Milchick has raised some thermostats and eyebrows in my home as well. What a force. Also those shots from the marching band crotch level were intense... very effective.
I was praying for her to save Mark S - and as soon as she did, I said, "now SHE can handle herself in this fight!" And I'll be damned if she didn't do exactly that. So glad Gwendoline got another major fight scene here. That RULED.
So it's discussed in the "after the episode" featurette but I want to highlight the beauty of the four part/four person Mark/Gemma transition scenes.
First we have Mark Scout finally find his wife, but she's an innie. It's tragic that Mark finally finds her, but she isn't her.
Then we get the true reunion. Mark Scout finally finds his wife Gemma. It's what he's been looking for the entire series. But it's tragic that w don't have time to explain or discuss anything.
Then we get two strangers. Mark S and Ms Casey. Sure they're familiar with each other, but they don't really know each other. It's a reminder of how tragic things were in season one, so close and yet so far.
And finally we get the reverse. Mark S and Gemma. Mark S dud his duty and saved Mark Scout's wife. But that isn't his wife. Tragically he can't save the one he loves. Best he can do is run away with Helly, but they have nowhere to actually run.
So while watching, Helly suddenly appears from the elevator and I wonder. She disappears during the vending machine moment and I have to wonder where she is.
I think it's possible, but looking at the dialogue and how she reacts, it's definitely Helly R.
I don't know if this episode could satisfy my strong desire to just understand what exactly Lumon is doing here. The most dissatisfying thing is they didn't really answer what's going on with Cold Harbor. But aside from that I loved this season.
Like yes, more implications about Cold Harbor are confirmed. There seems to be a connection between Lumon and their aim to remove tragic memories, hence their approval when Gemma doesn't react emotionally to dismantling the baby crib. I can even see a future back story episode where Gemma is talking to the doctor character speculating about "what if you forget all the painful moments of your life?" before she is eventually abducted (or maybe she willingly chose to be severed at first?)
Then there's the whole, who is outtie Irving talking to? I speculate it's the Whole Mind Collective. I think we might see outtie Irving and outtie Burt again at some point, but have no idea what they'll be up to next.
Dylan had a satisfying end to this season, albeit kind of a repeat ending of last season. I'm pretty sure next season is going to be a search for meaning for him without his wife, without his work, and without anymore perks for them to lord over him.
I still don't know what the fuck James Eagan is doing though. I could have sworn they were trying to resurrect Kier, or give James a new body using Cold Harbor somehow, but there's so many questions as to why he's so interested in witnessing whether Gemma is so thoroughly a blank slate inside that room. Like, why? Why does James need her to be a blank slate with no memories? Is he trying to erase past sins like Burt? Are you developing an Endless Sunshine of the Spotless Mind kind of technology to sell to the masses? For the love of God, Ben Stiller, just tell me!! Lol.
And then we get to the climax, where Mark S decides to simply stay with Helly R. (or Helly E. As she indicates to Milchick in last episode). They built up to this beautifully. The conversation/confrontation between Mark Scout and Mark S. at the beginning was brilliantly written and I love how they portrayed it. It perfectly encapsulates the relationship the outties have with their innies. We've been rooting for Mark Scout finding and saving his wife this entire season, but the argument Mark S. makes is very compelling and in all honesty I don't blame Mark S. for sort of cutting it both ways at the end there. He saves his outtie's wife, but takes his outtie's time/life in exchange.
It's such a beautiful turn of events where Mark S. turns the tables on the outties and in a way says, "Y'know, you guys on the outside get to call all the shots and say what's important...but for once in my life I'm going to call the shots, I'm going to say what's important, and now, you all have to wait on us on the inside."
Its an interesting plot twist. And yeah, I've already seen the conversations elsewhere saying "But where will they go? This is such teenage romance schtick." Its a valid criticism, but I honestly think it's beautiful. From a practical standpoint though, yeah, the innie's are kind of in between a rock and a hard place. I like the theory that the innies will refuse to leave the building until more demands are met. Perhaps Mark S. will demand Helena never be allowed to exist again and Helly will be given complete control over her body...in exchange for him returning to be Mark Scout forever. Only for the reintegration to kick in fully once he finally leaves.
I theorize that Gemma will immediately go to the authorities and we'll see a sociopolitical drama unfold where Lumon tries to once again put out a PR Marketing dumpster fire. Or she'll be sent in to get Mark S. to compromise somehow so she can get her husband back.
Its an amazing show, but damn do I hate how it's become a more modern day Lost. I'm a selfish little plot pig and just want my questions answered now, oink oink, lol.
A great episode to end the season, though it did confirm my suspicions that the writing has been heavily padded. If they had tried to build up to this episode any more than it would have likely spoiled some of the big moments and reveals, so instead they had to have several episodes (including one that was egregiously short) where very little happened to tread water until the finale. To distract from that, they tried to make those episodes as visually interesting as possible. I predict that once future seasons have aired, it will become quite obvious that the finale of this season should not have been a finale at all but rather the culmination of a second act coming in somewhere around the episode 7 - 8 mark.
I can't believe I'm reading all these comments about this season being "padded". I've watched through the whole season again this week in advance of the finale and I just couldn't disagree more. We gained CRUCIAL information and back story throughout. Every episode was riveting. I don't get where everyone's coming from.
The sweet vitriol episode built out the world in a really interesting and character-centered way, but it interrupted a really important development that was moving the story forward so it felt like slamming on the breaks
If that episode had come after the return of Irving, Dillan, and Hellena instead of right after Mark's ayahuasca trip, it wouldn't have felt quite so jarring.
It's a shame because I really liked that episode, I just couldn't enjoy it as much because I was dying to know what happened with Mark (I'm still kind of dying for more details)
I completely agree that there was no padding. The only thing close is the setup in episode 9, in order to give episode 10 the flow it needed.
For example if we look at Gwendolyn Christie's Goat caretaker character we could have used a filler episode to better show her journey. If we watch her scenes back to back it isn't surprising she turned on Drummond. We could have used an episode where Mark is just wandering and talking to her again as a reminder. Unfortunately there isn't time after her first appearance where that could have happened.
Similarly Cobel is absent for half the season. We could have used something to keep her story alive, but instead we get a one episode character dump. That isn't a mistake. Slowly drip feeding her story is an option, but the one episode build up and reveal was an excellent choice.
I’ve watched through the whole season again this week in advance of the finale and I just couldn’t disagree more.
This is a misleading way to form an opinion on pacing, because this season didn't release in a binge watch format. Apple have milked 3 months worth of subscription fees from their audience between the airing of the first episode way back in January and the finale in the latter half of March. The vast majority of paying viewers have been watching from week to week and they've maintained their subscription throughout that entire period.
Hell yeah, after several slow episodes in this season, we are finally advancing with the story!
🍿(⌐■‿■)🍿
Certified Milchick 🏃🏿➡️🏃🏿➡️🏃🏿➡️
My thoughts about rentegration not being white and black solution were correct, but it's a shame we haven't seen any reintegrated Mark in this season.
Mark S and Helly might have run into the sunset cold LEDs, but sadly there will be no honeymoon for them.
Next season's premiere must be stronger than this one, because they can't pull everything under the rug, and return to the previous status quo, like they partially did in this season.
Maybe third season should be the last one, to avoid dragging the story.
They have said they have a path and ultimate end in mind - let them tell the story they set out to tell. It's a rare case where they know where this is going, unlike LOST where they didn't already know the answer to questions they were asking. It won't drag.
Not stoked about cold harbor. Answers no questions, has some weird plot points, and just a super unsatisfying ending. What was the lead in earlier seasons asking if Gemma was more afraid of suffocating or drowning. Also 75 minutes long!? For what? Meh.
The question about drowning might have just been a misdirect for the audience, I suppose? The purpose of the actual Cold Harbor test is clear, though, they present her with a task of dismantling a baby crib, essentially giving up on the dream of motherhood that Outie Gemma had, yet their analytics show she’s feeling no pain about it, meaning their quest to separate a human completely from their trauma has worked. There’s a reason an earlier line mentions freedom from pain.
I’m left uncertain about why they wanted specifically to get ready of her after this test, though. Is that really the biggest pain they could test for? Is there a limit on innie instances? Or is it again some bullshit Kier limitation that’s part of their rituals?
Also seems like there's more of a backstory with Lumon possibly creating Gemma's infertility to traumatize her and then see if they can reverse the trauma completely via the Severance procedure.
I hope not, it would be repetitive if they kept doing that, and would get old if they reused that twist. Kinda like the "who's actually a Cylon" from Battlestar Galactica after the second or third reveal.
I agree, I never sensed Helena this episode. My hackles were raised earlier in the season, but I didn't detect any thing this time. I don't think Helena would have made the same choices Helly just did.
Cobel has been highly invested in Mark. Last season, she basically proved out what Drummond proved this season - that they showed no emotion and no personal connection, the two spouses put face to face; this time, it was Gemma only, showing no emotion in the face of her miscarriage. But Cobel did it covertly, and wasn't sharing results with the company (yet). She's helping Mark for now, but I suspect she orchestrated Mark and Gemma's entire hell 2 years back. She feels guilt, and she worked and lived with Mark. Complex emotions. But she probably genuinely cares in her twisted way.
So my theory is that Helena setup Petey reintegration in order to get Petey out of the picture.
I think Helena, in an attempt to win her father's respect/attention/affection/etc tried to be fully involved with "Project Mark". However Jame refused and Helena was sidelined. I think Helena then setup Petey finding a way to reintegrate, knowing it would get him kicked off the project. Once Petey was off the project Helena would volunteer for Severance to replace Petey, both putting her on the the biggest project they had and furthering the severance procedure.
As a result I think Helena is aware of reintegrate and could reintegrate, but given it's current death track record, isn't likely to do so, yet.
I suspect she knows where the doctor is and will attempt it in a future season, but hasn't yet.
So I guess next season Mark and Helly are going to be hiding out on the severed floor while Devon and Gemma team up to break him out?
Now that the season is over, what was with all the babies in the opening credits? Was that just because of the infertility backstory, or maybe they're setting that up for something else? I was certain that there would be weird baby clones of the severed employees revealed at some point this season
I think Jame Eagan trying to make babies in whom he sees Kier is probably a good read. The baby in the opening credits seems to have Kier's face, which in a metaphorical sense is Jame's goal. The innies are also "babies" in a sense, and Jame says he sees Kier in Helly R, so that's another "baby" with Kier in them (although this one is a stretch because they're more like adolescents this season). Third, I guess it contrasts Kier with Dieter, who spilled his lineage in the forest rather than procreate and pass it on.
The final scene of Mark S and Helly R running down the hall panicked and giddy into a freeze frame zoom quotes Truffaut's The 400 Blows. In that film and several that followed, the character of Antoine Doinel, age 14, represents a younger facet of the director himself. He is an innie Truffaut, if you will, coming of age.
In the climax, the rebellious delinquent Doinel escapes from the reform school to which he has been confined and runs to the ocean. He looks around, without any obvious plan for what to do next, before looking towards camera in a freeze frame zoom that encompasses the uncertainty of his future from here.
On a less literal level, I wonder whether the freeze-frame and fade to red connects back to (outie) Mark and Devon's original after-image plan. We get a fading after-image of Mark S and Helly R and the implied question: "Who is alive?" Besides the literal sense when it referenced Gemma, that's obviously a question that goes to the heart of the show. Who is alive?
It's also the ending of The Graduate and I need to mention it here because it's one of the rare references that I actually saw myself (so many references in this *slaps roof*).
The very ending of Mark S going away with Helly R was beyond stupid of him.
I get that he doesn't want to "die". I get that he loves Helly R. What Mark S just did set himself up to be in Mark Scout's state of tragedy before Mark Scout the took the job at Lumon before that Mark S gets destroyed forever.
There was nowhere for Mark S and Helly R to escape on the Severed Floor. They will be found, and quickly. With Cold Harbor done, there is no need for Helly R to be on the Severed Floor so she will never return as soon as Mark S and Helly R are found and Helly R is dragged back to the elevator to become Helena Egan again. So Mark S loses her making Mark S lose the love of his life, just like Mark Scout did when he lost Gemma.
Here's where the real hell begins. The Mark Scout/Gemma + Mark S/Gemma's brain process was interrupted (destroyed?) by Mark Scout on the black elevator floor. Except...... there's nothing preventing Lumon from simply wiping Mark S's memory by creating a NEW Mark S Innie! They even said in the episode that 24 Gemma Innies had been created, one for each "file"/room. So they can easily create new Mark S innie, put him in MDR, and drag Gemma back down to the basement again and force her through another 25 rooms. A new Gemma Innie is created in each one, so if they can create 25 before, 50 doesn't seem to be an issue. As for Mark Scout, they'll keep him in a prison somewhere just like they did with Gemma. Mark Scout will have no memory as NEW Mark S Innie and Lumon still gets the exact outcome they want from the first time around. Mark S is an idiot.
Original Mark S lost the love of his life, erased his own existence, and doomed Gemma and Mark Scout to hell on Earth trapped for the rest of their lives in prisons.
I'm cautiously optimistic there's something else Helly R and Mark S can do (or think they can do) and we just don't know where they're running to yet. Mark S knows his work is done, especially after what he did to Drummond, regardless of what he thinks about his outie's motivations. If you were at that exit stairwell (can he even use it? Helly couldn't 🤷) and you knew that life inside was 100% hopeless then surely you'd take your chances with your outie's reintegration.
OTC was a convenient plot development for making the situation more flexible and it wouldn't surprise me if we see another.
I’m cautiously optimistic there’s something else Helly R and Mark S can do (or think they can do) and we just don’t know where they’re running to yet.
If you were at that exit stairwell (can he even use it?)
If there is, the writers of the show are being completely disingenuous to the audience. How many episodes in Season 1 and Season 2 were spent showing us all the ways they couldn't escape the severed floor. Yes he could have used the stairway. They explored this in Season 1 where they are standing at the door and the innie walks out, then the innie "wakes up" inside the door again because the outie walked them back in.
Helly R tried to actually commit suicide in the elevator as a way to exit. If the writers suddenly come up with "oh yeah the secret door we've never tried that lets us have a happy ending together" then they've treated us all like idiots.
OTC was a convenient plot development for making the situation more flexible and it wouldn’t surprise me if we see another.
OTC was used more the Season 1 finale. Remember Dylan Innie "waking up" in his clothes closet at home? It was also used on the ORTBO.
I’m cautiously optimistic there’s something else Helly R and Mark S can do (or think they can do) and we just don’t know where they’re running to yet.
Wasn't it quite obvious that they were about to begin a revolution from within Lumon? Dylan just recruited like 50 people (and Helly was with him prior to that) and Mark just revolted against Drummond with the help of the batshit goat lady (who was already close to snapping prior to Mark's intervention).
Mark Scout didn't act like a loving husband in this finale. If I knew my wife was being held against her will and tortured (which Mark Scout did from what Cobel told him), I would give everything to get her out. Even my own life. He had that choice but never offered it.
Mark Scout could have offered Mark S the body forever. So instead of Mark S "dying" because a lack of a severed floor, it would be Mark Scout. How? Permanent OTC.
Mark Scout didn't know that Cobel was the inventor of Severed technology, but Mark Scout could have asked Cobel if there would be a way to make OTC permanent. Cobel would have been able to make that possible because she invented the technology and even OTC. Heck, once both Mark Scout and Mark S knew that permament OTC was on the table, Mark S could have even offered Helly R permanent OTC. Mark S and Helly R could have had a life together and Gemma would have been freed.
If the cost of freeing my wife was my life, I'd take it immediate without a second thought. Mark Scout didn't.