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Cape Fear: Why Are Anna’s Children as Unhinged and Unpredictable as Max Cady?

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Cape Fear has been building its own brand of dread since its premiere, and it is not always coming from Javier Bardem.

Max Cady terrifies us, yes. But Zack Bowden losing a toe and not noticing? Natalie cheerfully climbs into a car with the man, systematically dismantling her family? 

At various points through this season, the kids have been scarier to watch than the actual villain.

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

This can be interpreted as the show trying something unpredictably different with its teenage characters, or a sign that nobody in the writers’ room has spent much time around actual teenagers lately.

By Cape Fear Season 1 Episode 7, the show finally gave a medical explanation in scopolamine, the motion sickness drug Nevaeh had been dosing Zack with in large enough quantities to cause depersonalization and, according to his doctor, potentially permanent psychosis. 

That answered some of the questions, but not all, and the ones it left hanging are worth revisiting before the final episodes arrive.

Zack Was Already Broken Before Nevaeh Found the Crack

Long before Nevaeh Valentine showed up as Angel X in his DMs, Zack had already been canceled at school for sharing intimate photos of a girlfriend in a group chat. 

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

He was socially isolated, spent most of his time gaming alone in his room, and had a documented history of self-harm.

Tom told the hospital doctor about it on Cape Fear Season 1 Episode 2, and had expressed concerns about his mental health. 

The show made it seem that Zack’s social death sentence had soured him the same way seventeen years in prison drove Max Cady mad, and that parallel was a factor in their relating to each other. 

Both were humiliated, isolated, and found someone willing to give them attention and a sense of purpose in that void. For Cady, it was his religion and dead family.

For Zack, it was Angel X, and then later Max himself, sauntering across the street with an outstretched hand and a story about going fishing.

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

Nevaeh had been secretly messaging Zack online under that alias, patiently brainwashing the isolated teenager into self-mutilation, and the scopolamine she was feeding him made that brainwashing stick. 

The medication explains Zack’s altered behavior and why he became convinced that Max was his father.

The revelation recolors every strange scene with him across the prior episodes.

Rather than making irrational decisions on his own, Zack was being chemically manipulated into accepting Max’s version of reality.

By Cape Fear Season 1 Episode 7, the scopolamine had done so much damage that the medical staff was not even sure it could be reversed.

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

So Zack was not simply gullible. He was a troubled teenager with pre-existing mental health vulnerabilities who was then chemically conditioned by two people working in coordinated stages.

And we are not sure if the Bowdens will ever get their son back. Zack is completely under Cady’s control.

Natalie’s Road Trip Was a Writing Problem and a Drug Problem, Possibly in That Order

Natalie’s case is harder to understand.

She was established from the start as the level-headed sibling, the perfectionist daughter doing college applications while Zack fell apart around her. 

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

She pulled four dead skunks out of the pool and barely flinched. She pepper-sprayed Nevaeh without hesitating when the situation called for it.

For most of the season, Natalie was the one Bowden who seemed to have her head on straight.

Then Episode 7 arrived, and she got into Max Cady’s car.

She was drunk, disoriented after Paul’s noncommittal response to her questions about her parentage, and had been reading about Max’s trial online before Max showed up at the Bowdens’ door to return the cat. 

Max did not explicitly ask Natalie to go with him, but he did not talk her out of it either, and we saw him inject a peach with a drug that appeared to be the same scopolamine used on Zack.

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

What bothers me the most is that he didn’t even have to give her the peach to get her in his car, though she eventually eats it later on.

For an intelligent kid, how dumb do you have to be to trust the one person clearly targeting your own family? Much less go on a road trip all alone!

Now that she’s had that peach, the show is going to make it seem that Nat will be joining her brother soon, thanks to the scopolamine. But that just seems like lazy writing to me.

Sure, you might go with the flow and assume she went looking for the truth about her father, got an answer from Paul that sounded like “maybe not me.”

Then, she found an answer from Max that sounded like “definitely me,” and was baptized in the Cape Fear River while still processing it.

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

The show wants you to believe the writing earned that sequence.

You mostly do… and then you remember that a grown, intelligent teenager just voluntarily drove into the dark with a man she had watched terrorize her family for weeks.

Suddenly, the “maybe she was drugged” explanation starts losing its legs.

Both kids ended up in the same place through different routes.

Zack was controlled by chemicals, Natalie was controlled by uncertainty, and in both cases, Max isolated his victims before replacing their trust in their family with trust in him. 

(Courtesy of Apple TV)

But the way both were written did not fit into the puzzle.

More like shoving a square peg in a round hole.

Maybe the writers’ room needs to rely less on drugs and more on actual storytelling, and maybe some teens in the room to show how it’s done.

Does Natalie’s road trip make sense to you on rewatch, or does it fall apart the moment you think about it too hard?

Drop your take in the comments, and subscribe for weekly Cape Fear breakdowns as the final episodes land.

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