From that big finale shocker to the small but telling moments you may have missed, we get the backstory behind the most devastating episode of the series yet.
! Every week we'll be interviewing someone from the addictive Showtime drama to discuss the shockers from the latest episode, get hints on what to look out for in the rest of the season, and to break down the Easter eggs that abound in the show's scripts, props, and even in its killer '90s soundtrack. For once, the wilderness didn't choose. This time, Natalie chose.
We are getting to go deeper with a lot of characters, and I would say that now is the time where we start to see the level of transgression and trauma in their teen lives, and how it's almost a miracle that these now middle aged women are even halfway functional. I'm interested to see sort of how they continue to put one foot in front of the other despite their past.
. But you forget that sometimes the most surprising storytelling is the stuff that, if you really look at it, actually makes perfect sense. But I just hadn't anticipated that she would be chosen like that, and I found it really heart wrenching. A couple things were at play that Courtney was really paying attention to. Lottie's just had kidney damage, she's had her face punched in, and she's been brought to her knees both literally and figuratively. So I think that the notion of a spiritual calling has become a distant bell. Now she's just more in touch with wanting to live.
want? To what degree did Misty, who seems so comfortable playing the good lieutenant, want to be named Number One? To what degree did Tai, who's been a more type A personality from the beginning, want that level of responsibility? Or to what degree did Shauna, who's begun to reveal this about herself, want it? My sense is that Ashley, Bart, and Jonathan are seeding all of those questions for successive seasons.
I'd always felt this about Natalie, even from the pilot, but it's interesting to see the full circle quality of her arc: She's driven by shame. Every fiber of her being is living in this terrible sense of shame and guilt and regret. And that stuff kills you. I do think what the finale reveals isshe's so filled with this guilt and regret.
We talked a lot about our own histories, our own lives, the people in our lives that we've loved, that we've lost. There was a sense that it can't be that easy if you're in the middle or the prime of your life to give up and say, "I surrender." And we talked a lot about ego and pride and the survival instinct, and how those things keep you going. It's meant to be somewhat touching and surprising that she's not ready to go.
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