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‘Westworld’: Bodies, Bodies, Bodies in Penultimate Episode (RECAP)

[WARNING: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Westworld Season 4 Episode 7, “Metanoia.”]

At this point, it’s looking like Westworld’s Season 4 finale is going to be an Ed Harris bottle episode.

Okay, that’s an exaggeration. But it’s not an exaggeration to say that “Metanoia” isn’t light on major character deaths. It’s unclear how many of these violent ends will stick, or if they’re even real, or when ‘now’ is. (Ah, Westworld.) Moving at breakneck speed, the episode offers further answers about Christina (Evan Rachel Wood), gives Caleb (Aaron Paul) a key character moment and answers the question of what Transcendence is. It also sets up The Host in Black for a huge role in the finale. Here’s how it happens.

HBO

The episode opens with one of Bernard’s (Jeffrey Wright) simulated futures, in which he and Maeve (Thandiwe Newton) go to the Hoover Dam—which is actually the Sublime, since that’s where Dolores uploaded it—and get ambushed by a riot control robot. In reality, when they go to the Hoover Dam, Maeve takes down the bot. She makes a deal with Bernard that when the fighting’s done, he’ll upload her to the Sublime so she can be with her daughter again. Bernard agrees, but there’s something in his expression that says he’s not telling Maeve everything.

From there, they reunite with Stubbs (Luke Hemsworth), Frankie (Aurora Perrineau) and Odina (Morningstar Angeline), and they head into the city. They all split up, with Odina securing them a way out, Stubbs and Frankie going for Olympiad and Caleb, and Bernard and Maeve heading to the tower. They all say their goodbyes. Maeve tells Frankie to tell her father she “kept her word,” while Stubbs pieces together from Bernard’s somber farewell that he’s not going to make it.

While all of this is happening, Hale-ores (Tessa Thompson) decides today is the last day for humanity. All humans are to be placed in “cold storage.” That doesn’t sit right with the Host in Black. Christina and Teddy (James Marsden) have a chat about how she took over the world. Christina doesn’t believe she has it in her, and when Teddy calls her Dolores, she’s overwhelmed. She asks him if their “kind” can be hurt or die. He tells her death is more difficult for them, which she discovers firsthand when she goes into the bathroom, runs a tub and tries to drown herself. She survives, and from there, she’s forced to accept she isn’t who she thinks she is.

HBO

She and Teddy go to the Olympiad headquarters, where Christina uses her powers to make all the staff exit the building—except for the writers, whom she orders to erase their narratives and destroy the office. From there, she also orders the guards away and kind of runs into Caleb, whom Teddy calls “a ghost from a past life.” (Teddy shouldn’t know anything about Caleb, so that feels like evidence Teddy isn’t actually real, and is, instead, all in Christina’s head.) Christina orders the Olympiad guard to unlock the doors, which sets Caleb free.

Frankie and Stubbs find him, and father and daughter have an emotional reunion… after he almost kills her. In Caleb’s defense, it’s been more than two decades, and he’s been through a lot. They all get out of the building together.

Maeve and Bernard, however, don’t have such smooth sailing. They break into the tower just fine, but before they set their plan into motion, Bernard confesses he hasn’t been entirely honest with Maeve. “We can’t save this world,” he tells her, “But we can save a small part of it.” That doesn’t change her mind about fighting with him. From there, she gets into a brawl with Hale-ores, who very nearly “Transcended” before Maeve stepped into the room. Side note: We discover what “Transcendence” is in this episode, and it’s not getting into the Sublime. Instead, Transcendence is a host uploading itself to an entirely metallic, non-humanoid body.

HBO

Hale-ores and Maeve fight, shattering windows and eventually winding up in the pond in front of the tower. They reach something of a stalemate only for Maeve to get shot in the head. Yep, that’s right: Maeve has now died for a second time this season. Hale-ores gets shot in the head, too, thus ending her reign of villainy… maybe?

Here’s where The Host in Black comes in: he killed Maeve and Hale-ores. His decision to do that came from another conversation he had with his human self, during which human-William told him that they were the same, and that their destiny was destruction. Given that, The Host in Black kills his human counterpart as well as Hale-ores and Maeve, then he goes back inside the tower and changes the tones that control everyone in the city. As he explains to Bernard while shooting him, he’s going to have everyone play “one final game” until there’s no one left, thus ending the world. Great! Bernard dies, and it’s not clear whether this is the scenario he envisioned or if everything just got royally messed up.

Across the city, Stubbs, Caleb and Frankie try to make their exit through the subway. That goes bad fast, as William’s new narrative means everyone starts attacking them. They survive, but Frankie gets shot (non-fatally in the leg, but any wound in this scenario is a problem). Christina and Teddy make their way through the chaotic city, with Christina begging everyone to stop fighting. It’s no use. Teddy tells her they can’t listen to or see her because she’s not in this world. “It’s real,” he says, “but you’re not.” And as chaos unfolds, the Host in Black strolls out of the tower in full Man in Black garb, shooting everyone in his path.

HBO

Other Observations

Westworld, Season 4 Finale, Sunday, August 14, 9/8c, HBO

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