Harry finally goes into the commune and is led through the woods. He wakes up in the motel room where the people were killed. The boy is beginning to wonder what is going on; why don't the things he's been fed since birth help him to get away. He is in with kids older and physically stronger. Harry is seeing more and more how there is a kind of inbreeding in this town. It is obvious to him that there are numerous people who have been a part of Mosswood. A tape is found where we see someone who denied being involved. Harry is starting to really irritate the police department and the higher ups would like to see him gone.
5 Reviews
Improbable
tombohache10-152-8724234 September 2018
Ho Hum
chinabeach418 September 2018
Meh
inkthestreetac30 August 2018
Definately NOT seaon one, sadly.
insideout09820 February 2020
I'd like to say this season reminds me of the first season of True Detective, but then I would have to suspend disbelief that everything going on in this season is credible. Very generally speaking, the characters say, or don't say, and do things that no one in their particular positions would. It's like a script written for a world that doesn't really exist and then having actors pretend that it does. Nothing really fits. One simple example of this is Bill Pullman's journey through the woods with Carrie Coon that starts off in the morning, and before you know it, it's night. That aside, he apparently does this to learn about her "work" while allowing her to be in control. He is also willing to leave behind his bad, ID and gun. Clearly, no one would ever come close to doing something so ridiculous when wrapped up in a murder investigation that's tied directly to the person he's following. Lie I said, one example. And I won't even get into the icky little kid.
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