Warning: SPOILERS lie ahead for Resident Alien season 4, episode 7, “Daddy Issues”!

Harry has finally found a way to get his alien essence back, though it’s coming with an unwanted family reunion inResident Alienseason 4. In the wake of escaping from the Greys and returning to Earth,Alan Tudyk’s protagonistfound he no longer had the ability to transform into his alien form, believing that the Greys had installed some form of inhibitor. As he begins to come to terms with being a human, Harry is taken by the Galactic Housing Council, where he is put on trial for sabotaging multiple Grey missions, including stopping the Yellowstone explosion and saving Kate’s baby.

Stephen Root’s Ed looking judgingly as Alan Tudyk’s Harry cleans up a mess at the diner in Resident Alien season 4

Learning that the Greys stole his alien essence and that the Council has it, Harry makes a deal with the Federation to get it back to hunt down and kill the Mantid on Earth, or give over his soul to the Greys. Though they agree to the deal, they turn Harry’s essence over to a conservator, revealed to be Harry’s alien father, much to his chagrin.Resident Alienseason 4, episode 7subsequently follows the two back to Earth, where Harry has to find a way to get his essence from his disapproving father before it’s too late.

Ahead of the episode’s premiere,ScreenRantinterviewed Stephen Root to discussResident Alienseason 4, episode 7, “Daddy Issues”. The guest star opened up about continuing his two-decade-plus trend of getting to work with Alan Tudyk, including the wild ways they depicted their characters' alien behaviors, as well as the complicated relationship between Harry and his father, and how his return will impact the character going forward. He also reflects on his recent run playing darker characters, and his upcomingKing of the Hillreturn.

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Root & Tudyk Have Stayed In Each Other’s Circles For Over 20 Years

“…I Was So Happy To Get A Call From Him…”

While Root is no stranger to suchwacky comedies asResident Alien, one film that laid the foundation for the Emmy nominee’s appearance on the showwas that of 2004’sDodgeball: A True Underdog Story, in which he found himself first working with Tudyk. Not only did that movie see the two work together, they would even later reunite in Tudyk’s comedy seriesCon Man, which he wrote, directed and starred in, as the two “have kept in touch over the years” and he was then “so happy to get a call from him” forResident Alien.

“‘What do you think, dad?’,” Root recalls Tudyk asking him. “And I went, ‘Yes, alien dad? Yes, I’m in!’ I was very happy. I happened to be pretty busy this year, and it was going to be hard to slip it in between a couple of other projects, but we made it happen, because I love Alan.”

I got to work a lot with Alan, which made me happy.

After praising his love for the show, which he has “always watched since the beginning”,Root also recallsResident Alienseason 4 being a reunion with Alice Wetterlund, as the two worked together on the 2016 comedyMike and Dave Need Wedding Dates. Though acknowledging “I didn’t really get to work with everybody”, as his character’s arc was mostly time spent between Ed and Harry, he had a very fond memory of his experience with the show, feeling it “was great to see everybody” and praising his co-stars as being “tremendous actors”.

Root Also Missed Out On The Show’s Prosthetics Work

With Ed being one of the few members of Harry’s species to appear in the show, the latest episode ofResident Alienreveals more about Harry’s past, including a heated conversation regarding the protagonist’s late brother, in which they returned to their native language. Though the show’s past has seen Tudyk’s character speaking in his native tongue,it pretty much always comes across as a collection of random sounds, being unclear just how his language actually works.

When asked about talking in Harry and Ed’s language, Root reveals that these sequences are almost entirely improvised, with Tudyk telling him “You’re going to make something up, and I’m going to attempt to reproduce it”. This led to the pair trying out “a couple of different ones” for how to pronounce the late brother’s name,which led to the longer one seen in the episode, which Root found “was more fun for [Tudyk] to try to get it together”.

“And Alan came up with a couple of really nice, I think they were, ad libs,” Root recalled. “I can’t remember from the script, just as he gets up from the floor, ‘Oh, I didn’t remember I was this tall.’ So he came up with a couple of great things. I have to give him credit for it.”

Though Root “didn’t really get to use the [alien] head” of Ed in his natural form,he did find he was “very happy” to get to utilize the “tremendous alien hands” from the show’s production team, as he is “the biggest nerd ever”. The Emmy nominee went on to praise “the whole conceit of the show”, particularly for how “it’s gotten bigger” with its arcs, feeling it’s “widened out” since its debut and “that’s only to its benefit”.

Ed’s Return Reminds Harry About The “Different Ethics Systems” Between Humans & Aliens

As indicated byResident Alienseason 4, episode 6’s ending, episode 7 sees the relationship between Ed and Harry quite strained, with “the crux of the episode” seeing Root’s character reminding Tudyk there’s a major difference between aliens and humans as “they’re two different ethics systems"and Ed wants Harry to “stop all this nonsense and kill everybody”. Much to his father’s dismay, though, Harry is “more human than alien” by the point of season 4, which Root found was “a nice dichotomy” to get to play through the episode.

Initially agreeing to Ed’s deal to kill one human in exchange for his alien essence, episode 7’s ending delivers something of a twist when he brings a tied-up Max to Harry’s cabin to be killed, given he can see aliens,only for Harry to instead stab and kill his father with a fireplace poker. Humorously acknowledging the mix of tones in his death scene, particularly since “you’re still seeing fratricide”, Root recalls filming the scene as being “bizarre”, but also “really well-staged and well-done”, praising the show for having “great stunt people”.

“But for me, it was flailing after being dead,” Root said with a chuckle. “I felt like I was in a ’60s movie going, ‘[Flails arms and makes gibberish sounds].’ But it was fun, it was great and well-written, well-done by the stunt guys. I’ve got a great picture of my alien form with something in it that Alan sent me. [Chuckles]”

He was further amazed at the “absolutely incredible” work the visual effects team behindResident Alienput into the show,recalling “we didn’t shoot the episode that long ago”, but that “there was a lot of work to be done” in the wake of wrapping production, feeling the team “did a great job” with it.

Root Loves Finding “Some Kind Of Humanity” Behind His Darker Characters

One Show, In Particular, Sticks Out To Him As Having The Perfect Creative Force Driving It

Though having first found success with more comedic characters in the likes ofOffice Space,DodgeballandKing of the Hill, the past decade has really seen Root become better known for his work playing darker characters,namely Jim Hudson inJordan Peele’sGet Outand Fuches in Bill Hader’sBarry. Laughing as he recognizes that there’s no humanity inResident Alien’s Ed, as “he was probably treated the same way by his alien dad that he treats Harry”, he explains that the reason behind his shift to dark characters is “all about the script, and the people who are doing it”.

“The script is No. 1,” Root expressed. “If the script is phenomenal, and then they get phenomenal actors to do it, then you got something going. If you have got a mediocre script and great actors, it’s still not going to be great, but if you got both of them, it’s going to be exciting.”

I thought that was the best decision he made.

It was this combo that really soldRoot on starring inBarry, praising the HBO show for how it"walked the line of comedy and heavy drama and violence within that show”. As the Emmy nominee recalled, Hader “made it a point of never making the violence funny”, acknowledging “there’s real violence in this show” and that there is plenty of comedy to be found, but “they’re not going to be mixed”.

“So the reason, of course, to take that show is the writing and the people, and it’s the same with most of the work that I do now,” Root explained. “It was certainly true in this show, because I love the show, love the actors on the show, I thought this episode was tremendously well-written, and I didn’t mind having no redeeming qualities.”

Returning To King Of The Hill Was A Family Affair For Root & Co.

The Show Also Updates The Classic Sitcom In Some Major Ways

Looking beyond hisResident Alienstint, Root also hastheKing of the Hillrevivalon the horizon, with season 14 of the Mike Judge and Greg Daniels-created sitcom back on August 4 and has Root reprising his role of Bill Dauterive. Though it’s been 15 years since the show was last on the air,Root found it “was really easy to step back into that character"after having played him in “200 shows before this”.

I don’t think I’ll ever get rid of [in character’s voice] William Fontaine de La Tour Dauterive. I think he’ll always be in there.

Though being careful not to share too much about the storylines in the new episodes, Root praised showrunner Saladin K. Patterson formaking it “a contemporary show with problems that everybody dealt with through COVID”, feeling that the pandemic “changed everybody’s life a little bit”, both in real life, and in the show. As Root shared, this includes Bobby now being 22 and “has got his own business”, while Hank and Peg “have been through not living in the United States for a while”, and as such are processing how the country changed while they were gone.

“Obviously, we’ve had some people pass that did voices on the show, and that was hard,” Root lamented. “But most of the family is intact at this point, and even a couple of people that have passed are being done by people within the show. So, it still feels like a family thing for us, and we’re so happy to do it.”

Check out our previousResident Alienseason 4 interviews with:

New episodes ofResident Alienseason 4 air Fridays at 11 p.m. on SYFY and USA Network!

Resident Alien

Cast

A television adaptation of the comic book series, Resident Alien is a sci-fi comedy that stars Alan Tudyk as an alien who crashes on Earth with one mission - destroy humanity to save the planet. When Tudyk’s character takes the identity of a doctor, he arrives at a small town and begins to act the role preparing his plan. As time passes, he develops human emotions against his will - but his plans are further complicated when he meets the son of the mayor - who can see his actual appearance.