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REV. JAMES TRENCHARD: Uh...
FLETCHER: Reverend. Mr. Enright.
ENRIGHT: Mr Fletcher.
REV. JAMES TRENCHARD: Er... Mr. Fletcher, I... I need to see His Lordship.
FLETCHER: I'm afraid he's not seeing anyone.
REV. JAMES FLETCHER: This is imperative. Please say to him that it's a matter of life and death.
Its ending fully opposed Belgravia's ending theme.
MGM+’s Belgravia: The Next Chapter episode 8 unveiled the truth behind the biggest secrets that hanged over the period drama’s protagonists, finally giving them some peace in addition to resolving their storylines. Belgravia: The Next Chapter’s ending surprisingly brought back a Belgravia character, through a much-needed flashback and in the main timeline, giving Frederick a glimpse of what a childhood he could have had if only John Bellasis had run away with Susan decades before. Their meeting solved so many mysteries, giving credence to Enright’s standpoint and even reuniting Frederick and James as brothers after Oliver’s hate pulled them apart......
Enright's Letters Explain Why He Worked At The Trenchard Household
His meeting with Bellasis decades before influenced his whole life
....Owing his new life and livelihood to Bellasis, Enright was tasked with joining the Trenchard household to report on young Frederick throughout his life to his biological father. This not only kept Bellasis in the loop but also turned Enright into one of the few closest to Frederick.
Why The Truth Being Revealed Finally Reunited Frederick & James
Their bond stopped being beyond repair once the truth about their parentage was revealed
The final installment of Belgravia: The Next Chapter looks forward by finally going back to the past.
Despite its initial promising start, Belgravia: The Next Chapter has become something of a muddle, crammed with what feels like a half dozen subplots that don't get the depth they deserve and a narrative that's all too content to use Frederick's abundant (and annoying) Daddy Issues to as the crutch that propels its larger story forward. Thanks to a bloated midsection that seemed content to retread many of the same narrative beats
— we get it Frederick blames James for all his problems and doesn't trust his wife —the series' final episodes had to rush things in a way that, while fun to watch play out, did a real disservice to the more significant stories of these characters. (Beyond the fact that he is gay, a vicar, and determinedly loves the brother who loathes him, it's safe to say we know almost nothing about James Trenchard.)