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Well, this is it. The end of our True Blood run. We’ve had a great time and I feel like the series finale was well-deserved and thought out. Let’s get started!

Assisted Suicide

We open this episode with Sookie and Bill inside her home talking through his decision to die. Bill explains that he visited his family in the cemetery and that his memorial is basically a lie. He is not buried there with his family, but it says he is. Sookie slowly begins to understand why Bill is asking her to let him die, telling her about how she won’t be able to live a normal life with him around.

Sookie seems to really get it and Bill asks her if she would kill him with her light. This plan would afford both of them what they want. Bill will be out of her life so that she can move on as per his hopes and Sookie will not be a fairy anymore – something she has been wishing for the entire series. Sookie is really upset by this proposition and asks Bill to leave.

New Blood

Eric and Pam formulate a plan to free Sarah, feeding her Pam’s blood so that they may find her again, and kill Gus. Eric plans to steal the idea for New Blood and get rich off of it himself. It turns out to be pretty easy when Eric and Pam kill Gus’ men and burn Gus alive in a tunnel as he goes after Sarah.

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TrueBloodS7E10 Eric telling Sarah his plan to release her

Pam finds Sarah at an amusement park and Sarah begs Pam to turn her into a vampire. This is laughable. Worst idea ever. Pam declines and feeds off Sarah to “vaccinate” herself.

A Marriage

Jessica goes over to Bill’s with Hoyt and makes amends with the fact that Bill has chosen to die. Bill asks Hoyt if Jessica is the reason he has decided to stay in Bon Temps. When Hoyt confirms, Bill asks if he ever intends to marry Jessica.

This tailspins into the impromptu wedding of Jessica and Hoyt where Bill is able to walk his daughter down the aisle before his death. It’s all very sweet but rushed. I mean, I guess you’re not legally married so there are no repercussions, but that was fast (especially for Hoyt – who has no memory of their past relationship).

TrueBloodS7E10 Jessica and Hoyt kissing at their wedding

Sookie speaks with Jason at his home about Bill’s proposition of her killing him. Jason doesn’t give advice and just listens. Sookie lets Jason know that Bridgette likes him – she listened to her thoughts. Sookie gives her blessing even though Jason says he definitely won’t be a girlfriend fucker again. Sookie brings up the fact that they just left Jessica and Hoyt’s wedding so Bridgette definitely isn’t Hoyt’s girlfriend.

At the wedding, Sookie heard Bill’s thoughts about how he wished a normal life for Sookie because he loves her. He wishes Sookie could experience what Jessica and Hoyt have. Sookie also goes and seeks advice from Reverend Daniels. It’s a nice talk where she comes to the decision to help Bill end his life and end her fairy powers.

TrueBloodS7E10 Sookie and Bill at the wedding

The End

Sookie has made arrangements with the cemetery and she meets Bill there at night. They open his empty coffin that was buried in his place when he didn’t return from war.

TrueBloodS7E10 Bill in the cemetery

Bill climbs inside the coffin and Sookie summons her light, but is unable to do it, realizing that being a fairy makes her who she is. She climbs into the coffin with Bill and uses a broken shovel handle to stake him. This scene is devastating and Sookie is covered in her lover’s guts and his mourning her loss.

TrueBloodS7E10 Sookie staking Bill

A Year Later

The episode flashes to a year later where we see Eric and Pam filming a commercial for New Blood. They prattle on about how they searched for Sarah Newlin after she swallowed the antidote to Hep-V but could never find her. However, they did find a drop of her blood from a broken windowpane as she escaped her sister’s home and they synthesized it into New Blood.

TrueBloodS7E10 Pam and Eric releasing New Blood

Three Years Later

We cut to Eric and Pam making huge money on New Blood on the stock market. This is a great ending to the pair of our favorite vamps.

That Next Thanksgiving

During the following Thanksgiving, we see Jason and Bridgette with their three children as well as a very pregnant Sookie.

At Fangtasia, Eric is on his throne and Pam is selling 60 seconds with Sarah Newlin and her blood for $100,000 a pop.

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TrueBloodS7E10 Pam with a wad of money

Sarah sees a vision of Steve who asks her what she’s thankful for, to which she replies “Nothing.” Everything that Sarah got was coming to her and I don’t feel bad about it.

TrueBloodS7E10 Pam in the foreground with Sarah chained up in the background

Back at the Thanksgiving feast, we get to see a lot of our favorite couples still together, making a toast with beers and New Bloods. Sookie hugs an unknown man who is clearly her husband as the screen fades to black.

TrueBloodS7E10 the Thanksgiving dinner scene

The Verdict

What a great ending to a seriously killer show. The love story of Sookie and Bill is finally complete and I enjoyed how Bill received closure for himself, even if he had to die. Sookie found her own way and did end up happily ever after, as did some of our other favorite characters. This show is one of the best vampire sagas to exist and you can’t convince me otherwise. There were only small places in the entire series where I felt bored. I was always throttled by the newest revelation and the story propelled itself. Bravo! 5 out of 5 stars (5 / 5)

Sarah Moon is a stone-cold sorceress from Tennessee whose interests include serial killers, horror fiction, and the newest dystopian blockbuster. Sarah holds an M.A. in English Literature and an M.F.A. in Fiction Writing. She works as an English professor as well as a cemeterian. Sarah is most likely to cover horror in print including prose, poetry, and graphic forms. You can find her on Instagram @crystalsnovelnook.

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Movies n TV

Fallout, The Beginning

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We’ve now reached the end of Fallout, season one. As I mentioned during the last review, I was heartily concerned that this show, like so many others, was going to drop the ball at the finale and ruin an entire season.

Thankfully, that wasn’t the case. This episode was everything it needed to be and more.

Let’s discuss.

The story

We begin our story with Maximus returning to the Brotherhood of Steel compound. He has a head, which he is claiming is the real head of Wilzig.

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I don’t know why he thought that was going to work.

Of course, it doesn’t. The elder cleric is about to kill Maximus until Dane says that they hurt their foot.

Because of this, the Brotherhood is sent out to get the head. Or rather, what’s inside of it. They head to the city run by Moldaver. This happens to be the same place Lucy and The Ghoul are headed.

Still from Amazon Prime's Fallout.

There, Lucy does manage to find her father. What she ends up finding is so much more than she wanted to find.

What worked

The first thing I have to discuss is how seamlessly the storylines of the series combined.

Each of our four main characters has been on their own journey. Lucy is trying to save her father. Maximus wants to become a knight. The Ghoul wants to find his family. Norm wants to know what’s going on in Vault 31.

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I sure wasn’t expecting all of these stories to come together in the way that they did. And to preserve the ending, I don’t dare say more. I will only say that yes, all four stories tie in perfectly with one another. By the end, two characters end up having the very same goal.

As I hinted before, I did not see the twist ending coming.

Ella Purnell in Fallout.

Yes, we might have guessed some things from the last episode. We of course guessed that Lucy’s dad was involved in some nefarious and probably sci-fi way. But the way this story twists at the end is nothing short of serpent-like. Which is why I cannot go into too much detail here. If you haven’t seen it yet, you need to experience it blind.

Finally, I can give the Fallout season finale the most important praise I can ever give a finale. It did its number one job, getting us excited for season two. We have answers, but now we have new and more exciting questions. And even better, we have a desire to see vengeance done.

What didn’t work

Now that the season is done, though, I can bring up something that bothered me through all eight episodes.

I don’t buy Lucy and Maximus’s relationship.

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Maybe because it’s rushed. Maybe because the two actors don’t have a lot of chemistry. Maybe it’s because I’m not sure even now either character could tell you a single thing about the other. There is just no spark between the two. So their love story feels tacked on. I honestly feel like their love story could have been removed from the show entirely and it would have no negative impact.

I also didn’t buy Dane’s confession. This is a minor spoiler, but it comes up early in the episode. Dane confesses that they hurt their foot so that they wouldn’t have to go into the wastelands.

And at first, I kept expecting Maximus to thank them later. I honestly thought that they were just lying to save Maximus’s life. But no, as it turns out, they were not.

But it just doesn’t make sense. The motivations don’t jive. I honestly think it would have been better for the story if they had lied to save Maximus’s life.

At least then there’d be one other Brother of Steel who had some nobility.

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In the end, this first season of Fallout was everything I could ask for. So far as I can tell, it was everything fans of the Fallout franchise could ask for. There wasn’t a bad episode in the bunch. Honestly, the only real complaint I had was that the season was so short.

I’ll be counting down the days to season two, and I hope you’ll be joining me then. Because war, war never changes.

5 out of 5 stars (5 / 5)

If you like my work, you can check out my latest science fiction/horror novel, Nova, launching on May 17th. Pre-orders are available now on Amazon.

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Movies n TV

Fallout, The Radio

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Episode seven of Amazon’s Fallout is the penultimate episode. This is often when a series goes off the rails and starts to mess things up. After being burned so often recently, I was apprehensive when this episode began.

Thankfully, this was a fear that did not come to pass. And so far, Fallout’s finale is doing just fine.

Lana the dog in Fallout.

The story

A lot happened in this episode, so we’re just going to skim over some of the more important storylines. We’ll start with Lucy and Maximus, in Vault 4. Lucy has discovered what she believes is a secret collection of monsters. But of course, it turns out that it’s simply people that the vault dwellers discovered and are trying to help heal. But her meddling around was enough for them to kick her out of the vault. With two weeks’ worth of food and water, of course.

But Maximus assumes they’re going to do something much worse. And so he steals their power coil to fight through the perfectly innocent people and save Lucy.

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Meanwhile, we dive further into The Ghoul’s past, when he was still Western star Cooper.

After attending a Communist meeting, he’s approached by Lee Moldaver. She suggests that Vault Tech is hiding something, something terrible. And she tells Cooper that his wife Barbara knows more about this than she’s letting on. Moldaver gets Cooper to bug Barbara’s Pip Boy, and listen in on an important meeting.

Poor Cooper hears far more than he wants to.

War, war never changes.

What worked

I would like to first point out that this was one of the funniest episodes so far. I mean, it got incredibly tragic and sad by the end. But it also had some great laugh-out-loud moments. This should be a surprise to no one, with such an array of comedians guest starring. Chris Parnell was in the last episode as well but is now joined by the incredibly funny Fred Armisen as DJ Carl. This is of course not his first foray into the funny and spooky world, as he also played Uncle Fester in Wednesday.

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Most of what makes this episode funny is the character’s understated and deadpan responses to wild situations. When Maximus returns the energy coil and is greeted by a simple thank you. When Thaddeus gets an arrow through his neck, and slowly realizes that hey, he might be a ghoul. These were hilarious because they could have been truly dark moments. But because this world is so dark, and the characters have already been through so much, they’re simply done. They take all of this in stride because of course that’s what’s happening. It’s par for the course for them.

Aaron Moten and Ella Purnell in Fallout.

On the other hand, we’ve finally seen the full extent of The Ghoul/Cooper’s past. And it’s so much worse than we could have imagined. I assumed that he’d lost his beloved wife and daughter in the atomic blasts two hundred years ago, somehow not dying with them and instead turning into a literal and figurative monster. The truth is so much worse. I’ll do my best not to spoil the ending. But I will say this. There is nothing more painful than mourning someone and hating them at the same time. And it’s easy to see how Cooper turned into The Ghoul. That sort of pain could drive anyone mad.

This balance between comedy and tragedy is one of the reasons why this episode worked so well. It’s one of the reasons why the series is working so well. It manages to combine the core tenets of theater in a way that never compromises the strengths of either. The eventual downfall of Thaddeus is a great example of this because it’s both tragic and funny. We’ve seen what happens to ghouls, and it’s a horrible end. But as he’s hardly been a sympathetic character, we can all get a good laugh at his predicament as well.

The sheer amount of good old-fashioned gore doesn’t hurt either, of course.

What didn’t work

All that being said, there was one thing that bothered me about this episode. And it was the reveal of Vault 4’s big secret.

Honestly, I was expecting the Vault 4 storyline to go way darker. I wanted it to go way darker. While I’ve never played these games myself, I know enough about the story to say that these vaults are not the bastions of safety and morality that they have so far been portrayed as. And while that has certainly been alluded to, we haven’t seen it.

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We haven’t seen the depravity in these vaults. And it’s there. But maybe we just haven’t gotten to it yet.

In the end, The Radio did exactly what it needed to do. It set us up to have most of our questions answered in the season finale. And I can’t wait to see how it all ends.

4 out of 5 stars (4 / 5)

If you like my work, you can check out my latest science fiction/horror novel, Nova, launching on May 17th. Pre-orders are available now on Amazon.

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Fallout, The Trap

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Amazon Prime’s Fallout has continued to be a suspenseful delight. And with the last episode’s dramatic cliffhanger, I was certainly looking forward to this one.

Thankfully, it did not disappoint.

The story

We start our story with Lucy and Maximus waking up in a decontamination room in Vault 4. They’re welcomed guests, once they’re done with decontamination.

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Vault 4 at first seems very much like Vault 33 to Lucy. She’s surprised, however, to find that a lot of people who live there are actually from the surface. And the people who live in this vault are, well, a bit mutated. Their overseer, named Benjamin and played by the hilarious Chris Parnell, has just one eye in the middle of his face. Some people have extra limbs or missing ones. And yet it’s clear that everyone’s living together in peace and companionship.

At least, that’s what it’s supposed to look like. There is, after all, the matter of the weird cult the surface dwellers seem to have formed. And, the small matter of the vault level no one is supposed to go to. It should come as no surprise that, of course, that’s exactly where Lucy finds herself before the episode is over.

Ella Purnell in Fallout.

Of course, this episode wouldn’t be complete without checking in with the Ghoul. And his part of the story is, honestly, more compelling.

We see him apprehended by people referring to themselves as The Government. And while he appears to be a prisoner, it’s clear soon enough that he’s the one in charge.

Far more compelling are his flashbacks to his past. While his wife, Barb, is starting to be more secretive, he learns more than he wants to about Vault Tec. He also learns that the Communist party in Hollywood might know more about what Barb does for a living than he does. And it’s clear soon that she never wanted him to know.

For good reason.

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What worked

I first want to draw attention to the excellent way we are learning about the Ghoul. As we learn more and more about his past, we can see how he’s become the monster he is today. It’s clear that once upon a time he had everything he could want. A lovely home, a family he lived for, and a successful career. And he lost all of that, even his dog. And with those losses, he lost his humanity in more ways than one.

But I also think we’re seeing signs that his humanity at least isn’t as lost as he thought it was.

On a lighter note, I loved Maximus’s response to the vault. While he’s apprehensive at first, he is swept away by the welcome basket. He’s lived his whole life hungry, barely surviving, and suddenly he has food. Good food. Caviar and oysters. He has a warm robe and TV and a safe place to exist. It must have been like stepping into a fairy tale for him. And while it wasn’t exactly helpful for Lucy, it’s completely relatable that he decided to sink into a chair and have a snack in front of the TV for a while.

What didn’t work

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While this episode was mostly good, I do have one complaint. When Lucy is first meeting with Overseer Benjamin, we see him accidentally drinking a cup of coffee that has gotten moldy.

Chris Parnell in Fallout.

Now, this makes perfect sense in our world to convey someone too busy and forgetful to clean up old mugs. But it’s hard to fathom someone living in a Vault in which every resource is carefully monitored, letting something like coffee go bad. It’s a small detail, and it was funny. Also more relatable than I’d like to admit. But in this instance, in this world, it was jarring.

So far this season has been intense. There’s a lot of intrigue and mystery. There’s a lot of high emotions. And there’s a lot on the line for everyone. Maybe, for one character, more than we’ve ever realized before.

Good thing we still have two episodes to discover what’s happening.

4 out of 5 stars (4 / 5)

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If you like my work, you can check out my latest science fiction/horror novel, Nova, launching on May 17th. Pre-orders are available now on Amazon.

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