To Right the Wrongs of Many
Okay, now is when I don’t know what to write.
It makes sense that the final battle plays out and the war with Neolution wraps up about halfway through the episode. That’s never really what this show’s been about, after all, and once we’ve dealt with the business of dispatching the villains we can spend time on what this series has actually been about all along, which is the lives and relationships of the four (five?) main identical women at the story’s center. Actually, the first half does that as well, with a laser focus in on the connection shared by actual twins Sarah and Helena. Art eventually gets in on the action as well, after first dealing with minor villain and major thorn in his side Detective Enger (it’s really satisfying; she is the Absolute Worst), but the two major antagonists have to be taken out by Sarah and Helena themselves. Coady comes in at Helena with yet more mind games, but she has no power over Helena anymore. The connection she has with her twin has reawakened the fight in Helena, and turns out when Helena’s got fight she can murder a person while literally about to give birth. Sarah gets faced with a demon of her own, the man behind the (both figurative and in this case literal) curtain, the man who calls himself Westmoreland. He similarly tries to play mind games with her, and she similarly holds on to her connection with her twin to fight him off. And then things all go a bit sideways and some violence breaks out. Sarah shoots the guy, and then nearly gets suffocated. But the most important bit is what happens next. That man is responsible for the suffering of Sarah, all of her sisters, and so many more around the world. Poor squeamish Sarah bashes the guy’s head in with a metal canister. She doesn’t even flinch.
It’s all about cycles. Cycles of violence and manipulation and abuse of power. Helena puts an end to letting people tell her who she is, and Sarah puts an end to running. Or rather, that’s what that was supposed to be for her. More on that in a minute. Because first is another, which is a reminder of how the women in this weird extended family take care of each other, in a supremely well-edited sequence. We cut back and forth between the past and the present in a way that makes them almost blur together. I’ve mentioned before while watching other shows that I absolutely hate birth scenes because they’re drawn out, uncomfortable to watch, and usually go in for a sort of bland sentimentality designed to trick the audience into an emotion based on what we’ve been conditioned to feel by real life in those circumstances without ever really contributing to the story or the characters or being about anything at all. I’ve also mentioned that there are a small handful of exceptions. This is very specifically the exception I was talking about. This scene is about Sarah and Helena and their crazy intense connection. It’s about how Sarah feels the loss of her mother, and it’s about how she had hoped that her decision to have Kira would turn her life around, break her out of her own cycles of fucking up, but it didn’t and she just turned out to be a pretty not great mother. It’s about a fresh start and it’s about how there’s really no such thing as a fresh start. Sarah had hoped, years ago, that her decision to have that baby would turn her life around and break her out of her own cycle of fucking up. It didn’t. But now, everyone again is hoping that this marks a new chapter in Helena’s life, one free of violence and suffering. And it just might.
And all of that is just the first half of the episode. Because the second half lets us just live in their world, see what life looks like for them after the madness has died down. It’s not happily ever after. (Fun fact, everything wrapped up and uncomplicated happy endings for everyone is another pet peeve of mine in storytelling.) Life is messy, and stuff is complicated. Killing the monster didn’t cure Sarah’s restlessness. If anything, it brought it back. At least when they had a war to fight, she had something to fight against. Now she’s lost at sea again. In the past, this probably would have been the cue to run away and do some self-destructive behavior. That’s not an option now. So she does some different self-sabotaging, skips her GED test and starts pushing people away. And they don’t let her. It’s not neat. It’s slow and it’s messy. It’s not about happily ever after, it’s about the idea that she’s trying, and she’s going to mess it up, but she’s got a whole team full of people now to pull her up and also call her on her shit. Sarah’s still got her demons, but she’s better than she was at the start of the series when she stepped of that train. She and Kira and Felix will figure the rest out together, with her sisters at her back when she needs a little extra help.
Lab Notes:
Too long. So sorry. So many things I didn’t even talk about. This is what happens when I’m watching a super high quality show. I’ll talk forever.
"How could you let a woman in labor escape!" Okay, but it was Helena.
"You're a shitty partner, Enger." Again, so satisfying.
Sarah spends a fair few minutes of this episode in a video game stealth section.
"You never caged us. Not me and Helena."
I swear, it's like Sarah's never seen a horror movie in her life.
Donnie's now in the business of concrete floors. Among other things. But I assume that’s a man who knows his concrete.
Tony lives in Cleveland.
"It's just a human." Felix, you are the worst.
Cosima immediately turns around and hands off to Delphine. "I don't want to hurt you,” she explains to the baby, as one might talk to a full grown adult. Look, that whole thing is Things Cosima and I have in common.
"It's always when I eat, he poops."
The show was very kind to sneak in one more opportunity for me to joke about Delphine being in love with Sarah.
Sarah and Alison are always going to have the sort of relationship where they get under each other’s skin and argue. But that’s part of the strength of the very specific relationship dynamic that they have.
Oh, every single person at that party has fantastic barbecue fashion.
"There's no one left to fight, and I'm still a shit mum."
"Every time I look, the baby is eating sand. I turn around, sand. Where does this sand come from? I don't know, so I let them eat it."
It’s fitting that Rachel shares her last scene with Felix. He is in many ways, Leda’s handler. He manages to have a meaningful and unique relationship with each and every one of them. There was no way she could face the others, not after everything that had happened, but she still became one of them in spirit at least with the olive branch of everything Cosima needed to cure them all.












