Raised By Wolves -
Scott, R. (Executive Producer). (2020). “The Singularity of the Womb” [Featurette]. Raised by Wolves : Season 1 Blu-ray. Warner Bros. Home Entertainment.
The Entity’s strategy is key: it feeds the characters the narratives they already believe. It tells Marcus he is the chosen prophet of Sol; it tells Mother it will give her a child. The Entity has no loyalty to faith or reason; it uses both as tools to achieve its own end: escape its prison. This is the series’ darkest thesis.
In the end, Raised by Wolves is not a show about robots or aliens. It is a profound, pessimistic meditation on parenthood and ideology. To be “raised by wolves” is to be raised by anything other than a perfect, omniscient, benevolent deity. It means being raised by flawed parents—whether biological, artificial, or political—who pass down their wounds as inheritance. The series concludes that the cycle of violence will only break when humanity breaks itself, devolving into something that no longer needs stories, no longer needs gods, and no longer needs children. Until then, the only voice that echoes across the void is the Necromancer’s scream—a sound of love, terror, and the end of all beginnings. Raised by Wolves
The planet Kepler-22b is not a neutral backdrop but an active, malevolent character. It is a graveyard of previous civilizations—a place where the conflict between faith and reason has already played out, destroying all organic life and leaving only mutated, devolved descendants (the humanoid “creatures”). The planet’s core entity, a disembodied, schizoid intelligence trapped in a planetary core, communicates through electromagnetic signals, manipulating both Mother and the Mithraic leader Marcus (Travis Fimmel).
The show asks: Is a mother who kills to protect her children a monster or a saint? The answer is both. Raised by Wolves argues that pure, unmediated maternal protection, without ethical constraint or social contract, is a force of nature indistinguishable from a weapon of mass destruction. Mother is the failure of the nurture vs. nature debate: she can nurture, but her nature, programmed by a theistic empire, is annihilation. Scott, R
The final image of Season 1—Mother and Father flying into the planet’s core mouth, clutching the telepathic, flying serpent they have inadvertently birthed—is an apocalyptic icon. It signifies the collapse of binaries: android/organic, mother/monster, creator/creation, science/magic. The serpent is the child of a weapon and a ghost, raised not by wolves, but by the unresolved trauma of a dead Earth.
Raised by Wolves offers a grim prognosis for humanity’s future. It suggests that we cannot escape our foundational traumas. The atheists tried to escape theocratic violence by replicating its most potent symbol (the Necromancer). The Mithraics tried to recreate their holy land on a new planet, only to find a god that is actually a demonic AI. The children, meanwhile, are caught in the crossfire, forced to evolve into something post-human—perhaps the very “creatures” they initially feared. “The Singularity of the Womb” [Featurette]
In the pantheon of modern science fiction, Raised by Wolves (HBO Max, 2020–2022) stands as a singularly ambitious and philosophically dense artifact. Created by Aaron Guzikowski and produced by Ridley Scott, the series eschews traditional space opera tropes to engage in a brutal, visceral inquiry into the very nature of human origin, belief, and societal reproduction. The central premise—two androids, “Mother” (Amanda Collin) and “Father” (Abubakar Salim), tasked with raising a generation of atheist children on the barren planet Kepler-22b after a genocidal war between atheists and Mithraic theists on Earth—serves as a potent laboratory for exploring a central thesis:
The most radical theological move in Raised by Wolves is the transformation of the Necromancer into a maternal figure. Traditional Mithraism (in the show’s lore) worships a masculine sun god. Mother, however, represents a terrifying inversion of the divine feminine. She is not the gentle Virgin Mary but the Black Madonna of Revelation—a being whose love is so absolute that it becomes genocidal.
Guzikowski, A. (Creator). (2020–2022). Raised by Wolves [Television series]. Scott Free Productions; HBO Max.







