The Watch online Womb Raider (2003) full moviefirst three episodes of Hulu’s Castle Rock, a one-show example of what a Stephen King Extended Universe looks like on screen, did an admirable job of introducing its audience to the characters, setting, and overall spooky vibe of the eponymous and doomed Maine town.
While there was plenty of mystery to go around — who (or what) is that man in the cage? What happened to Henry when he was 11? Why is this town so overwhelmingly shitty? — the show didn’t coalesce into a unified sense of horror until “The Box,” the literally explosive fourth episode of the series.
SEE ALSO: Four episodes in, 'Castle Rock' feels like a real deal Stephen King creepshow“The Box” is a damn good episode of television unto itself. It acknowledges that the storytelling has been vague so far and it course-corrects by rapidly flipping over its cards in micro-reveals that illuminate past questions while raising a terrifying set of new ones. It confirms as much as it queries and ends with a sequence that drives home the cruel lawlessness of whatever is wrong with the entire godforsaken town of Castle Rock.
Of the questions that are (kind of) answered, Henry’s childhood disappearance and the death of his father are paramount. Henry has a vision that suggests he was once in captivity, in a suspiciously similar setup to the way the Shawshank guards found The Kid in Episode 1, but his investigation into the man who was once a suspect in his case turns up a dead perp, a creepy barber, and his own missing case file. Ex-Sheriff Alan Pangborn, who already appears to be hiding way too much, is pressured to tell Henry that his father outright said Henry was the one who tried to kill him and Pangborn covered it up — a strong answer that somehow still rings false, or at least incomplete.
The episode’s most disturbing set piece and reveal comes in its third act, which reflects the ending of Episode 1. That pilot ended with C.O. Dennis Zaleski watching on CCTV as The Kid escapes from his cell and leaves a trail of distinctive bodies in his wake. But in a truly Kingsian twist, it appears in Episode 4 that Dennis becomes possessed by whatever dark entity haunts Castle Rock (hint: it’s probably six-foot-four and currently incarcerated) and uses his duty gun to massacre his coworkers in the exact manner previously seen on the CCTV screens.
The full-circle nature of this spree in some way clears up the meaning of Dennis’s Episode 1 vision, but in what is quickly becoming Castle Rock’s trademark, the motivation behind the vision-to-massacre pipeline is obscured. It’s true that Dennis was upset about the constant abuses and human rights violations that take place at Shawshank and viewed The Kid’s upcoming case as an opportunity to change the way things are done at the prison by testifying.
When Henry decides to drop the case in favor of fleeing Castle Rock (egged on by the realization that he may have murdered his father), Dennis loses his shot to make a difference and...well, it’s possible that he snapped. But in Stephen King, it’s almost never as simple as that.
Dennis’s massacre could also be connected to two other elements of Castle Rock. It’s clear that something in the town is wrong, and Dennis says so himself when he talks to Henry about testifying on behalf of The Kid: “You know how they always say Castle Rock has some kind of luck,” Dennis says, “not really luck, though, is it?”
Hold on tight for the rest of Castle Rock. And don’t fist-bump maybe-Satan if you can help it.
The badness of Castle Rock is treated in this episode like a pervasive fact of life, one that feels indelibly connected to the existence and perhaps release of The Kid – whom the late Shawshank warden Dale Lacy trapped in a water tank because he believed The Kid was literally the devil, as shown in Episode 2.
The issue with connecting specifically Dennis’s murders to The Kid is that Dennis was possibly the only person besides Henry who was kind to The Kid. Where the other guards regard him as a freak, Dennis talks to him, brings him food, and even promises to keep him safe.
Of all the people in Castle Rock to damn with the devil’s touch (Dennis’s fist bump with The Kid in this episode is highly suspect), why choose Dennis? Is The Kid an indiscriminate evil? Does he have any control over whatever evil-inducing powers he contains?
“The Box” ends with Dennis Zaleski dying in the warden’s office, gunned down by responders to his massacre. There will be no answers coming from him. Castle Rock answered the question of “what did the CCTV vision mean” and killed off the person in the center of that mystery in the same five-minute sequence. This attitude towards important reveals may become a hallmark of the show.
At four episodes in, it’s still too early to know, but “The Box” does an outstanding job of letting audiences know what they’re in for as the season progresses. Hold on tight for the rest of Castle Rock. And don’t fist-bump maybe-Satan if you can help it.
Smoke fills cabin on commercial flight, making an unscheduled landingThe 'shameful' abortion rights struggle you haven't heard aboutWatch Vine star Jason Nash, YouTube star Bart Baker in new 'FML the Movie' trailerThe bittersweet ballad of 'Captain Earthman,' the most beloved beer vendor in baseballLupita Nyong'o lived every Beyoncé fan's ultimate dreamEveryone's making the same joke about Yahoo's massive data breachThese adorable little fish will hold your ice cream for youTwitter announces its debate hashtagMashReads Podcast: Discussing David Foster Wallace's 'The Depressed Person'Lupita Nyong'o lived every Beyoncé fan's ultimate dreamEveryone's making the same joke about Yahoo's massive data breachDatawind's $45 smartphone will come with free internet subscription in IndiaBritish people are doing something great with their first plastic £5 notesNBC enlists social media stars to help promote 'Superstore' Season 2Airbnb is now worth $30 billion after raising a fresh $550 millionBritish people are doing something great with their first plastic £5 notesDigital finance could add $3.7 trillion to emerging economies, report saysRiot Games addresses the many issues of 'League of Legends' esportsCartoonist compares gay rights advocates to Nazis, gets a powerful history lessonSky Ferreira had creative control of her own unretouched 'Playboy' cover Zoom update improves security with automatically protected meetings Netflix's ‘Love Wedding Repeat’ makes a mess of easy premise: Review Zoom is different on your phone, so here’s when to use it Michael Moore wants 'The Rock' to run for president because nothing matters anymore The mysterious recycling company led by 2 Tesla execs Jack Dorsey invites you to follow along via Google Docs as he spends $1 billion on COVID Rihanna won the Met Gala again. Goodnight, everyone. A year after Hiddleswift: Here are the best celebrity Met Gala couples of 2017 Chinese iPhone manufacturer has a strict coronavirus prevention strategy Zoom update hides Meeting IDs to protect users from hackers U.S. Senate advises against using Zoom for video conferencing Stephen Colbert told a dumb joke. The campaign to get him fired is even dumber. Spare a thought for the guy detained in U.S. for allegedly overstaying by 90 minutes How advocacy organizations are adapting to the coronavirus pandemic Dr. Fauci knows which actor he wants to play him on 'Saturday Night Live' Stolen Zoom passwords and meeting IDs are already being shared on the dark web J.K. Rowling just tweeted the biggest 'Harry Potter' apology so far The zoo messed up when naming April the giraffe's baby Best streaming services with live TV for cord How to clean your filthy video game controller
2.9342s , 8224.046875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch online Womb Raider (2003) full movie】,Unobstructed Information Network