As predicted, Killer Queens, last night’s mid-season finale of American Horror Story Delicate left us with more questions than answers. We’ve got a lot to go over in this one, so let’s get right into it.
The story
Anna is suffering from extreme discomfort in her second trimester. Dr. Hill doesn’t seem too worried about it, recommending some yoga and massage. Oh, and he also tells her she can’t travel.
Which is great, seeing as how she’s been nominated for an Oscar.
Anna’s inability to travel might be why Siobhan, who so far has been her best friend and constant support system, is now cold and aggressive towards her. She even takes the young, perky, infuriating Babette as a client, even though she and Anna are both up for an Oscar in the same category.
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This of course isn’t enough of a violation for Anna to have to suffer. After a sexual assault at the hands of her physical therapist, she gets into a fight with Dex. Dex is at his absolute worst in this episode, actually going so far as to accuse Anna of faking her stalker. This is especially galling as, if Preecher is to be believed, this whole situation is his fault.
Feeling betrayed by everyone, Anna retreats to the basement with her dolls. Oh yeah, she’s collected and saved all the dolls of herself. There, she plans to watch an award show in peace. That is until she coughs up a talon.
Things go fuzzy for her after that, and she wakes up in bed the next morning. Dex is there, with a dark look on his face. He shows Anna his phone, which reveals a news article.
Poor young, irritating but otherwise innocent Babette, has met with a terrible fate.
What worked
I love how the season so far is offering us a never-ending stream of questions. As predicted, I understand less about Anna’s predicament now than at the start of the episode. Why did Siobhan make sure that Anna got an award-winning movie role? Why did she take Babette as a client, only to presumably get her beheaded?
Is Dex responsible for everything going on? At this point, we have to assume he is. However, is he responsible because he orchestrated the whole thing? Or is it because he’s drawn the ire of an evil coven down upon him and his family?
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The largest question, though, and the one that plagued readers of the book as well, is this. Is Anna losing her mind?
We have proof that some of the terrible things she’s experienced are happening. Other people have seen the people dressed in bird gowns. Preecher confirms that the same sort of thing happened to her.
But that doesn’t explain why Anna ate part of a dead and rotting raccoon. That doesn’t explain why she’s been collecting these dolls she keeps finding. So is she making up some of this in her head? Or, is the stress of everything simply driving her crazy?
Could we really blame her if it was?
What didn’t work
I’ll be honest, I hate the entire subplot with Dex’s mom. It feels out of place and is just infuriating. At first, I liked the inclusion because it made Dex feel more human and sympathetic. Frankly, I don’t feel that way anymore. Because he’s only sympathetic when she’s being horrible to him. Her insane behavior doesn’t make Dex’s abusive attitude towards Anna make any more sense.
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I did appreciate seeing her cornered by black goats, though.
I would also like to point out that this season of American Horror Story, so far, doesn’t seem to exist in the same world as the others. It appears to be breaking canon from several seasons.
Here’s one example. In Coven, Supreme Cordelia announced to the world that witches are real. If this season is set in the same universe, why hasn’t anyone brought this up? With all the witchy things going on, why hasn’t Anna, a well-known actress, suggested maybe the very public witches might have something to do with this? Or at least something to say about it.
One of the fun things about American Horror Story has always been this loose understanding that all of these wild stories exist in the same world. Even some of the American Horror Stories tales exist in the same world. If this season openly rejects that eleven-season legacy, it’s going to leave some asking why.
Finally, as this is the season break, I have some predictions. At this point, I feel like enough content and subplots have been added that we can no longer be sure this season is going to end like the book. Though any guesses I have based on the book I’ll set aside, in case you haven’t read it yet.
I believe the four witches in the ally are Ashley, Ashleigh, Dr. Hill, and Siobhan. Other people might be involved, but I believe those were the four we saw.
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I also believe, or at least I hope, we might be looking at a coven of witches with bad intentions. A coven who, perhaps, is outside of the control of the Supreme Witch. And if there were such a coven, would it not make sense that the Supreme might need to do something about them?
So far as I’ve found, part two of American Horror Story Delicate doesn’t have a release date. Sometime in 2024 is all we know. But as far as I’m concerned, it can’t come soon enough.
We’re back again with Goosebumps The Vanishing, episode two. A story too big for one episode, apparently.
Or, maybe this is just a nod to the fact that Stay Out Of The Basement was a two-part episode in the original 1995 show. Either way, after seeing this episode, we could have kept it to one.
The story
We begin this second episode with Anthony investigating the parasitic plant taking over his body. Rather than, I don’t know, going to the hospital, he’s decided to phone a colleague and send her some samples from the bulb he pulls out of his arm with a handheld garden trowel.
Meanwhile, Devin is having his own worries. He’s haunted by what he saw in the sewers. So, he gets CJ to go with him to investigate. What they find is more of the tendrils of the plant that dragged him down through the manhole last episode.
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I sure would have liked to see more about that.
Instead, we see Devin pivot to flirting with a newly single Frankie. Because teenage hormones I guess.
Meanwhile, Trey is having a terrible day. First, his girlfriend leaves him. Then, Anthony breaks his car window.
Needing a way to deal with his frustration, Trey decides to break into the Brewers’ basement. There, he starts wrecking up the place. Until he meets the plant creature and has an unfortunate accident.
What worked
The big difference between this episode and the last is the increased gross-out factor. This episode had some straight-up cringy moments. From the tendrils waiving from Anthony’s arm to the whole goat he brings home to feed his new pet, this episode was skin-crawling gross in the best way possible.
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The series is called Goosebumps, after all.
What didn’t work
Unfortunately, that’s where my praise ends. This episode, unlike the last, just wasn’t that great.
To start with, there was a lot of unnecessary drama between characters who are not in danger of being eaten by a plant from the inside out.
I especially disliked the focus on the Frankie/Trey/Devin love triangle.
Now, I don’t hate it. This part of the story adds extra emotional depth to the show. We can see why Trey would be especially incensed by his girlfriend falling for the son of the neighbor he’s feuding with. But it would be more enjoyable if it wasn’t so cliche and dramatic.
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I hate the way Trey tried to gaslight Frankie. It makes me dislike him when he should be a sympathetic character. I hate how whiny Devin is every time he talks to Frankie. And I hated the impassioned speech Frankie gives after Devin asks her why she was with Trey.
Listen, I understand what we’re going for here. Devin and Cece are not struggling financially. They’re doing alright, and their new friends here in Gravesend are not. We kind of got that without Frankie claiming that her socioeconomic status is why she’s dating a bully and gaslighter. It felt out of place. It felt like pandering. It certainly didn’t feel like something an eighteen-year-old would say. I hated it.
Finally, there was a moment near the end of the episode that irritated me. I don’t want to give too much detail because I wouldn’t dare ruin an R.L. Stine cliffhanger. But, well, it doesn’t make a lot of sense.
I get that we’re watching a show about a carnivorous plant that is going to wreak havoc on this family and neighborhood. I understand the suspension of disbelief. Some might even say I am a little too generous with it. So I can buy into a teenager being absorbed by a plant and turned into a monstrous version of himself.
I can’t buy into what happens at the end of this episode. It doesn’t make sense with the rules established. It certainly doesn’t make any sort of scientific or logical sense. It is a lazy moment meant to further the storyline but threatens the structural integrity of the season.
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All in all, this wasn’t the best episode of Goosebumps. But it’s only the second episode. Honestly, the season has plenty of time to go either way.
The movie monsters always approach so slowly. Their stiff joints arcing in jerky, erratic movements While the camera pans to a wide-eyed scream. It takes forever for them to catch their victims.
Their stiff joints arcing in jerky, erratic movements As they awkwardly shamble towards their quarry – It takes forever for them to catch their victims. And yet no one ever seems to get away.
As they awkwardly shamble towards their quarry – Scenes shift, plot thickens, minutes tick by endlessly… And yet no one ever seems to get away. Seriously, how long does it take to make a break for it?
Scenes shift, plot thickens, minutes tick by endlessly… While the camera pans to a wide-eyed scream. Seriously, how long does it take to make a break for it? The movie monsters always approach so slowly.
So my father used to enjoy telling the story of Thriller Nite and how he’d scare his little sister, my aunt. One time they were watching the old Universal Studios Monsters version of The Mummy, and he pursued her at a snail’s pace down the hallway in Boris Karloff fashion. Both of them had drastically different versions of this tale, but essentially it was a true Thriller Nite moment. And the inspiration for this poem.
Episode six of Dexter Original Sin brings us Dex’s third kill, making him officially a serial killer.
Yay!
The story
This episode dealt with many things. The first, and clearly most interesting, is the kidnapping of Nicky Spencer, the police captain’s son, whom we met a few episodes ago.
This loss has sent the entire police force into an uproar. They need to find the killer fast before Nicky’s found hanging from a bridge.
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Unfortunately, Harry’s still on the sidelines for this one, after horribly messing up the case against Levi Reed. He’s instead working with LaGuerta in a case regarding a dead homeless man. Despite the different victims, types of death, and the fact that they don’t appear to be related at all. Except that Dexter believes they are. They are, in fact, the first murderers of a blossoming serial killer. Just like him.
Before Dex can lean into this investigation, though, he’s drug along on a double date with Deb, Sophia and Gio. And here, we see the first shadows of danger from Gio. Shadows that will almost certainly turn into a monster.
What worked
I would first like to acknowledge that, despite my irritations, Gellar did well in this episode. She didn’t have Whedon’like one-liners. She didn’t exist to give snappy comebacks with a side of girl boss.
She looked as though she’d aged. She was serious. She behaved like a real person who felt terrible about what was happening.
And, just to shout out the costume department, she looked washed out. Yes, that is a good thing. Let me explain.
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White is not a good color on her. At least not that shade. It made her look bad. This is not something that Sarah Michelle Gellar would choose to wear.
But it is something that Tanya Martin would choose to wear. And I love that. I love when shows and movies let people look bad because they’re more interested in being true to the character and not focusing on everyone looking as hot as possible at all times.
I also want to discuss Gio, Deb’s boyfriend.
Gio scares me. And I think that most women watching this will feel the same way.
Not girls. Not teenagers or even some young women. But adult women, I’m willing to bet, do not like Gio after this episode.
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It was the scene at the bar. The part where he got in the face of the guy who spilled Deb’s drink. There was danger in that scene. Gio didn’t want an apology. He didn’t want to make sure Deb was okay. He didn’t even want the drink replaced. He wanted a reason to hurt that stranger. Because at that moment he was furious. And the only way to handle that fury for him was pain.
Gio is a very dangerous man. I’ll be very surprised if this season doesn’t end with Dexter having to take him out.
What didn’t work
At this point, we have a lot going on. We have Nicky’s kidnapping. We have Dexter finding himself as a serial killer. We have the flashback storyline with Laura and Harry. We have the dangerous Gio and the likely in-danger Sophia. And we have these murders of drifters and homeless people that the team is now investigating.
That’s a lot. It’s more than what can be followed comfortably. And that doesn’t even consider the one or two-episode arches like Levi, Nurse Mary or Tony Ferrer. A lot is going on, and a lot to keep track of. And it’s hard to believe, seeing what we’ve seen from this franchise and knowing what we know about how they handle endings, that these are all going to have satisfying endings. Especially since I haven’t heard anything about a season two.
We have four episodes left in this season, and I am expecting the storylines to start heating up. As of right now, we have way too many that don’t have enough to do with each other. But as we get closer to episode ten, I would expect these loose threads to knot together and form a noose around the neck of our dashing Dexter.