As MGM’s thrilling horror saga, From, nears its finale, the stakes have never been higher. Sunday night’s episode kept me glued to the screen, heart racing until the credits rolled. Beware of spoilers ahead.
Amidst the chaos in Fromville, our protagonists are desperately searching for an escape route:
- Boyd and the other core characters are trying to figure out a way to get into the tunnels and save the dead children entombed there. Boyd’s latest plan is to test out one of the spears from the lake settlement and see if it can kill the townsfolk monsters. Jade is drawing a map with wires to visualize the tunnels.
- Colony House is a den of activity. Donna is still on bedrest after her near-fatal heart attack. Fatima is still building her golem. A group led by Acosta (who hasn’t been bad since her little ambulance tantrum) is going through the basement and the diner’s storage room to find clues about the Man in Yellow and Jade and Tabitha’s previous incarnation.
- Tabitha, meanwhile, is helping Victor try to find information about the Man in Yellow, which I’ll return to momentarily.
- The Man in Yellow is currently not a man or in yellow, but rather the super creepy girl, Sophia. She’s so creepy and evil and sus that I’m not sure how nobody has at all suspected her of anything yet. That dam has to break soon, I imagine. More on Sophia and one super interesting tidbit below.
- Finally, we have Henry. Henry started going downhill when he learned about the Man in Yellow killing and eating his wife. Then Sophia put a drop of her (its?) blood in his drink and his alcoholism combined with that black magic has him seeing things. Specifically, he’s having visions of being hooked up to life support, including one vision that had him waking briefly in the “real world” and seeing Victor there.
Henry’s predicament mirrors the tragic fate of Boyd’s wife. She believed everything was just a dream and that the dream’s death would bring awakening. Now, Henry is treading a similar path, doubting reality and contemplating if he’s merely in a coma. The appearance of Victor adds a sinister twist—could it mean his family never vanished but that he’s been unconscious all along while they’re alive and well?
While I sympathize with Henry’s struggle, his actions are increasingly frustrating. He vowed to be there for Victor, promising to be the paternal figure Victor never had. Yet, one unsettling revelation sends him spiraling. Remember, Henry, Victor endured isolation and fear for years, witnessing horrors. Your self-pity is hard to justify. Once a fan of Henry, I’ve grown more frustrated with him than with Acosta. My empathy lies with Victor.
Tabitha is also on my radar. She and Victor investigate the Man in Yellow’s vehicle, bringing Ethan along. Victor uncovers a disturbing sack of human teeth, attempting to “prepare” Ethan by highlighting a crucial detail: in Tabitha’s previous life as Miranda, she was with a boy and girl, but only the boy survived, growing up alone and terrified. Tabitha, however, shields Ethan from this grim discovery, and when Ethan leaves to avoid the scene, she sharply questions Victor, “What is wrong with you?”
Really, Tabitha? Is Victor the problem, or is it you? Her frosty demeanor towards him is puzzling, particularly after the revelation that she was his mother in a former life. One would expect them to have a conversation about this revelation.
Are you serious, Tabitha? What is wrong with Victor? What’s wrong with you, lady? She’s weirdly chilly with him even before this despite the rather massive revelation that she was his mother in a past life. You’d think maybe they’d talk.
At least everyone else is talking. Boyd is very open about everything with the gathered Fromvillians after they discover the door in the basement (which is sealed). So much communication this season! No wonder the Man in Yellow had to show up to make things worse. At this rate, with everyone working together, they might actually escape.
The most interesting thing in this episode was Sophia’s spellcasting. She finds an egg and breaks it on the rather horrific corpse of Roger and whispers some kind of incantation in a strange language. Later, she resurrects him using more magic. This is the first time we’ve seen magic actively being used in this show, and it reinforces my theory that the Man in Yellow is some kind of evil faerie trapping people in his dark realm to feed off their fear and suffering (and organs).
The teeth also reinforce this theory. I mean, the tooth fairy, right? Just a very twisted version of the tooth fairy.
The episode culminates in Boyd’s plan going very badly. Kenny is the one to execute it and he stabs one of the monsters who pretends to be dying and then laughs at Kenny. He’s quickly surrounded, and monsters are blocking all the nearby doors. Of course, Kenny deserves a dressing down at this point also: Boyd told him to stab and run, don’t even bother to see if it works, but he just stands there. He just stands there like an idiot! If he’d been killed this episode, he’d have only himself to blame.
He makes it to the bus, but Smiley gets there before he can shut the door and Smiley very nearly kills him, but then something happens. Fatima, who can see all of this going on through Smiley’s eyes, screams at him to stop. Somehow, her psychic connection with Smiley has a silver lining. Smiley’s transformation into full monster is halted and Kenny is able to escape. It seems that the Man in Yellow’s machinations haven’t worked out entirely as he’d planned.
The resurrected Roger, with button eyes and a ripped up mouth and jaw, bursts into Colony House but Elgin stabs him with one of the lake spears and he dies. Kind of a, ahem, toothless move from Sophia if you ask me. Kenny survives, nobody is harmed at Colony House. I was expecting more. That’s not necessarily a complaint, just an observation. I suppose they’re saving the big deaths for the end of the season – but even one of the extras?
What did you think of this week’s episode of FROM? Let me know on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.
