featuring two stills of Sam looking through a door and two stills of a creature feeding on Jack, all washed in a neon red lighting effect.
The Boroughs Review: Drenched in a haunting neon red glow, this sequence turns a quiet suburban hallway into a claustrophobic, high-stakes nightmare as a predator feeds in the dark.

He has absolutely no desire to be there, until a welcome barbecue ends with him discovering a resident named Jack being actively drained by an alien creature.

Sam attacks the monster, collecting a sample of its glowing alien blood on his hammer. When he notices the blood reacting strangely to a specific frequency radiating from an old television set, he takes the evidence to the first person willing to look at the data: Wally (Denis O’Hare), a retired man of science who is quietly fighting terminal prostate cancer.

Together, they run tests on the sample, uncover non-human DNA, and perform a covert autopsy on Jack’s body. The terrifying reality clicks into place: the monsters aren’t just hunting, they’ve already tagged Sam and the other residents, slowly feeding on them from the inside out.

A still image featuring Sam, Judy, and Wally peering anxiously inside an oven after Judy shot the creature, featured in The Boroughs Review.
The Boroughs Review: Domestic spaces turn deadly when survival instincts take over, forcing a desperate cleanup crew to peer into the dark to ensure the threat is actually dead

The Underground Economy: The Mother and the Immortals

As the investigation deepens, the scope of the conspiracy explodes. Sam, Wally, and fellow residents Renee (Geena Davis) and Judy (Alfre Woodard) discover that the community’s ovens hide secret passageways leading to an expansive network of underground tunnels. The entire facility is an engineered trap run by the village owner, Blaine, his calculating wife Annelise, and a corrupt security force keeping cages of alien creatures beneath the desert floor.

But the biology of this horror is where the show truly finds its narrative footing. The caged creatures aren’t the direct source of the youth-giving orange elixir that Blaine and his staff drink to stay immortal.

A character still of Blaine and Annalise navigating the complex community secrets for The Boroughs Review.
The Boroughs Review: Drenched in a haunting neon red glow, this sequence turns a quiet suburban hallway into a claustrophobic, high-stakes nightmare as a predator feeds in the dark.

The creatures are merely the middlemen, workers harvesting human spinal fluid to feed a massive “Mother” alien captured in the 1940s. The Immortals then consume the Mother’s blood to maintain their youth.

The crisis begins when the Mother’s regenerative properties begin to fail. Desperate to keep their immortality intact, Blaine throws the village into a strict lockdown to seal the secrets. At the same time, a mysterious subterranean peach tree, nourished by a bizarre, fatal murmuration of crows dive-bombing headfirst into the desert floor begins to grow.

When Judy’s husband samples its fruit, his body visibly reverses in age, instantly catching the dangerous attention of Annelise, who realizes there might be a new way to cheat death without the dying Mother.

A three image grid of individual stills featuring Sam, Wally, and Judy preparing for the finale confrontation for The Boroughs Review.
The Boroughs Review: Reclaiming their agency in the face of absolute grief, the main trio prepares their final, desperate defense using makeshift tools.

The Climax: Non-Linear Grief and Homemade Accelerators

What keeps this 7/10 mystery entirely engaging is how it wraps up its cosmic threads. Throughout The Boroughs, Sam is plagued by what he believes are painful, grief-fueled hallucinations of his late wife. In a great sci-fi twist, it’s revealed that he was actually receiving telepathic SOS distress signals from the Mother alien, who experiences time non-linearly. She doesn’t want to be a corporate fountain of youth; she is suffering and simply wants to die.

The senior residents coordinate a massive breakout, utilizing Sam’s practical engineering background. Using a makeshift particle accelerator that his daughter Claire helps him tune so it doesn’t instantly blow the community’s electrical fuse box. Sam creates a weapon powerful enough to pin the Immortals in place and wipe out a massive portion of Blaine’s security force.

Ultimately, the team guides the willing Mother deep into the tunnels, where she spontaneously combusts, taking her remaining children, Blaine, and the entire corrupt infrastructure down into the dirt with her.

What is the core mystery in The Boroughs on Netflix?

A promo poster used in the FAQ section of The Boroughs Review showing Wally and Sam in their laboratory goggles protecting themselves from the alien DNA experiment.

The series follows a group of retirement home residents who discover that the facility’s management is running an underground operation harvesting human spinal fluid to sustain their own immortality via a captured alien lifeform.

Who plays Sam Cooper in the 2026 series The Boroughs?

The Boroughs Review FAQ: A promotional poster of a terrifying alien hand trapped inside a kitchen oven.

The main protagonist, Sam Cooper, a brilliant, grumpy retired engineer who uncovers the cosmic conspiracy is played by veteran actor Alfred Molina.

How do the villains stay young in The Boroughs review?

A promotional poster of The Boroughs showing the entire ensemble cast together for the final section of The Boroughs Review.

The villains maintain their youth by consuming the blood of a captive “Mother” alien. To keep the Mother alive, they use caged alien creatures to harvest spinal fluid from the elderly residents of the retirement village.

Continue the Investigation

If the eerie, dark-suburb undertones of this The Boroughs Review kept your pulse moving, dive into these alternate files in our suspense archive:

Let’s talk in the comments: If a sci-fi series leaves its core answers to a homemade gadget built out of spare parts, does it feel like a satisfying ’80s throwback, or does it take you out of the suspense? Drop your verdict below!


Disclaimer: This blog is for informational and entertainment purposes only. All copyrights and trademarks for the TV shows, films, and other media referenced are the property of their respective owners. This blog aims to provide original commentary and insights and claims no ownership over third-party content.

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