Girls Gone Canon Cast - His Dark Materials Series 2 Episode 2 - The Cave
Episode Date: November 24, 2020Things are heating up between the Magisterium and the witches while Lyra finds a scholar and Will finds his family.  LINKS MENTIONED  Dr. Sam Henry - https://twitter.com/g7vdj  Dr. Henry...'s blog - https://particlegadgeteering.wordpress.com/2017/10/17/dark-matter-detectors-and-philip-pullmans-his-dark-materials/  ------ Eliana's twitter: https://twitter.com/arhythmetric Eliana's reddit account: https://www.reddit.com/user/glass_table_girl Eliana's blog: https://themanyfacedblog.wordpress.com/ Chloe's twitter: https://twitter.com/liesandarbor Chloe's blog: www.liesandarborgold.com Intro: Waltz Of The Skeleton Keys by WombatNoisesAudio | https://soundcloud.com/user-734462061
Transcript
Discussion (0)
🎵
Hello, and welcome to Girls Got Game.
Girls Watch His Dark Materials, Series 2, Episode 2, The Cave.
I am one of your hosts, Chloe.
And I am another one of your hosts eliana we're coming
off of a really big argument it's it's it's actually a discussion not a discussion no not
a discussion and we're trying to figure out if we should be changing our intro to us singing
the intro an acapella version, if you will.
An acapella version.
Is it good?
Is it an arrangement?
It's an arrangement.
Debatable.
Lauren, weigh in.
We would love to hear.
A vocal.
A vocal.
We would love to hear.
Arrangement.
So, you never know.
You might be listening to this with the vocal arrangement and stylings of Girls Gone Candid.
Or, by the time of its release, this episode's
release, you may still have the old
intro music but
you never know. I mean, this
is one of those things, right, that splits into
two different worlds
and there will be one dimension,
one world, where we made
the choice to do
the vocal arrangement and another
where we kept it and you know let's see
what what world this one is yeah i mean asriel's probably messed all these worlds up already so
what what harm could we really do what harm could our hijinks truly do catch me at the
tory d'angely you know what i'm saying uh it's good to be back. Last week, if you listened in to our first episode coverage,
we were so happy to have our friend Lo on.
They were an excellent addition, an excellent voice to the paneling.
But this week, it's back to us.
This week, it's just us.
It's just us.
We've got our feet up.
And maybe our vocal arrangements.
And maybe our vocal arrangements.
Just our voices.
This isn't the only thing you're
going to hear from us this week, though.
If you're listening to this in
the United States, you might
be very thankful for a couple other episodes
coming your way.
It's Thanksgiving this week. That was the joke.
Wow. Get it?
But we do have another episode this week. You'll be hearing
La Belle Sauvage, episode 3,
chapters 6 through 8. La Belle Sauvage is, of course, the companion trilogy to the episode this week you'll be hearing labelle sauvage episode three chapter six through eight
labelle sauvage is of course the companion trilogy to the main trilogy of his dark materials written
by philip pullman and this episode is uh coming inspired by his dark materials via the show
it is and so you know in in labelle sauvage we are following a time that lara is still a baby
following a boy named malcolm polstead and that should be coming to you probably
friday of this week yes and then next week we'll return with another davos episode yes davos in a
song of ice and fire the other series that we're following
and if you're a patron of ours over at patreon.com slash girls gone canon you get special patron
episodes if you're in the stranger tier and above the five dollar tier and above this month's special
patreon episode will be about a song of ice and fire on the lysine spring from fire and blood
and next month we will be having a his dark
materials themed episode so stay tuned for that reveal yes we have something i think pretty
exciting planned for our december episode but yes this one's the lysine spring in winter
the middle of autumn well we did get a really great email from our friend John, the Prince of Sunsphere.
He sent us an email saying,
A couple of things that I thought about during this episode.
The books were written pre-smartphone, and it's a really nice symmetry to the alethiometer.
I look forward to seeing how they integrate it into the show.
Yes, totally agree on that.
I am excited about that.
I actually spent a
lot of time staring at the phone interactions and seeing what will was doing and some of them had
meaning i was very very surprised i like mrs coulter's interpretation of dark sansa stark
cosplay from game of thrones john said i love that it's uh mrs coulter's feather outfit right
that we see her in at the magisterium
and then it is really good outfit it's a beading i love the beading it's very pretty iconic very good very iconic john comments that thorall's demon is a jack russell and as we know loyal
servants have dog demons jack russells are known for hunting foxes and otters and he comments that
if you're a harry potter fan ron weasley's Patronus is a Jack Russell and Hermione's Patronus is an otter.
The Magisterium airships use incendiary bombs.
Contrary to Michael Bay, not all bombs have fiery explosions.
They chose to burn the witches with fire.
Yeah, that's an interesting tie-in to of course i'm sure people have associations with uh
you know people do it burning witches or women alleged to be witches in the past so interesting
way that they brought that in to this episode yeah i know that i was kind of capturing or
screenshotting during the summer when we had some of the trailers what the bombs were uh trying to
connect trying to
figure out so it's crazy to see that brought into this episode so early on in the series
there's a lot of really new stuff happening and i i i'm not gonna say i love a bombing that's awful
holy shit i love this adaptation though this is it's good we had thought of course that it was
going to be right the the warring that would happen
towards the end of this book with lee scoresby and john perry but i'm glad that there are things
that you know that are in the trailers and things that are still surprising i'm excited for that i'm
surprised every week and i i know there are surprises tonight i'm at the point where i'm
tuning out of the extra content.
I feel like there's a lot of extra content.
I was just talking to the Dark Materials podcast about this.
Ian and Amy over there, we were discussing about how there's so much extra stuff that there's too much and I'm not seeing things.
We have a friend in our Discord over on Patreon that is bringing in a bunch of those little extras every week, posting,
here's a behind-the-scenes this and bless cassidy our friend for that because i can't even keep up
they're releasing so much extra stuff uh but i yeah it's stuff i'm kind of at the point i don't
want to keep up with it i i like that i somehow they're outsmarting me and surprising me and i
am into it every week it feels good yeah i Yeah, I mean, I like speculating, right, on what might happen,
but I don't want to know until it happens.
And I think we've discussed that, you know, that I'm kind of
personally a little spoiler-averse.
Yes.
So that plays into it.
And yeah, speaking of spoilers,
sorry if any of you have tuned in and were surprised by some of the things
that are going to happen in that perhaps you haven't read these books, right? And with that, we are going to dive into
the episode soon. And the material that we will discuss from his dark materials will cover
anything from the three main books. We may touch on some stuff from the side stories, the novellas,
and or very, very briefly right on things from the book
of dust but i think that's pretty unlikely in this episode uh so just just be forewarned that
we are going to discuss things from northern light slash the golden compass the subtle knife
and the amber spyglass yes and i will add we will be discussing serpentine because the show spoiled it true
so i don't have to yeah it's it's whatever it's a you've watched this episode and it's it's a 28
page novella so i'm not really it's not that big of a spoiler all right we did this last week i
like this this is fun for me what is your favorite part i want to know
eliana your favorite part and i'm talking it does not have to be some deep like momentous oh
lee scores be this or it can be the stupidest littlest thing in the world what is your favorite
part go well lee scores be wasn't here. I know. Chloe was personally
affronted by the
lack of Hester in this episode.
I'm
torn between two parts.
And yeah, same vibes
as last week. One might be
where Mary Malone goes,
oh, I'm sorry, this cookie
thing is stale, sets it down, and Lyra
you can see is kind of like, she still kind of wants to eat it but it's trying to pretend to be normal and sets it down
i'm like no poor lyra i'm like i would have kept eating it i would have been like
is this this is totally fine this is fine uh the other one might be you know as low loved all the
red panda scenes last episode,
and, like, Pan is a red panda at the beginning of this
episode, helping Lyra pick out outfits, and the
excitement behind, like, yes!
That's it! That's the one! And she
comes out and she has this cape, and
is so proud of herself, and Pan's
proud of her. That's a good moment, too.
It was so
good. I
enjoyed that. I, okay okay I think I have two
I do think I have two I was gonna only go one
but I'm going big or going home
right so yeah yeah
this one has become a common
line last week it was the hmm
the very casual hmm
this week I think
my favorite favorite
common line in the household because we just say it and pretend our cats
are saying it
when Pan says unbelievable
when he gets shoved in the bag
oh I lose my mind
unbelievable
it is the funniest
crap in the world
I think that is probably my favorite
whenever the cats are mad at us
for like you know I don't know,
not letting them go in a room or something and like shutting them out.
One of us will just yell.
Unbelievable.
He's so offended.
That one was,
that one was good.
That's a good one from the start.
That was good.
And then my other favorite is when Lyra holds the alethiometer,
like an FBI badge,
right?
When she's just holding it up like, freeze FBI.
That one is my lesser favorite, but it is a favorite
just because we saw that from the summer.
We saw stills come out from production of that moment.
And I'm really excited to see how it was incorporated
and that it was at Mary Malone.
Yeah, I mean, honestly, the confidence that Lyra has
to open it in such a way and not think she's going to drop it
because i would
have dropped it like on my foot yeah i've been like i'm gonna look really cool right now and
doing this and then totally totally fuck it up but she nails it yeah this was a good episode i'm i'm
excited about getting into this with you because it was just a a full episode every single scene contained some
sort of nugget of information to propel the story forward and i wasn't bored in most of these
so let's start off in oxford with lyra and will visiting will's oxford will is teaching her to
blend in and he does not approve of her poncho nor her giant hat, which Eliana did not spoil yet. The giant hat,
Eliana, tell us about it.
The giant hat was a great touch, especially because
again, Pan's just egging her on,
is super excited about everything, and
is like, yes, that's it, with the key.
And it really hammers
home, yes, Pan is her.
And, I don't know,
I'm just like, yeah, that would be me.
And we discussed this in the trailer
right
but as a reminder
when we were first watching this
in that trailer it looked like
this might be a little more significant
not that it's not significant, again one of my favorite parts
of the episode
but the cape that Lyra picks
it is multicolored and it's got those stripes
and we're going to see those lines, use of
visual lines and stripes throughout this entire
episode. But it reminds me
of how in the opening credits those
worlds are kind of layered together and they
look like those stripes, lines, and striations
especially as we zoom out
and we'll see
kind of something like that repeated with the cave
later on. But also
our friend Cand candid59 on twitter
pointed out in response to that episode uh that we did on girls gone canon that these multicolored
stripes on lyra's cape actually will's demon later on that we meet in book three kerjava
that name kerjava means multicolored in Finnish everything means Will and Lyra everything I know it does gosh no that that's I was really impressed
with the use of these lines and these stripes throughout that tree motif like we discussed last
episode and with here with the poncho even and then later. And I figured that's what it was.
But it blew my mind seeing the lines on the cave and going, oh my god.
Those are the freaking lines from the intro.
It was a very mind blowing like, wow.
This episode was very like, I love being a His Dark Materials fan.
That's how I felt about this episode.
I mean, a lot of people have said that they think this might be the strongest episode so far.
I mean, who knows?
By the time that this hour episode and review of episode two comes out,
episode three of series two will have already been out.
And that could blow us out of the water, too.
That could actually be the best episode.
I don't know.
I hope so.
I hope so. I hope each one is better than the last yep that is my dream well will says that he has to
see his mom's lawyers and he's on his phone his phone device right and he has 10 battery it says
he has 10 battery there in chitigatse oh no the follow-up now is i've rewatched it a billion times and later on
when he's checking her knee he has a bag that he has like his phone he takes something out of it
and plugs his phone all up and he has like two chargers coming out of his phone which you think
would be normal like one would be your earbuds and the other would be your charger and i'm guessing
he had an energy bank but it was really weird because it looked like he had two chargers plugged into his phone of different size chargers
i don't know he could be like trying different ones seeing seeing what worked i don't know
i uh i would like the prop department to weigh in on this yes how is will charging his phones well
it looked like he had just bought one of them, right? Yeah.
When they were on that thing, because he was taking out of a plastic bag in case maybe one of them pooped out and he can't, like, stay anywhere long enough to get it charged.
That's what I was guessing, too, his battery.
I mean, introducing phones is very complicated, as John mentioned. Now it kind of changes all of it for Will.
He's got to keep up and
as we'll keep going we'll see other things
like his missed call
screen etc so I actually like
how that's playing into this
and yeah and the missed calls
I guess you know obviously signal doesn't
probably work in Chittagazza
that's what I was thinking was signal doesn't work
it's dead because it's looking for
a freaking sort of satellite
well so what he should do this is way too much thought yeah he should put it in airplane mode
and turn off the wi-fi it's still i guess putting it in airplane mode would do that automatically
and that helps save battery yeah chita got say mode yep or he could actually technically probably
turn it off most of the time into Jigatse,
except, you know, Will's trying to take
pictures for his gram as we saw last episode.
Yeah, do it for the vine, Will.
Do it for the vine.
R.I.P. Vine walked
so that TikTok could run.
Will says, though,
what's not exciting for some
characters is that Pan has to hide inside this backpack.
Unbelievable.
Pan's just like, Lyra's going to get me out of this, right?
And Lyra's like, sorry.
Can't do shit, Pan.
This is it.
This is it for you, buddy.
She, like, rushes through the window and she gets herself lightly hit by a car.
Unbelievable.
Pan's just in the bag like he's the closest
thing getting hit by the car besides
Lyra. And like
Will yells at her. He's like you have to be careful and
blend in. Don't you know the word wait?
And Pan's like
thanks. Thanks for checking in on me. I'm fine.
Yeah he literally says
that. It's a fantastic small moment.
He's like what about me everyone
in the bag
she fell on me hello
unbelievable
as we're walking away we see that
Lord Boreal is still in this car and it shows
him through the window three different
versions through the window they are killing
me with these windows this episode
specifically is just like window glass window door window window we get it you read the source
material guys oh my god the will i'm proud of i'm proud of that part of you um there's great
cinematics though so they as they walk by and they're saying they need to blend in,
the camera angles in onto the car mirror first to show someone in it,
which you already know, you're like, oh, it's got to be Boreal. And the window comes down on the car, gets rolled down,
and of course it reveals Boreal through another window, through another world.
Yes, and of course he's on the right side of the car,
because that is how cars work in the UK.
I'm, again, very bad at driving on that side of the car.
And there's a lot of symmetrical framing in this episode as well, besides the windows, and we'll see some of it in the Magisterium scenes, of course, like the funeral, everyone looking like, I don't know, the fucking madeline school girls but here as lyra
and will are leaving that street island it looks like those two roads converging right around that
island as lyra and will's roads have converged and you know coming back to lord boreal though
i'm just like how long has he been waiting here his car is just so dirty i mean it works because
all the other cars are like a little dusty too.
Not that kind of dusty, like literally just nobody's cleaning their cars here.
Look, I'm going to be honest with you.
He's probably just left his car there for three to five months.
If you remember his introduction to the last one, I think that's supposed to show passage of time too.
That's the other thing.
This is a way to show passage of time from being in different worlds.
Oh, yeah.
Because he's walked back absolutely after this.
We see him back at the Magisterium.
So I'm guessing it's supposed to show time,
because when we first meet him, you get the boot on the car.
That's what we see from.
We see an angle of a boot on a car showing that it's been locked up
because it's been there for too long.
Oh, right. Like a towing boot you know yeah yeah so also as somebody who has left their car
outside for about three to five months now in one spot and it doesn't move right now either
i'm guessing his cars probably just stay in there you know he got the one good parking spot free
parking spot yeah he has windows
to go through you know that's honestly the smart thing to do on his part just leave it take that
spot and i mean maybe he just stops by every now and then right like i think hanging out there in
his car on his smartphone which smartphones are pretty cool uh is probably way more fun than
sitting in on magisterium meetings. Holy shit, yeah.
I'm surprised. You know, if they all had smartphones, I bet some of them would be on it
during those meetings.
Lord Boreal definitely would be. Absolutely.
He'd be sending...
Lord Boreal would be on Tinder.
Oh my god. Oh, maybe.
Wow. Truly. Oh my god.
He'd be out there trying to swipe on the Oxford
hotties, you know what I mean?
Yeah, they'd all be swiping on him. He'dphail if your platform is for better wi-fi i'm into it i mean it's a good thing to campaign on so we're back at oxford and it's bustling it's busy it's
full of people food things to see new things to seera's like, what the fuck is all of this? And she's
really disoriented. She sees a building that looks like what her Jordan is near, and she runs toward
it, causing kind of a ruckus on the way. And she finds it is not the same building at all. It is a
construction site, which according to some friends of the Herd Art Materials podcast, this is now a COVID testing area in real life.
Yes.
And I like the scene where Lyra running into these places,
she just crashes into some workers and then she like squats down and puts her hand up.
She's like, so sorry, so sorry, so sorry.
Then just turns around and keeps running and it's just perfect.
Classic Lyra is total classic Lyra.
That brings us to the Magisterium with the Cardinal's funeral.
Again, Miss Clavel vibes,
but dark, goth.
Father MacPhail gives a speech
about the wild witch
who killed the Cardinal and has a line
of,
The authority has blessed me with a clarity of purpose
which cuts through my grief like a knife.
But it's so dramatic,
right? It's the most dramatic speech honestly something is not any
speech given there with those acoustics is going to be dramatic this is a great spot
uh but he does kill it will keen does a great job here but the way it's pronounced it's like
through my grief like a knife and it like resounds it's like echo echo and it's crazy it's very sharp like a knife like
the the actual tonality of the speech is very focused and obviously also the emphasis is on
knife because we know the subtle knife is coming we know that soon lots of build-up lots of
foreshadowing and he dedicates himself to the great task of cleansing the witches.
Interesting.
They're dusty.
And then, yeah, they are.
That's what he's saying.
Not laden with anything else at all.
And then he leans in.
Throughout this, you know, we've noticed, of course, that the Magisterium is using the term the authority, really leaning into that, which I think makes sense you know you can't just go out there and tell everyone this is a show about killing god because they are in fact trying to get the show produced um unlike all the hubbub that surrounded the golden compass movie and you know but but leaning into that term right
it also of course plays into the very authoritarian nature of this regime but it's really great to see
it like this to see it revealed and not stripped
down to bare bones like in the golden compass and actually like this is the intention behind all of
it if anything it's it's the opposite of stripped down right they've really fleshed it out done a
lot and it's a great way that they're just making that really have more weight and importance and they're doing a really good job building yeah i know that some people i'm sure some people aren't
like super jazz but again chloe and i have been traumatized we've had a hard life shows on hbo
that are adaptations of fantasy novels don't always happen in a positive manner.
And sometimes they are trash.
And sometimes you end up with a movie
that gets execs walking in at the last second
saying, cut this, cut this, cut this.
We're not ready for a God-hating movie yet.
And sometimes you get people
that are blessedly talented to adapt the script
and not only adapt it in a meaningful
and honest adaptation
but also like add
in some really great creations
utilizing the source material
and having it mean something toward the end
of the story
yeah incorporating things that are like themes
you know again yeah
8th grade book reports
and fan service that's actually meaningful
yeah so you know Eighth grade book reports. And fan service that's actually meaningful.
Yeah.
So, you know,
if we seem too complimentary,
just remember, we've all been burned before. And not quite like
Father McPhail, but maybe a little.
Will and Lyra, though.
Been burnt there, too, with Will and Lyra.
Just saying. Thanks, Paul.
And we're gonna relive that hurt
this episode they're really just getting us ready to feel that hurt i uh i was spoiled and saw the
bench beforehand like i i waited a couple hours before i got to actually see the episode and the
bench of course had made its rounds and had been kind of like teased which is the ultimate for
shadow tease fan service and they know they knew what they
were doing first of all and in this scene they get the first mention of the botanical gardens
will and lyra will is cleaning her up while they talk about the botanical gardens and that was the
first moment where i was like shut up i hate you guys so much shut up uh hurtful lyra's like what
do you keep looking at which is his cell phone explains, oh, my cell phone gets really good
service anywhere, and it told me
that you're a murderer, by the way.
And then Will, yeah.
I'm just saying, does the alethiometer have
fleet? No, not alethiometer.
Recently rolled out on Twitter.
I'm not using it, but
people are excited about it. I'm more
of a, I'm
loyal to my Instagram stories,
so.
Do it for the gram.
Do it for the gram,
just as Will does.
And,
you know,
Will is upset,
though,
about the things that Lyra saw on her Alethiometer newsfeed about him being a murderer.
And,
I mean,
obviously so,
understandably so.
He does,
of course,
though,
have that new phone battery charger that we were discussing that he bought.
And as Chloe pointed out earlier, it's a little confusing with the two charging ports.
But, you know, we're going to go with it.
Yes, Will's phone is going off and he tells Lyra he has to go meet his mom or see his mom, not meet her.
And he says, let's meet back at the botanical gardens at
5 p.m turns out the alethiometer cannot set alarms as we learn but some of the texts on will's phone
since i'm a loser and i paused it and i was like let me pause it and see what they say
i believe these texts say can you at least let me know you're okay when are you coming back
will please let me know when you're
coming back i love you mom where are you and he has i can't tell if it's four or six missed calls
but it does say there's 18 more notifications and the missed calls you can see say they're from mr
hanway who is the gym teacher so if you recall he's in this episode as well very briefly must be
him so i thought that was neat that the phone actually, if you zoom in, is not just like mumbo jumbo.
It is related.
Good job.
Very detailed.
Yeah.
And I mean, obviously, it's all just suddenly coming in at once, right?
Because as we said, no signal into the godse.
But yes, signal everywhere for the alethiometer.
And I couldn't really read the screen.
So I'm glad that you grabbed these. Mine was too blurry. I make you do all the screen so I'm glad that you grabbed these mine was too blurry
I make you do all the math ones but I got these little details so after that Will leaves and he's
obviously a little a little I guess Pan warns Lyra yeah Pan is like shouldn't have called him a
murderer I just want to call out that will is like walking backwards
when he's like okay meet me at 5 p.m and he has no eyes on the road so he's just walking backwards
into a street he could be hit by a car and yet he just had the audacity to yell at lyra about
rushing to get hit by a car the audacity the audacity unbelievable yeah i you know teenagers they all think that they'll be fine
and i guess part of it is like you know at least he knows what a car sounds like and to look out
for it whereas lyra is just like i don't know what's going on yeah i'll live my life lyra
then finds some other things though that are closer to her oxford maybe her jordan college she passes a bunch of different things
that absolutely embody her world her jordan some of the posters are the magical operas of mozart
such as the clemency of titus the magic flute and don giovanni them. The next one is Elizabethan Lute Songs by Candlelight,
and it actually specifies I Saw My Lady Weep.
And I Saw My Lady Weep is a lute song from the second book of songs
by Renaissance lutenist and composer John Dowland.
John Dowland heavily used chromaticism,
which is not the album by Lady Gaga.
It is a musical device, not chromatica, like a chromaticism which is not the album by lady gaga it is a musical device not chromatica
like a chromatic scale it's a heavy form of dissonance basically sometimes it's called the
other sound to diatonacism's male sound which is like basically it intersperses primary diatonic
pitches and chords with the pitches of the chromatic scale. Chromaticism elaborates or
substitutes only uses music from outside of its key, so it's kind of a harsh sound.
So I saw my lady weep, back to the actual song. The song itself is part of the Elizabethan
melancholy, romanticized, basically the woman's beauty is somehow excessive in her crying,
and more than her being a beautiful dainty lady and the end of
the song is kind of ironic because it reasons love conquering over reason it's said to be directly
connected with the next song and the album flow my tears dowland's most famous and kind of his
signature song that follows it it begins with a falling tear motif that starts on an a and actually
descends down to E by the end.
Not in the way of it's a two-part song necessarily,
but the way that the chromatic scale and dissonance builds in I Saw My Lady Weep,
it actually doesn't give you resolution,
so you're almost teetering on the edge when you get through I Saw My Lady Weep.
When you listen to both of them together, Flow My Tears actually has resolution,
and it resolves instead of leaving you hanging with that dissonance so the modern english lyrics for i saw my lady weep mostly because i don't know
that i could pronounce faithfully all of the old english lyrics i saw my lady weep and sorrow proud
to be advanced so in those fair eyes where all perfections keep her face was full of woe but such a woe believe me as wins more
hearts than mirth can do with her enticing charms sorrow was there made fair and passion wise tears
a delightful thing silence beyond all speech a wisdom rare she made her size to sing and all
things with so sweet a sadness move as made my heart at once both grieve and love oh fairer than odd else
the world can show leave off in time to grieve enough enough your joyful look excels tear kills
the heart believe oh strive not to be excellent in woe which only breathes your beauty's overthrow
so with that poem when you put that song against Flow My Tears, which these are probably my favorite verses.
learn to contemn light.
Happy, happy, they that in hell feel not the world's despite.
It feels very much like Will and Lyra foreshadowing
is kind of what I'm saying to you all.
That's all.
That's how it felt that she found that song of all things.
Like, especially in the last verse there of Flow My Tears,
the heart you shadows that in darkness dwell
learn to contemn light.
Happy, happy, they that in hell feel not the world's despite.
Yeah, I think that's a great poem.
And I mean, it could very well be, you know, we know that Pullman loves his poetry.
And yeah, not only does it feel like that love between Will and Myra,
but also the happy that they in hell feel not the world's despite.
Some of what we're going to see in the Amber Spyglass with hell feel not the world's despite some of what we're gonna see in the amber spyglass
with the land of the dead
another thing that we have
here that Lyra runs past
is a bunch of posters with
bears on it you know
good murderers
and with the title
story of the north of early
life in the arctic
yes there's story of the North of Early Life in the Arctic.
Yes, there's Story of the North, Saving the Arctic, and another Saving the Arctic.
There's a couple variations.
So the first one with the Story of the North is a bit odd, right?
There's one that kind of shows an odd dress on the bottom.
And there's also a couple other ones. One that kind of has a sled on it that kind of looks like what she was taken on and kidnapped in the Northern Lights, right?
On the way to Bullvanger.
They definitely reminded me of Bullvanger.
The other two Saving the Arctic posters had a lovely Arctic bear holding melted ice.
And another one with bears with melted waters in front of them and ice caps.
Which is in fact happening, of course, in our real
world. It really is, though.
And it's quite sad.
You know,
when Lyra snags one of these
sort of the North Flyers you were talking
about, how this is like
reminiscent of Lyra's time in Bolvanger,
she goes inside
the
Pitt Rivers Museum, and it's reminiscent of her own world and
the Arctic Institute. She pretends to examine things while secretly using the alethiometer
at a display, but one of the displays behind her has some of the northern clothing. And
in the book, Lyra finds that it like the same clothes and even a photograph right of
the Tartars who kidnapped her and including also her own clothing it doesn't seem to be that here
I re-watched that episode of when Lyra gets kidnapped and their clothing's a little different
maybe the hats are kind of similar but so I think it's more of the posters that you were talking
about Chloe that's supposed to be the way that that's interpreted for this show.
Yeah, I definitely thought the posters outside looked a lot similar, at least.
But inside, the clothing was a little different, which is to be expected, right? A different world.
Yeah, and maybe even like that, that might be the real exhibit there, right?
And you can't just make the whole museum change it out.
I mean, maybe you can. I don't know how production works.
Yeah.
So, then Laura asks the lithiometer
where she can find a scholar to help her
with dust,
and it shows her keys,
which, she asks Pan,
which saint held keys,
and he says St. Peter.eter yeah so they come up with saint
peter's college uh and specifically something that they might not remember or notice as we
know they were notorious for pulling shenanigans during class not paying attention these are the
keys to heaven not just any keys uh the keys of heaven are the keys of saint peter
they're seen as a symbol of papal authority which combines really well with the episode today as far
as we go on magisterium and they're seen on the papal coats of arms in the gospel of matthew 1619
jesus says to peter i will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on
earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.
This, of course, reminds me of some crazy things about to happen in his dark materials, right? A
little bit of the specters that we've already met, but also of the war on the kingdom of heaven that
we are yet to see. I also thought it was
notable that the crest for St. Peter's College not only has the golden keys crossed over the
kingdom of heaven on a field of green, but it's paired with birds, usually referred to as sea
pies or oyster catchers or Cornish shows with a red cross crowned on white. And there's just a
lot of bird stuff happening around mary malone
in this chapter so that was very exciting to me because of her bird demon i just thought that
these little birds on the crest were kind of cute little pudgy white birds real round and i just
like that and the alethiometer also tells her to find the door with the mountain, and most importantly, not to lie to the scholar, and to help the boy find his father.
So as she leaves, these odd wooden toys that she walks past suddenly make a ringing noise, and their eyes glow yellow, and they all turn to follow her with their eyes.
I also felt like this was foreshadowing for the land of the dead in a way
I think so, with them just following her
with those deadly lies
and familiarizing us to some of the things we'll see this episode
in terms of just seeing things that react to dust
items
I'm telling you
just like we said last week, I'm waiting
for the Doctor Who crossover, I'm waiting
for the angels to come to life, because they're
saying that things can just get dust
and move around and do shit,
and have matter be alive around them.
That explains the Weeping Angels, Aliana.
You don't get it yet, but you will someday.
Someday.
I know that it's scary, and I've seen
gifs of this scary thing and looks like a lot
a lot of feelings to feel oh yeah there are a lot well more feelings here let's start here
we'll work to dr who first we get lyra in the museum with boreal and they chit chat he introduces
himself as a guy in Charles
Latrum and it seems that she does not remember him from the party and she introduces herself
of course as Lizzie they talk about trepanning he ends up offering his card to her in case she
wants to learn more he tells her that he donates items to the museum which immediately I was like
oh so you steal them from other worlds and even the way they kind of spoke to each other was interesting lyra and i'll say this later but
she embodies mrs coulter a lot in this episode in just a few different ways of just her mannerisms
and i i just found that so interesting and really good just the acting was great in general daphne
did an awesome job but she almost regards
him just like Coulter regards him that's interesting yeah with that sort of guardedness
and I mean even when he's like so did you learn trepanning in school and she's like no it's like
on the card here yeah total like no you idiot it's like Lyra wasn't paying attention in school
as we just said she did not pay attention.
I just love that Lord Boreal's in this hilarious, normal-ass zip-up sweater.
I don't know why I find that so funny.
And then, of course, Lizzie is the name that she used when she was up north.
Lizzie Brooks in Bullvanger. And we hinted at this before in the trailer episodes that we did, but Boreal, right, in his introduction to Lyra, again, with that framing and those windows, he's coming out from behind these glass cases, which kind of ends up acting as a sort of window in a way before he reveals himself to Lyra.
himself to lyra yes and uh in the books he's watching her from above right like he's upstairs watching her over a rail is how it's presented to us and i was kind of looking for that thinking it
would be that way but i actually like this better it was very sudden she felt very like caught like
oh i'm so sorry she didn't expect anyone else was there she thought she was very alone and he looks
like a normal ass dude yeah he looks very normal. The zip-up sweater, like you mentioned,
he's very downplayed here. He doesn't look
in his crisp magisterium suit.
He is just chillin'. He's wearing
loungewear. I like it.
It's a good look on you, Lord Boreal.
And I do want to circle back
to the skulls and the
trepanning. We did see in the preview
for episode 3
that Joe Pari does have a scar on his head up in the upper top of his forehead, similar to what we're seeing here on these skulls with the trepanning holes.
So I am glad to see they did give him a little trepanning scar.
Yeah.
Then we go to Will's journey in Oxford.
He's checking in on his mom.
Mom, though, if you are English.
Will is checking in on his mom at Mr. Hanway's house. And while he watches her from around the yard, he is texting her saying that he's safe. And we see her telling Mr. Hanway that Will will
be in touch soon, looking very relieved. Yeah, which is good.
And first of all, of course, like Will is looking at his mother through a window. So that feels
significant, especially with a couple of the other foreshadowing elements we're going to get this
episode. But also I just want to call out the heater looking thing, the many pipes thing at
this teacher's house. I assume it's a heater and it just looks cool that's it
you know you said it and i didn't even notice it so now i have to go back and notice it
i'd like the idea of like i mean maybe many houses have that sort of heating apparatus but i'm just
like very stylish into it also stylish is the home of will's shitty grandparents but we're not there
yet will's first gonna jog off to learn about
them. And before we get there, we're gonna stop in with some of our other family members, Ruta and
Seraphina. Seraphina says that we can't get drawn into all these little revenge schemes, and says
that she sent Martin Lancelius to clean up this mess. Ruta argues though that, I mean, for all
of what you're saying i protected
the prophecy and that we need to unite the nine witch clans against the magisterium
and the way that this world is changing seraphine is very concerned because she can't reach to find
the child baby yoda but and that liar seems to be beyond the veil interesting because we talked
with lo last episode and we weren't really quite sure
how far their telepathy
reaches. So it seems that
Seraphina can also regard Lyra.
I'm guessing
if they try, they can try to reach
people they know. I don't know.
Yeah, it might just be like a
concentration thing.
You know, can you call them?
Maybe this is another
smartphone and signal sort of reference thing. I don't think I'm really just be like a concentration thing yeah you know can you call them maybe this is another another
smartphone and signal sort of reference thing i don't think i'm really even joking and saying no
it might be yeah well and that's the other worlds absolutely i think that is the comparison she's
beyond avail she's in another realm and there's something else kind of interesting that's being
adapted here so in the actual book the subtle knife
seraphina has a crazy whirlwind chapter and this is all her alone she goes she deals with freeing
the witch from the magisterium she kills cardinal stirach herself she then flies off to chit chat
with martin lancellius who is like turns out that could have been bad what you did the war is brewing
the magisterium has an army and then seraphina flies off to thorold asriel's
servant to learn where lyra may have gone so they end up splitting this up bruda gets the first part
lansalius goes to the magisterium and coulter ends up going to get thorold most of this works i have
my complaints about thorold which we'll get to but most of this works so i think it's a really
bang up job good call i agree with you i'm interested to hear
what you say about the thorold areas yeah some of what's going on here i i also like that they've
you know in terms of splitting things up that they've given ruda again more of a role and i
like that they are giving her the role of being the one to call for the witches to unite as opposed
to seraphina it it it brings in some of this conflict there that can be resolved soon
uh based on what happens in this episode and you can kind of start to see how the attack at the
this episode will play out in a couple of ways i also like that in this exchange here right we
have this imagery again of trees but a little differently the trees are long and thin and they're in this world of
they're in this place right of of this forest in which the trees create that again visual motif of
those stripes and those lines that are reminiscent of those worlds side by side but also of some of
the graphics that you'll see later when lyra's commuting with us or Mary Malone's commuting with us.
But just play it off, of course, a little differently, a little digitally as opposed to naturally.
The only thing we didn't really get to cover yet here is that the actual vapors that are rising and the fog that's rising.
I'm wondering if that's going to be increasing in the next episode because they were present.
The fog was present, but it wasn't the
actual problem the fog in the very first couple of chapters of the subtle knife is an ever-pressing
problem so i'm wondering right and obviously it gets likened to the specters as well so i'm
wondering how that's going to come up slash be resolved but we'll see i have faith yeah i have
faith unlike oliver pain you know ye of little
faith that was a good moment we'll get to that but before we get to oliver pain we're gonna meet his
colleague it's lyra and mary entering saint peter's college there's amazing use of glass windows here
lyra literally gets lost on the way in because of the reflections and the glass and all of the light she ends up
going down a hall finding mary's door and she's like i won't lie to him i won't lie to the scholar
pan settle down because he was warning her not to so i thought that was fun to call out that of
course lyra thought it was a boy scholar but no we get mary malone's entrance and she is of course
playing with birds much like our friend Cassidy over
at our Discord on Patreon.
Mary Malone is playing with wrens.
They come back every year
she says cyclically. I love
that. It's not an alpine chew but
it's close and it's some really cute
foreshadowing towards her demon.
Wrens are small and inconspicuous
and in old high German their
name often meant king.
So, Miriam alone and birds.
A perfect way to open Mary's art.
That's a great connection.
Yeah.
I just liked Lyra coming into the college.
I don't know if it was that she was getting lost there, but she was just like, so I can just walk it?
Just walking in, and maybe she was like, like wow there's a lot of glass here fancy
and she's like interesting
kind of funny
we do end up cutting out the scene right
where Lyra has to lie to the receptionist
to get in but I think this is
fine she's just like whatever
this is fine and
Lyra asks for a physicist once she
enters the office and Mary's like
will I do?
And again, as you were saying, Mary is a female scholar.
And Lyra's like, wow, amazing.
Imagine if she had only looked to Hannah Ralph instead of Mrs. Coulter.
We never would have been in this mess meeting Mary Malone.
Yes, but she was entranced by the golden monkey instead of the adorable hilarious little jesper face
little marmoset but our hannah ralph right now in the flesh is mary malone and this is such a cool
we got mary malone i know and she was fantastic entrance i think everyone that I've seen so far is just so, so enraptured by Simone Kirby's performance.
She's done a great job.
And I know that other people, they thought this was really obvious.
I'm not someone who picked up on it reading.
They're like, yes, of course she's Irish.
It makes perfect sense.
And that they had actually always, some of them had actually always envisioned her as
being Irish and reading the books.
And because of that last name alone and her background background as a nun and that, as people have talked about,
the really strong ties with Catholicism in Irish culture.
Our friends Warren and Shadow Fox also brought up their associations with Mary Malone as
perhaps being inspired by her name, perhaps being inspired by the song Molly Malone.
This is a song
it's like something in the city and i'm not gonna sing it i thought about singing it and then i
forgot the tune yes the dubliners do it uh in dublin's fair city where the girls are so pretty
i first set my eyes on sweet molly malone yeah it makes sense it's a it's a cool call out for them good for them i'm happy for them i am
lyra asks mary malone can you please explain dust and mary malone's like uh what and it takes a
little bit of conversing for them to get on the same page because of course you know lyra tries
to tell a limited version of her story while telling no lies this is really really difficult for lyra
perhaps almost as difficult as putting down the cookie later and then finally lyra says
i need you to tell me about the particles that you study please yes just the entire poor lyra
first of all she's so tired right like someone let that girl eat her steel ass cookie and take
a nap oh my god but she tells her story kind of like in these limited clips that don't make sense.
And she's like, no, no, I'm telling it all wrong.
And you could just tell she's so tired.
And the way that she does tell the story and explain to her, I lost my friend.
You need to help me.
It does have a little bit of, again, not in a bad way, but it has that Coulter manipulation
vibe to it that she does with people at the Magisterium.
But here it's being used for good as a weapon by Lyra.
She's wielding it for good.
She kind of just looks at her and says, please, the emphasis she puts on please is killer.
We can also really see Lyra's desperation here.
As you said, she's just bowling through all this information at once and i think that's very classic right that's a thing
that's consistent in her character if we'll remember you know in the first season where
she just suddenly comes to far decorum and tells her him all the things that are going on here
about doric and everything and far decorum's like oh my god please chill out what what that was a lot of information at once and yeah i that desperation
i know that there are people who feel that daphne keen played this a little differently
than i think we imagine lyra being presented to do this in the books but i think that the tone
is very different too for a number of reasons, such as that emphasis on Roger and
his loss and how we're keeping that thread in this version.
And I also think it makes sense because Daphne Keene's a little older than the Lyra that
we're used to.
I just think it's harder to play that sort of precocious role when you are a little older than at around 11 or 12 years old.
You're still kind of cute then.
So I think that all makes sense to me.
But regarding Roger, it's something that I'm really glad that we've kept it in the last episode and this one that needs to have weight in this story.
And I think that the show has given it more
weight than there is in the books and the way that really works and it's caused me to like rethink
right the way that it plays in lyra's story and her motivations especially in the third book and
the decisions she makes because i think it gives some insight into like why philip pullman sees
lyra leaving pan as the great prophecy betrayal when all of us are like, why the fuck would you say that?
It was literally there in the first book.
We all read it. We all saw it.
And it's because Lyra feels so much guilt over betraying Roger.
And that's what ends up leading to her betraying herself.
Both of those really are connected.
Yeah, they're keeping it really prominent.
And it's very important the way that they're keeping it prominent i'm really glad about that because
and i don't even think it's uh better done than the book so much as just it's a better translation
when they do it on screen we get it through lira's poe and it doesn't feel as important
the asides to pan don't seem as important but the way she's anchoring it to the people and saying i did this
and what we'll get into with will later i mean that was heart-wrenching right to watch her say
like i betrayed someone will i can't do that to you too um yeah this episode got me this episode
got me you know did i cry yes yeah she's growing up she's learning that there are consequences
for people right and unfortunately she learned that
in the worst way possible.
Most of us don't have our best friend die
from accidentally
delivering them to our parent that we think is trustworthy.
So now
we go to one of those parents,
not the one that killed our best friend,
but the other one that killed another kid
that we knew. A lot of other kids that we knew actually a different parent so back to
the magisterium back to business back to politics marisa and boreal are discussing the current
situation of cardinal and boreal kind of gets some information on her motives marisa says mcphail's
only competition is father graves graves has been on a crusade arresting half the North, and she
thinks that people like his bold
actions. Boreal says
he thinks Coulter would be a better cardinal than either
of them, and mentions they're holding
Asriel's manservant in the dungeons.
He asks if she's had news of Asriel
or of her daughter.
He then asks if her daughter's
demon has settled yet, and Coulter
tells him that is
absolutely none of his business none of his business at all what a skeezy question that's
like asking if your daughter's had her first period that's literally what that is like that's
it's a malcomposted kind of movie no wonder she is piercing him with her eyes uh at this exact
moment and there's a lot going on here i think there's some setup even right there the way that he
says you'd be a better cardinal than either of
them shows that he kind of has this loyalty
to Marisa he's
ensnared by her charms and I
think that right there is the very beginning
of watching his downfall
yeah that's interesting he's ensnared by her but
also that's his way of
trying to cozy up to her he's doing
a couple of things
he's nagging her with this dot with her daughter and also flattering her and honestly fantastic
acting on both their parts right um ruth's acting the way her eyes pierce boreal is just
incredibly done right she when he asks how her daughter is, the look on her face, her expression does not change at all.
Nothing actually moves. Yet somehow you can see that shift in her demeanor and maybe her eyes.
Somehow it shifts from kind of like amusement and we're like having a playful banter and it
hardens into that displeasure and almost content for him. And i think that's something that we've seen ruth do as mrs
coulter even in the first season and she's just fantastic at conveying again those small shifts
which really work for a character like mrs coulter who has done a lot to mask her emotions she's the
lady heady of this show yes she's the lady heady of this show i mean it's for real and even as you
mentioned that it sets up also the blackmail
possibility later he knows where her daughter is he's playing a game he knows all this and that
becomes kind of a blackmail to her like do you want to see your daughter i know where she is
which i'm sure we are going to get more elaboration on in episode three and that will come to play
but it also highlights that blackmail that she then lays down on Cardinal Macphail later.
Hmm.
Yes, it does.
All comes around.
Everyone's fucking over
each other, but
Dr. Lancelius especially is
fucked over right now. He comes here
to the Magisterium as a peace envoy.
Yes, he shows
up and he tries to explain ruda acted alone
but mcphail calls him a spy claiming the witches sent him as a spy lancelius argues this is untrue
that he was sent to broker peace and father graves asks to question him father graves is permitted he
asks lancelius to explain his position as the witch's counsel lancelius explains he grew up in the lakes amongst the witches
until his demon settled and then he left home
as his mother was trying to spare him from undertaking the separation ritual.
Father Graves calls this unnatural, saying,
what sort of woman would send her child away?
Is this not all a perversion of all that is natural?
As the camera focuses on Mrs. Coulter.
Yeah, I want to point out, you know, Dr. Lanselius
here saying, you know,
you're not going to find any evidence
of this conspiracy
because there is none.
Nothing happened between, like,
me and Ruta, and if I don't
if that isn't a message for these days
here in the United States,
I don't know what is.
Things are going great.
But, you know, coming back to this idea of what sort of mother would send her child away,
and that focus on Mrs. Coulter, they're doing quite a bit of that, right?
This episode, likening Mrs. Coulter to the witches, or at least how the Magisterium seems
to perceive witches. And at the start of the episode, during that funeral for the Cardinal,
as they're condemning the witch who stabbed and killed the Cardinal, as we know, yes,
Ruta Scotti actually stabbed him. But the person who really delivered the killing blow is Mrs.
Coulter, as we see when she's conspiring. There's evidence for that, you know, conspiring with Father MacPhail. So in fact, that speech and that voiceover is very much her. It's
zoomed in on her face. She's the quote-unquote witch there. And then here, we're reminded of
mothers sending their children away. And of course, yes, yes, Mrs. Coulter, the parallels are quite
clear. And then there's the connection that chloe you've been bringing up
right in the previous episodes of how mrs coulter seems to be able to separate from her demon
or go much further from her demon than others as the witches as we see do and then there are a lot
of those dangers that father graves talks about when it comes to witches right that they're very
seductive and all these things that actually we've seen Mrs. Coulter do
using her powers of seduction. She wields her sexuality in a way that plays on men's desires.
We saw that sort of weird scene in the first episode of this season. And we've also discussed
previously how Father MacPhail, right, never seems to fall for Mrs. Coulter's sorts of charms
or seduction. But I think it's because back
then she never actually offered anything that he desired. Because he doesn't desire women's
attention, he didn't lust after her. What he actually coveted, turns out, this whole
time was to be cardinal, that sort of power. And it's only when that opportunity opens
that Mrs. Coulter is finally able to jump on that and find and offer what he desires
in order to control him.
And then as she does in this episode, get what she wants.
Yes, I really like what you're saying about Mrs. Coulter.
And I don't have anything I can chat with you about it until you finish the secret commonwealth.
And then maybe we can have a grown up discussion.
But I'm also curious where the collectors might fit into all of this.
That's my next thought, because it sounded like you were trying to convince me of something for a minute there and i was like yes go on eliana what else are you trying to say about this but you just didn't go where i thought you were so close it's
because i'm too i know someday when you're dustier i'm too i'm too clean undusty okay well hopefully
you fucking fallen snow virgin will get there.
Pure as the fallen snow, Eliana.
Something you did say that made me think about this in a little different of a way is Father Graves.
He asks if he can question Lancelius and Lancelius and him go back and forth.
But then you see later as we get through it, Macphail is calling with the gavel and trying to hold order.
So we see Graves step up and use his words,
which Marisa Head, of course, says to Macphail,
use your actions.
You know, he's a big man of big words. And he uses his words to impress all these men in the chamber
that have to vote that evening.
And Macphail realizes, this guy's going to beat me
if I don't do something.
So this is kind of what leads him to kind of give in and follow and sin as we learned but i i didn't really think about the way that graves steps up here and just tries to take the floor from him
in his own area yeah and i like you know speaking people's acting mr daphne keen's father does a
great job yeah here um and he he
does like a thing right when when when father graves is like going off on his thing he kind
of it's kind of like a rolling of the eyes but he like looks off in a way and you can see that
the disdain of he's like oh my fucking god who hasn't done like why is this happening right now
like this is so annoying so graves goes on and he calls the separation ritual unnatural
and lancelius disagrees calling it beautiful and then he explains it there is a land far north
where only the witches can go and to become a witch a girl must cross it alone it allows
separation without breaking the soul so as i mentioned up top we will spoil a little bit of serpentine only because the show already
did this is kind of an interesting add to lore if you haven't read the new novella serpentine
that pullman just published you might not necessarily be familiar with this in serpentine
lancelius explains to lyra every witch has to go through it or not live a full witch life. There are some
who can't or who won't and their sisters pity them, though those who can't do it pity themselves
more. Their lives are not happy. Lancelius explains that witches have to go to a deserted place that
I won't spoil where it is and the demons are prepared for this. While it's scary and awful,
witches demons live their whole life knowing this day would come which is why for lyra and pan there might be an
effect that's a little different since they didn't know this would ever happen to them i thought it
was spectacular they chose to wove this in through the man we hear it from in serpentine no less and
it's a pretty decent sized reveal about the witches how they live how they love serpentine
tells us if a witch doesn't complete the ritual she only lives a normal lifespan something i found
a little bit different in the presentation here is how he described his younger life and leaving
i find it really well done with that inner cutting of coulter into the scene no pun intended inner
cutting uh there there are only female witches in this world as we've
discussed and the males can't become witches semi-explained in this world so it makes sense
lansalius becomes the witch's console he was very well versed in this world and he can navigate
witches without having quite the same powers as them but it also kind of foreshadows especially
here in this scene in this episode for the amber spyglass plot right so it's a really good double hitter of giving some lesser known his dark materials knowledge delivered in a
not canon but a really well adapted scene yeah that's a great point that it's it's setting us
up for that possibility in the third season slash amber spyglass so father graves is like the witches
have been hiding this ritual in secrecy for ages,
and Lancelius is like, it's not.
Everyone knows it.
You can look it up, go to a library if you've ever been to one.
No, he doesn't say that, but he kind of maybe feels it.
He tries to explain that anyone can see them be done, and Graves goes on to then call the
witches the enemy of men, and that they use deceitful ways to seduce them
and steal men's seed really describing
them as succubus but like
your semen's not that cool alright
just saying that and then abandon their
offspring and then Salias says that
witches see the world and its beauties in ways
that men cannot and then
everyone there is like really
offended by this they're like but hashtag not
all men graves begins to call it blasphemy and screams it and then mcphail is like oh my god
so done with this and he's just banging his gavel oh my god how dare how dare you say i a man can't
see something i can see everything i'm a man made by god of course everyone wants my semen how dare you say
they don't want my semen uh white men uh mick fail stands up and thanks father graves and condemns
the blasphemy lancellius speaks ordering him to eight years of hard labor and demon captivity
our friend lo who joined us last week speaks a a lot of the Sami and the suffering they've been put through as a people, as many other indigenous peoples, especially in the North.
And this episode, quite obviously, had a lot about oppression in it.
And I think the writers did their due diligence on this.
The magisterium sentencing a peace envoy to labor camps really reinforces some of the World War II parallels with the Sami.
The Sami people never formed
borders of their own. They didn't want to be an independent nation. They were a peaceful people
that happened to live near Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia, and they had resources and land people
could steal. The idea of fighting over land and borders was probably foreign at first to the Sami
because they literally did not have a country of their own. It wasn't uncommon in the
war to have groups of Sami actually fighting each other for different sides, like Sami on the Russian
side and Sami on the Finnish sides. Eventually, many of the Sami were evacuated from the war,
and they were put into prison camps for the German. Later, the Finnish troops invade the
German-occupied areas of Finland, and they attempt to force them out, but the German declare war, and then they scorch the entire earth, burning every building
except for a few in the outlying districts and laying mines as well to deter the people.
Again, I think they did their homework.
As we get toward the end of the episode, we'll take a closer look at the magisterium with
the witches.
Setting up Lancelius as a captive is going to be a strong plot point i think for a few things i think this
was kind of a smart way to use his character seraphina sent him as a peace envoy so now she
probably has to get him saved which means we'll see some more witch versus magisterium standoff
soon and this pushes her hand in the war as we knew she would have to be pushed a little
bit she was set up as that centrist but this is gonna push her hand and if this doesn't as we see
their lands being blown up does yeah and as you were saying earlier about father graves right and
he used to arrest a bunch of witches father mcphail is like i'll do you one better i'll kill them
Father MacPhail is like, I'll do you one better.
I'll kill them.
Essentially.
He doesn't say that, but bombing, I mean, bombing sends a very clear message.
Yeah, a little bit.
Just a bit.
Just a bit.
Less clear is the sort of messages that Will gets when he goes to the family lawyer.
I don't know.
I thought it was pretty clear.
Okay.
No, you're right.
I just made really bad seconds.
I just wanted to call you out on that. I really tried.
I just wanted to...
You know, Eliana, I think it's pretty clear what messages the lawyer gives.
And the lawyer's like, you're still poor and I can't help you.
No, I'm just kidding.
The lawyer actually tells Will when he visits his family lawyer, the lawyer's like, yeah,
actually, you do have money.
You're a trust fund baby, but I can't give you any because you're a minor and
your grandparents hate your mom the lawyer doesn't say that but i'm saying that yes maybe that's the
less clear message again i just wanted thought i could nail this segue and i did not to hit or
miss every episode this scene though and we're gonna that throughout this episode, as we did in the previous
seasons, and throughout Will's characterization
in general, plays up his whole parentified
child aspect, as Will
attempts to do...
It's a very adult thing that he's trying to do, right?
He's here, he's visiting the lawyer, but
he's literally not able to because he's a minor.
It's like, what are you doing, Will? That's what adults
probably think, and it's quite sad.
Especially when, you know, he finds out that his grandparents are here in Oxford.
He's like, what?
And the lawyer does give him the grandparents' address.
We go back to Mary and Lyra, who are asking questions about matter to each other.
And Mary explains dark matter to her, the matter in between everything.
Yes.
dark matter to her the matter in between everything yes so we were talking a bit earlier about that lyra channeling mrs coulter in this episode but i think we start to see a little bit
of her and mary right because mary is another sort of mother figure to lyra and we see that
mirroring of their characters in the wardrobe in the first season we saw that Mrs. Coulter kind of tried to fit Lyra into this
mold of who Mrs. Coulter wanted her
to be in these dresses, these blue dresses
especially, that matched Mrs. Coulter's
own. But here now, Lyra's
in a sort of blazer. She just
coincidentally actually happened to find this blazer.
It's quite nice. She's finding some pretty nice
clothes in this place where she and
Bill are squatting.
And she's got this blue blazer in the
way that mary malone also has a blue blazer it's kind of fun also i think mary malone is wearing
they look like converse her trainers they are the converse her trainers yes did you like that i love
that detail some other people i know some people i was kind of offended my best friend once was
like yeah but this thing had converses and I don't wear converses.
And I was like, what do you got against converses as a converse person?
We had a whole homecoming themed group where we wore converse.
Did you even live, you know?
Did you ever live?
I was a big converse person.
So I was like, what are you trying to say?
What are you saying?
God.
What did you think of me all these years?
Back to Mary and lyra mary explains what shadow particles are to lyra and that they have a detector in the cave that will amplify these particles and we get to see some of mary's
testing as she explains it to lyra she says that man-made items provided more particles
than non-man-made items i thought that was a great note we see a
notebook that has some formulas and on the other side it explains the human workmanship theories
so some of those formulas that are in the notebook again i hit up my friends who are physicists to
help me understand this because again i'm not a physicist which is why i'm going to tell you that
so the formulas that are on there some of it you can actually see in the title at the
top where it says polarization tensor.
That is what the formula, especially I think on the left side is.
And then some of the other formulas are about like electric fields and dielectrics.
Thank you to our friends.
And like, that's all I'm going to really tell you about that because I could try to
explain to you what this means, but I would just be copying words from the internet and you're better off Googling it yourself because I don't know what it means.
You gave it a good run, though.
You know, Eliana, I feel like I learned something new.
God.
Yes.
Learned something new about, I guess, me and that.
Interesting.
Yeah, I didn't feel like it was very detailed as far as the formulas went on the polarization tensor.
So that's interesting, though.
Electric fields, I guess, you know, it makes sense, the sensing of the consciousness, right?
Yeah, parameters.
Especially we've discussed in previous episodes, you know, waves and particles and what consciousness might be.
We get some other things that we've
talked about, actually, like the Yijing box.
Oh my gosh, I was so excited that they
showed that immediately.
Yeah. It's just very exciting
that they're adapting something so honestly.
And more than just the
Yijing box, the first thing
Mary is testing on is an apple.
I was like, oh, the fruit of the garden.
Is that what you're testing on there, Mary?
I was freaking out at this scene.
This scene was so cool.
And she actually-
Great symbolism.
Such great symbolism.
She actually then looks through a piece of amber when she first gets her first view of dust.
She looked through a piece of amber.
A piece of amber.
The amber spyglass.
Oh my god.
We see the screen making contact.
It looks like the lines of dust from the intro, like we mentioned.
They're moving.
And then she explains to Lyra, you can't see them unless you put your mind into the right state.
She compares it to Keats' negative capability.
She says that holding your mind in a state of expectation without impatience and then the particles flock to your thoughts like words.
Yes.
Yeah, I loved that she was holding that little piece of Electrum.
She was pondering in that moment.
And yes, so we talked a lot about negative capability in Keats during her coverage of the Subtle Knife in chapters three through four.
during her coverage of the subtle knife in chapters three through four and keats describes it as capable of being in uncertainties mysteries doubts without any irritable reaching after fact
and reason and that quote literally more or less that line is what keats has and it was kind of
like an artistic philosophy about this openness to ideas in the same letter where keats describes
negative capability, he also
contrasts Shakespeare and the poet Samuel Coleridge. Of course, he himself also a poet.
John Keats felt that Coleridge was interested more in like these single philosophical truths
and that his work would argue towards that, whereas he felt that Shakespeare was different,
contrasted, that Shakespeare was more interested in many different kinds of philosophies and would explore a lot of that,
would bring those different arguments and truths in different voices, and wouldn't exactly say that
one was right or that the other was. And I think that it seems like, as we've discussed back then,
it seems like this concept of exploring different ideas and that exploration of course
makes a lot of sense in this story right that is really interested in explorers like asriel or
stanislaus grumman hoops and other later scholars have interpreted this line about naked negative
capability as about perhaps like breaking against hierarchy which again you know kind of works in the story
that's maybe like about killing god but i don't know i don't know if keats was actually about
like that breaking of hierarchy or not but clearly you know pullman seems to be quite
quite so between this and his twitter account i i actually really like that about keats that
a lot of the reason why he so thoroughly discussed negative capability and
fulfilled the topic of it and made it such a big deal is because he critiqued the other work of
these genres and you know if you haven't taken the time to read it pullman has actually done a
really beautiful introduction to paradise lost uh completely kind of not i wouldn't say it doesn't
relate to his dark materials obviously since it's part of what inspired his dark materials but it uh it's a really refreshing piece where he has this line
many poems are interrogated until they confess and what they confess is usually worthless
as the results of torture always are broken little scraps of information platitudes banalities
negative capability to me plays a lot on that
on that negative polarity of the poet and he who holds the pen or the quill it's been elaborated
through history as you mentioned for centuries to come if you're looking for a modern keats take
by the way me and eliana were discussing this before i recommend bob dylan because he is keats
with the guitar as many call him.
Bringing it all back home in Blonde on Blonde are probably my favorite albums.
If you're looking for a couple songs, you might be into try I Want You, Visions of Johanna, It's Alright Ma, I'm Only Bleeding.
Those are some really beautiful poetic songs.
But we're not here to chat Bob Dylan as much as I want to be.
We're here to talk about the 20th century British psychoanalyst Wilfred Bayen.
He had some very interesting thoughts that work specifically in some of the framework of this episode.
Bayen felt that the ability to tolerate pain and confusion of not knowing,
rather than imposing ready-made or omnipotent certainties upon a situation or challenge was negative capability. I think this comes up a
lot in the Magisterium's reading and refusal to read of magic and the world around them,
even as we saw in the last episode, right, of where the blasphemy was being declared about
different worlds, but you could look out the window and see it. I also do think it's visible
in, for example, tarot reading. If you're getting a tarot reading and you're projecting what you want to read on it or someone who writes a character falling in love with
another character and then the other characters all suddenly agree it's a good idea even though
some of the characters naturally would have objections to it it's unnatural ethically to
display that and not have that path of the story be told but then to lie at the end and say that
was the story the whole time it's a little cheap right but i digress i'm not talking about malcolm polstead fly rough this is letting it i was like
is that is this what i think it is this is letting it be right when poetry is made it flows and it
comes to a natural progression uh you're not forcing it you're not stopping it from getting
there earlier we spoke about elizabethan flute songs. Dowland's I Saw My Lady Weep
has an unnatural conclusion,
not just from its musical tone,
but also from its writing.
It concludes love conquers reason.
But when we have Lyra reading the alethiometer,
as we later have her saying to Will,
it tells her the truth, good or bad.
As Lyra is about to explain to Mary,
that's what dust is.
I think that's a great
connection that uh it's neither good nor bad it's just the truth it's just what's being held there
and yes it's a it's a state of just being is what it seems to be uh that that state of mind and
then you know mary asks wait lyra how do you know about my work? Because it's unpublished.
Lyra reveals that she's been the federal investigation of Dust Bureau in one of, of course, Chloe's favorite scenes in this episode.
Mary thinks that the alethiometer must be a game.
And Lyra's like, excuse me?
Lyra's like, it's not a game.
Ask me anything. You think this not a game. Ask me anything.
You think this is a game?
Ask me anything, Mary Malone.
And Mary's like, fine, tell me what I did before I became a scientist.
The alethiometer answers.
She was a nun, but stopped believing when she left.
Lyra comments, they would never let you do that in my world.
And she explains the magisterium and her world want to destroy dust or matter.
They see it as original sin mary is astonished and says well i left being a nun to get away from that kind of thing she says people hate what they don't understand and dark matter is honestly
beautiful lyra asks to see the cave so someone that i saw you I just stumbled across this person on Twitter who elaborates on some
of the challenges that Miriam Malone might have with that funding aspect, which is of course going
to play a role in the plot and the chapters and probably episodes to follow when it comes to
Oliver. But I've never really thought that deeply about like, oh, it's so hard to get funding for scientists,
because I just kind of take that as assumed. I'm like, yeah, of course it's hard to get
funding for scientists, just in general, for a lot of things, which I'm so sorry, scientists.
And again, I think of the academic who made a joke in the first season, he says, I know
this is a fantasy show because Lord Asriel just got all of that funding and backing
immediately and it would
never go that fast
but on Twitter
Dr. Sam Henry
whose Twitter account
is G7VDJ
I don't know if that means anything
sorry if I'm doxing you but he has his name
right there and he has his name right there.
And he puts his blog.
So Dr. Sam Henry actually, in our very real world,
builds particle detectors at the Department of Physics at the University of Oxford, which is pretty cool.
And he's also a big fan of this book series.
And he talks about it on his blog.
And I'm going to just read aloud some of his passages
where he wrote about his dark
materials in one of his blogs when the book of dust uh book one was coming out when labelle
sauvage was coming out and he was i guess excited about it and he quotes this from dr mir malone of
shadows are particles of consciousness you ever heard anything so stupid? No wonder we can't get our grant renewed. And here goes the crazy part. You can't see them unless you expect to. Unless you put your mind in a certain
state. And so Dr. Henry explains, I am starting to see why Dr. Malone is having trouble with her
funding agency. Her description is actually more familiar to particle physicists than you might
think. It's a well-established issue that when analyzing your data, it's easy to bias yourself to get the answer you want.
You just keep breaking the threshold of your muon veto and adjusting your analysis parameters until
you see a dark matter signal and then, eureka! This way, you fool yourself into thinking you
have something when it's actually just the background from other particles.
The way we deal with this is what we call a blind analysis protocol.
You fix the parameters in your analysis before you look at the data, then you unblind it, run the code, and publish the result of whatever it shows.
history of dark matter research has seen enough false positives that any claim of discovery which was not in a blind analysis would be treated with extreme skepticism and if you can't see your dark
matter particles unless you expect to it would indeed be difficult to get that through peer
review so we're going to link this blog post in our post description but i i think it's a great
explanation right like dr malone struggling
to get our funding because the way that she's describing what these particles are relies on
something that people would be like no this is just confirmation bias this isn't really here
and you tweaked it like so that you would see what you wanted to see intentionally and it does
kind of sound unscientific probably because it's a fantasy series but whatever i would like to add that dr sam henry's icon on twitter actually has him with two my little pony caricatures with
uh rainbow dash was my favorite my little pony and twilight sparkle yes uh and i feel like that
might be the only reason why eliana is quoting dr sam henry no i'm just kidding eliana that was very
very interesting but that was more interesting to me, and I'm so
sorry. I didn't even notice that. And not
only that, the little figurines that he has
are probably later.
They're later ones because we have
Alicorn version of
Twilight Sparkle. I don't know what that means. That's the one
where she has both her unicorn
horn and her pegasus wings
when she becomes
an alicorn.
Later season stuff. is into the lore and i like that i'm down with sam he likes his dart he likes ponies we're in dr henry you know
who i don't like who do you not like the grand parries the grand parries grand pair they suck
they literally suck uh we they we open the scene and we see photos on the
nightstand there's only one that will is in it's john perry holding baby will and the breasts seem
to be of the grandparents and john perry's childhood no elaine to be seen on this mantle
they give will the usual when your dad went missing we were all upset and said thoughtless things but hey willie
boy you're here now and he asks for help with his trust interesting lyra's asking for help with dust
he's asking for help with trust uh the grandfather graham perry goes off and he walks away because
he's like ah he's asking for money and he's being a dick and he immediately gets on his phone to call
D.I. Walters from
series one he's still a character
still has a name I was
amazed I was like wow
detective Walters
I forgot he had a name
but yes
thank you for reminding us of his
name Chloe
yes he is in this and that's probably going to come to play.
That's probably why they brought him in the previously on Dark Materials stuff at the beginning.
Yeah.
Well, I was right.
The grandparents sold him out to the Magisterium.
Wah, wah.
Saw that coming.
Yep.
You did.
You did call that.
And the grandmother offers for Will to stay with them, and Will asks, well, can his mother stay too and then the grand parries are like i don't know if i like that with their body language
and thinks you know the grandmother thinks well you know she she might not be fine then is that
the case will and then will starts getting super nervous and he starts noticing that things are
off especially because they just start talking about the police he like pretends to suddenly spill his tea with his foot and then she goes to clean it up right
away because she's i guess more concerned about the carpet and i think that's supposed to be the
what that's signifying not just that but the stain on the carpet he's the stain on their white carpet
that's what that was the tea spill not only was it his distraction to get out of there
like he did it on purpose because he knew she would care about it and he could get up and run
but it was also the metaphorical stain on the white carpet yes of their perfect little home
that this is like a stain in their family history that what happened to john and what happened with
him and elaine and he he can tell that, right? We see
that Will's perceptive and he takes this moment to run away because he realizes that there's
no hope here. So sad. He was excited for a moment too, he was like, oh my god, I have
grandparents here. So sad. And of course, as we've discussed, this is something that's
adapted and brought into this from the lantern slides.
Interestingly, you know, when Will is coming to the house, it's another moment, right, where we see him through a window.
His grandmother sees him through that window, more of that framing.
And I will say that along with, you know, Lyra's looking for dust, Will's looking about this trust.
It's a contrast between their two scenes because when will's meeting up with his
grandparents right um lyra is being told by the alethiometer that she needs to trust this absolute
stranger and be very truthful with this person she doesn't know anything about just met and then
will here is with family and family supposed to be people that you can trust uh a trust of course and ends up having to be really
guarded and lied to them yeah it was uh it went pretty much what you'd expect from that scene to
go honestly and i'm glad they did it i mean i think it's a good filler scene for will to give
us more background on him and also something that i think this is gonna have a lot of payoff for is
you know the end of the season when he meets his dad.
And briefly, that is interrupted.
Like, as you and I discussed in the book for The Subtle Knife, I just feel like it's so abrupt and that we don't get any time to really understand a lot of the information that we're shoved into in the past books.
So I think this is a great way to bring some of that family dissonance up to the front.
Yes.
Well, now we go back to the cave, which is a badass scene.
This is like a little happier.
This is a little more exciting.
The music is amazing.
I want you to know that the music right here,
I have listened to this song that plays in the background during this scene
80 times in a row
now because it's just like a banger it's really like you're sitting there you feel like you have
the electrodes on your uh temples but lyra's the one that's getting hooked up to the cave which we
see a wall that has formulas all over it a see-through window that she's looking through
to look at the actual computer and she gets hooked up to the cave with electrodes you know people
love writing formulas on windows is what i'm learning in this show and it's a cool aesthetic
i get it great choices and as mary malone goes to hook up electrodes to lyra she actually flinches
at first and you can really see i think that great holdover in terms of keeping that character
consistency of the trauma that she experienced in bullulfanger when they would hook kids up and then measure them with all of these different instruments.
So it makes sense.
But Lyra's like, you know, I'll give it a go.
Then, you know, she's amazing at it and brings up all these images on the computer.
Yeah, the first try she does is really minor, right?
She's managing to move the dust around, so it's just flowing.
And Mary is amazed.
Lyra had asked if it was dust, and she goes, I think this means yes, Mary.
Mary's astonished, so Lyra does it again.
She thinks how she does with the alethiometer.
This one's the ticket.
The entire screen implodes with waves of dusty color, and then it begins to form into images,
and the music gets faster and some of the
images are actually from the alethiometer uh the first image is the alpha and the omega symbol from
the alethiometer but it's overlaid then we get the sun we get the angel we get a different one which
is yin yang then we get the knife and then we get lyra offering us this dialogue and she says
it says you're important which this kid just keeps
walking around telling people that they're important if this little girl came up to you
and she's like I think everybody's special yeah shut up Lyra oh my god uh but no Mary Malone is
important and Lyra says you have something important to do you have to make the connection
yourself the Chinese box you have upstairs you'll need it where you're going and the last image is the hourglass which
reminds lyra oh shit i can't set alarms on my android alethiometer so off she runs promising
to come back the next day honestly like i said i i don't know i would like an alethiometer but
at the same time smartphones are pretty great so interestingly, interestingly right, the cave
doesn't speak to Lyra
solely in that vocabulary
of those
36 images that are on the alethiometer,
as you said, and uses those other
symbols, such as that of the Yijing box,
the lines around the
yin-yang, and
even the subtle knife
makes an appearance. And, you you know the alethiometer actually
does have a symbol for sword but that's not we're shown here because we see that knife that has that
twist that we all know is a subtle knife because we have trailers and again a lot of that um bonus
content around the show and it's also in the opening credits so we've all seen it we all know
because how can you not watch the opening credits it's amazing every time and i find this very
interesting from a linguistic aspect which again i'm not a linguist but we've discussed in previous
episodes especially in our coverage of northern lights and the golden compass that the alethiometer
actually has its own language and these are and it has these chains
of language as you go down the ladders of meaning there are these semantic neighborhoods it refers
to ideas like semantic neighborhoods and those associations and lyra herself even describes it
as communing with dust like she calls it a language the language of pictures and versus
verbal language which is the words that she says that
Mary Malone can make this do. And in this way, Lyra is actually acting, I would say,
in the role of a translator. And we also don't know anything about the actual syntax
structure or the conjugation or anything that happens with the language of the alethiometer.
It mostly seems to,
I don't know, this is a guess, maybe have like adjectives and nouns because she's like, this
means this thing. And the rest is just sort of intimated in terms of, you know, maybe how it
works. But we find that in the cave, as Lyra gets up and realizes that she's late, it's because,
again, of that hourglass, which is a pretty obvious symbol for time. I think we all kind of
know it and associate it with that and how she's late. And then again, that hourglass which is a pretty obvious symbol for time i think we all kind of know it uh and associate it with that and how she's late and then again that subtle knife which
comes to represent will through a literary device called metonymy and that's the replacement of an
object or thing with something closely related to it rather than explicitly calling it that
so for example it's like using the word suits, right?
To mean businessmen,
or perhaps for this crowd,
when people would say like the iron throne,
instead of saying like,
oh, the actual power and claim
over all of the seven kingdoms and the monarchy,
or even maybe even using words like the authority
to refer to God or this hierarchical structure,
his rules and his will.
So it's very interesting for Lyra to know that this knife,
the specific knife means will and how closely associated that they are when we
actually even haven't been introduced to the knife yet.
Yeah, that's great.
And I found the overlaid ones the most interesting,
like the alpha and the omega as one.
And then that it's mirrored with the yin yang to explain to them
like almost like it's saying this is what i'm trying to tell you yin yang like i'm trying to
speak to you in terms you guys might understand uh i just like the idea of it communicating and
i like the way they showed it yeah i like that they brought in other images because like why not
you know we have a whole computer here we don't have to only do that and it's also there for speaking to the audience not just lyra and the branding is the other thing
i wanted to comment on with the alethiometer symbols like that like you said that the sword
looks like the knife but obviously the slight twist to it even back to those flyers that she
was pulling all of the branding is very streamlined and similar like it's just very neatly done all of
the different marketing stuff they've done for the show
and the fonts they're using and the colors.
It's very cleanly cut, and I really like that.
Consistent.
I know people have probably talked about this already,
but it all comes together, right?
They're creating a visual language within the show,
and what we see on the cave screen,
it's a lot of the same lines.
And I think everyone was like, whoa!
I was like, whoa!
It's a thing from the opening sequence!
From the opening credits when it showed up
and then all the lines and how they have it plucking.
The rest of the lines and the stripes
throughout the opening credits.
There's a lot of love.
I think you can tell that there's a lot of love in this show yeah it reminds me of windows media player back in the 90s and in
the early 2000s you used to be able to put it onto the music mode where the the beat would
yeah the different things crest and fall on the screen the visual mode that's what it reminds me
of i spent a lot of time watching that for no reason. I'm glad. I was like, what else am I going to do?
I don't know.
Be angsty in teenage whatever.
Here, Lyra's a little less angsty.
Will's the one who's angsty.
But as she realizes she's late, she runs from St. Peter's College and she's running across this green.
And it's not her Oxford and it's not her oxford right it's not her jordan
but that very imagery kind of really reminded me of the opening scenes of this series um in in
season one those first few episodes where she's running across the jordan green with roger and
they're playing and being kids or running after asriel and made me sad yeah it was perfect because of course it's
paralleled with will waiting for her and the conversation they're about to have
yep but first we stop with coulter and father mcphail they walk after the proceedings and she
pushes him telling him he needs to go further and act before the trials are terminated she says
graves is a man of big words mcPhail must be a man of big actions.
She tells him to show strength if he wants the cardinalship.
And then we get to...
The bench.
The bench.
Will is upset with Lyra, who's teeming with dust talk from Mary.
Of course she's late.
He thought she had been caught.
He explains that he waited for her
even though police and bad people are looking for him and she needs to be careful and mind him
yes and you know lyra has a hard time thinking about will's needs in general which is why she
steals his bed in the first episode and makes him an omelet with with eggs in it. But Will's been through a lot,
but besides Lyra's cooking.
Last season, Jack Thorne on Twitter
did a great job of pointing out, again,
Will as this parentified child
who has had to care for his mother,
as opposed to his mother being the one
who can really care for him.
And all of this episode,
I think we really see how that manifests
in Will's characterization
and the way that he worries about Lyra and cares, like, for example, for her knee when she gets hurt and tends to her wounds.
And I think there's an aspect of this behavior, right, that's just really ingrained in him.
And a way that I don't know is actually very healthy.
It's very reflexive because that's what he's just been taught to do.
And I think that comes through here in the way that he also blows up at Lyra for being late.
That's the other side of the parentified child coin.
Because Wilch has just undergone a lot of very triggering moments that would recall his past trauma.
From A, finding out that all the adults around him are untrustworthy.
And having to lie to protect his mother.
To the anxiety about this information that's
in his household and how his house got broken into because of all of that along with of course
the police being called on him and again those authority figures that are supposed to protect him
being untrustworthy so there ends up being an aspect in Will scolding Lyra where he plainly states that he himself is also in danger from the police and his desire to hide, which he told Lyra at the very beginning of this episode and Lyra didn't really pay much mind to.
But at least we got her to not wear the cape.
think very much an aspect of will's anxiety and reaction to lyra and him blowing up at her which i think is also a reflex from his mother sometimes either showing up to places unexpectedly or ending
up late due to the compulsions that she would feel because of her mental illness so we also have like
their his constant fear of his own mother being caught people finding out about her condition and
then taking her away from him.
That is playing out here in the way that he blows up Lyra.
And I believe that's a really big part of it.
He's reliving that same fear and scenario that he's grown up with when it comes to dealing with his mother's illness and having to just be responsible for her.
Yeah, and we'll get it in the next dialogue we get from him.
Especially that's heart-wrenching because it's absolutely tied to like he's afraid he's this is just the next person he's gonna lose
the next person that's gonna be taken away from him and lyra's just gone through that herself as
we know she's just a couple steps ahead of him in the whole recovery process you know um absolutely
he's upset lyra is you know she's kind of like hey don't blow up on me you need me
dude and he's like why do i need your help and she's explaining she's like to find your father
so here lyra's kind of playing the ma costa role right just like in series one when my pasta says
she's your mother lyra and lyra here's saying you have to find your dad will idiot she tells him she knows from the alethiometer and
will's like i don't know what you're talking about because my dad left us and he's dead
she asks can i show you and so she does they go to sit on a bench in the botanical gardens
and they have an alethiometer moment discussing what happened to the man will murdered she then asks the alethiometer
whether his mom's okay and pan crawls on the bench behind them his mom's safe mr handway will take
care of him lyra tells will he can trust her she tells him she's betrayed someone before and she
hates herself for it and she'd never let that happen to will and then will tells her yes this is this is why i'm
afraid lyra he says i'm gonna have to leave her aren't i just like my dad did i don't want to
lyra i'll put her in danger if i stay further foreshadowing it's so sad you can see it's not
just about his mom it's about Lyra on the
fucking bench in the fucking botanical
garden. Yeah, I get it. I fucking get it.
And I'm gonna sue Jack Thorne.
I already told him this on Twitter,
but I'm suing him. Suing him for emotional
damages. For emotional
damage. Emotional damages.
God. Oh, this hurts.
Like, this is exactly it.
Just like you said, he's's afraid he's gonna have to
lose his mom and then eventually lyra too yeah and and in the amber spyglass right his big fear
around that he losing people he loves being alone he's had to be alone so long and he's learning to
trust again and that it's good i'll be god eliana's covering her face with her ponytail right now
but I thought I saw a tear form
it didn't leave but it formed
anyway
not yet maybe one day
we've got a few episodes you know to go
something here that
you know something else here that's also kind of sad
but and emotional but in a different way, not as heart-wrenching as this one, is the way that it ties thematically to a couple of other aspects in this episode, this line and all these things about John Perry.
Because it's not just about mothers leaving their children in order to keep them safe, but I think we can kind of put that on John Perry too, right?
keep them safe but we i think we can kind of put that on john perry too right fathers who have to leave to keep the people in their lives safe um but also just kind of getting lost because you
couldn't find the window but anyways um it's it's for the witches right like well it's more about a
custom than it is in this world like you know because as we've discussed the books say that
men cannot be witches but
i think that the show plays that protection aspect up more when it comes to dr lincelis
because they're stressing that his mother sent him away so that he would not have to undergo the pain
of the ritual and so we're seeing a lot of that idea of parents and protection and an absence and
how it can be i think different and nuanced even though, Mrs. Coulter, it was a little more, it was less wholesome, maybe, but...
Yeah.
I think that's a really great look at it,
because this episode did feel very strongly
about that whole maternal-paternal thing going on,
like Coulter with Lyra,
and I think the parallels are only going to get stronger
as we see Coulter kind of go out on her own
to forge her own journey now from the Magisterium
after this episode.
She's going to wear khaki.
Oh my god.
Yes, while wearing khaki.
No, she is though. She's striking out on her own
and Will meeting
his dad at the end of this season
is going to be kind of parallel
to Coulter hoping to find
Lyra and protect her in her sick, twisted way.
Because we learn.
I can't wait for that.
Well, we close the scene with Lyra telling Will
that his father might be connected to Chidagatse as well,
like the alethiometer told her Will is.
Then she tells him that she likes it here in the botanical gardens,
and he says he does too.
Yeah, the subtle knife turns out is actually the one that's being stabbed into our hearts and repeatedly twisted
yeah yep with all these scenes who wrote this subtle knife who jane tranter jack thorne
i'm calling all of you yeah philip pullman i'm calling all of you to a table right now
in front of a jury that
is me my cats and eliana and we're gonna have a talk we are gonna have a talk but before we have
that talk mary malone and oliver payne have a talk and they discuss how even though this magical
little girl rode on through they still don't have enough funding to keep their research afloat over a beer. They talk a little bit about faith
in a way that's kind of fun.
Kind of subversive.
She tells Oliver to have faith.
She's like, come on, have faith! And he's like,
Pfft.
Science, Mary!
Science! He doesn't say that, but
that's the idea.
Mm-hmm.
What is the real science? Well, then we get to the big one right mcphail decides to take care of the witches
mcphail's room is really cool but despite all the you know blowing people up thing uh his room's
awesome it has a window in the very center that's like a very small vertical slit of light that comes in, like a crack in his world.
And then leads up to that magisterium symbol up top.
And yeah, I think that slit that's there takes on a lot of meaning in this show.
And it's on one hand, as you said, a crack in the world.
But also feels a little bit like that separation or splitting of
the veil and the arc of the covenant when jesus died and they're like what is this and how the
worlds are now connected or the way has been opened but i think that line also starts to take
on its own symbol symbolic meaning creates its own visual language within the series we see it
in that very first moment right in the opening
credits where the two sides they meet one another feels dusty and we also recognize it again right
in those graphics in the cave and here we see once more that glowing line of light and it becomes
both of those both of those lines and it also starts to take on
that symbolic meaning I think of the divine
or communing with the divine
as we see it
repeated throughout this episode and I think there's
a sense of irony here because we see that
Father MacPhail seems to probably be acting
of his own accord and rather than maybe
listening to divine
voices is actually
acting on the
temptations of the devil in his ear
Mrs. Coulter
and what he's proposed
as opposed to the kind of connection
that Lyra has, right?
Father Garrett?
All these people got names
they got that D.I.s with a name
whose name I forgot even though we said it earlier
I confused Father Grace and Father Garrett
for a good six episodes
I had to look it up
to make sure this time
putting that out there like I said last episode
all eight of the white guys that wear the black
robes Father Garrett
is Death that's his name
he's the one with the pence fly as a demon
ah yeah I mean it's hard especially
because like they had some images where they just shot
them, had their silhouettes
in the white outline. How am I supposed
to know? All of them look the same with their faces
shrouded. And
Father Gerrit is pretty shrouded here when he brings
the paperwork for Macphail to sign.
Yep. And says
that the witches must be cleansed.
Then he prays for Father Macphail's
success this evening. Father Macphail. Then he prays for Father Macphail's success this evening.
Father Macphail, most of all, prays for it.
Yes, Macphail goes to pray and he tells his demon it will be worth it.
It has to be done and they will repent for it.
He repeats it all had to be done.
His demon agrees and calls it a necessary sin, but still a sin, she says.
She tells him to put his hand out
over the fire and he does lowering it slowly and accepting the flames again with that treatment we
see in uh characters with more evil dispositions hurting themselves their demon their toxic demon
relationships just like with mrs coulter and, again, he's doing a great job.
I'm really amazed.
Again, this is Daphne's in-real-life dad.
So it's kind of...
Mr. Daphne Keaton's father.
Mr. Daphne Keaton's dad.
No, it's hysterical.
He's killing this.
He's doing like a really good job.
I'm actually amazed.
I'm not saying I didn't expect him to.
It's just like he's really getting it.
He's got the acting down.
He's kind of like this crazy guy that's an idiot at the same time getting played by colter yeah it he must be a really
good actor because i cannot imagine this man as daphne keen's father i i feel like he must be so
warm so warm behind the scenes yeah hysterical so different hysterical be careful Mrs. Coulter visits Thorold
in prison
she tells him that she gave him every chance
to escape and that she thinks that Lyra
might be in danger and she asks if Asriel
had any clues about Lyra's whereabouts
and Thorold's like yeah I mean
she came to see him
I literally saw her a moment before you showed up
and that actually Asriel
was ready in that moment.
He was like, getting ready to cut her because of, he thought he had to.
Doesn't mention the prophecy.
But then, thankfully for, I guess, Asriel, but not thankfully for everyone else,
Roger, the kitchen boy, was there instead.
And he's the one who gets severed.
Yeah, Coulter puts all this
together and goes, Lyra followed
Asriel and she's in another world!
I'm of two minds here.
Two things. One,
it's the weakest part of the episode.
Now that's not necessarily a bad thing.
There has to be a weak link, okay?
Not everything's gonna be gold.
But it was silver or bronze at worst,
so it's still good.
It's not a bad part, it's just it was the weakest part.
It works, it connects, but it just feels so weak,
and it felt like, hey, let's get Lancelius's actor
and Thorold's actor and make sure we fulfill the contract this week, you know?
It just felt like they needed to fill their quota
for their contract for this series
uh i just think i don't know i guess where would have thorold gone but at the same time it just
felt like a weak way to get this knowledge that oh yeah thorold's here by the way that being said
it is going to move coulter's plot along right uh and not only that but it shows that she has
motives for lyra not just for magisterium power
necessarily and as we are about to learn with her and mcphail she also wants to go travel the worlds
but she also is searching for lyra it seems yeah yeah i i'd agree with you i mean i'm like meh
on this scene i was just like why is he here it's also, I guess, yeah, I guess he's also there,
so you don't have to spend a lot of time for Mrs. Coulter finding Thorold to find this out,
and it's like an easy way to, you know, move the plot along.
And it is the Seraphina and Thorold scene.
That is what it is.
Like, that's what they're adapting.
They need that information.
Yeah.
I just think they could have gotten it in a different way.
No offense, Thorold.
Yeah, I think it works well to have it
be Mrs. Coulter as opposed to Seraphina
makes sense
especially as we build Mrs. Coulter's storyline
along with the Magisterium
which is now
having a sort of semi-ethnic
cleansing campaign
and by that we mean bombing the witches
and their homeland
it's not great
the scene is all intercut with
the men are voting for the new cardinal
and they're placing their ballots into a bowl
where it burns up and it's showing
bombs being unrolled at the same time
off of Magisterium Zeppelin
down to the lakes
it goes back
and forth and it's pretty
it's something
I think
you know, I see what they were going for
and I think they're
working on tying these different ideas
and scenes together
really tying it together
and I think it works better than
you know, what the scene we just came from
right, because of that
interspersing those intercut scenes with
the voting you have the flames of the votes right from how they're sort of adapting the papal voting
system how the the pope gets chosen in the catholic church as we've discussed in the trailer episodes
and they're bringing it together and echoing it with the fire and smoke imagery that's burning
up the witches lakes and homes so you have the fire there and this one
and it's all going up in flames yeah the power of the magisterium is consuming in both
operations obviously we have men kissing mcphail's ring as he washes the flaming voting bowl with
wide eyes and then we flip back to the lakes which are being lit up and the witches watching
with their demons as their homes are destroyed and then mcphail is back to the lakes, which are being lit up, and the witches watching with their demons as their homes are destroyed.
And then Macphail is back to gazing at the fire in his bowl.
You know, he should have been Stannis.
That's who should have been Stannis.
Daphne Keen's dad would have been a great Stannis.
He actually, I think, really would have, like, with the hair and or lack thereof.
Yeah, no, I know.
He'd be a great Stannis.
I don't know Davos.
Wow.
Wow.
So I spoke a bit earlier about how the ethnic cleansing happening here of the witches is
kind of significant and similar to the bombing of indigenous lands and people by the Germans
in World War II.
But I live in a city that has actually experienced its government bombing part of it.
In May 1985, the city of
Philadelphia dropped a satchel bomb, a demolition device that's usually used in combat laced with
Tovex and C4 explosives on a Black liberation organization called MOVE. MOVE was a political
and religious organization who advocated for anti-government technology and anti-corporation
ideals, and they were a little different than the
witches, but not really that different in the grand scheme of things. They lived in West Philadelphia,
a row home that was known to be occupied by men, women, and children, and the bombing ended up
killing 11 people, five who were children, the leader of the MOVE organization, and it ended up
destroying 61 homes, leaving 250 people homeless. If you haven't been following any of the Western news,
I salute you because it's exhausting and depressing.
But this is the same side of my city that authorities relentlessly tear gas
and intimidated all summer to get them back into their households
during ongoing protests against racial inequality, human rights, and police brutality.
And in the time leading up to the full-out
microcosm of a mini-war on this side of the city in 1985, the city continually antagonized the area
for weeks, pumping tear gas into the neighborhoods, forcefully evacuating people. MOVE didn't have a
perfect record. Some of their confrontations in the city ended up being disruptive. Some people
were allied to them. Some people didn't really like them. But the biggest thing that happened from all of this is that all groups
that advocate for rights in the city of Philadelphia at the time stood up and protected people involved,
stood up and condemned the act of the city. Because just as Ruta was trying to explain to
Seraphina Pecola before all of this happened, if they can do it to one of us, they can do it to any of us
and all of us. Situations like this where it's not just one witch who behaved badly, it doesn't
matter the race or creed because as we saw with Lancelius, they locked him up as a peace envoy.
The Magiserium don't care who they hurt or take down. This leads us to the height of the episode
because one thing is now certain seraphina's hand
has been pushed she has to act if they can do it to one they can do it to all and they can strip
free will from any of us yes and we see that they've been willing to do it right to children
you were pointing out the the the way children ended up as collateral in all of this and
absolutely and i think you're really seeing
the stakes here. And there, as you said, there are real world examples of, they can do it to
one of us, they can do it to all of us. There is no fairness when it comes to these sorts of
authoritarian regimes, right? The morality gets lost. And, you know, we were speculating, actually,
and you know in it we were speculating actually in the first episode of this season what is it that's going to force seraphina to pick a side and i think we had obviously thought it would
come later in the episode and not be this yeah which again glad there are twists and surprises
for us in in this series and this does make sense, especially also for it to happen here
so we can start moving that witch storyline along.
I do, you know, I kind of wonder,
like, are we going to see Serafina
at first blaming Ruta and then,
and Ruta's attack and saying
that's what led to this attack on the witches,
even though it's not, right?
We saw that it was just a sort of big power trip on the part of
father mcphail um before that like maybe seraphina agrees to join forces or is it going to be like
seraphina still refuses to take action even though i don't think that seraphina would be like that i
mean i'm just speculating different ways that this can all go but like or will like you know she
refuses to take action but the rest of
the witches in her clan are like no we can't stand aside because as you said if they can do it to one
of us they can do it to all of us and they move to unite and force seraphina to do so or is it
going to go straight to just seraphina agreeing and being like you were right ruda we have to
take action now the time is now and you know i think that there are a lot of other things that
are playing off on another in this episode, I think that there are a lot of other things that are playing off
one another in this episode. I do think that there's something in how the witch's scenes
where Ruta and Serafina are discussing what sort of action should we take, how should we unite
in power in this episode at the beginning. It contrasts with the power struggle that we're
seeing within the Magisterium between Father Macphail and Father Graves, where, you know, the priests, they refuse to discuss the different issues that are
in front of them. They turned it into the bad power struggle, it becomes this competition,
whereas the witches, they're having that open discourse with one another. There's a respect
between both of those leaders as they're trying to figure out like, what should we do with this
power should be in terms of the just sharing it and uniting yeah i think we're gonna have to see some resolution on lancelius as
we mentioned earlier and yeah i don't know that paired with i think some of the stuff you mentioned
last week on the specters versus the witches coming back into play uh we've seen kind of a
shot of coulter in chitigatse and i'm wondering if we're going to
get any aspect like you said of coulter training the specters uh maybe it'll become more of a
coulter training the specters and attacking the witches with the specters yeah and she kind of
like does that in the books but it'll be interesting if it's more direct yeah yeah that's
kind of what's happening right like we're seeing
a lot of these kind of background events being made more front ground more foreground events
being made into real just like scenes which is really interesting and i know there's a little
bit of made up coming to us in the next episode as well but not not too much that's out of like
the suspension of disbelief it all seems to be in the realm of what
did happen or could happen in the background during these events yeah it works within the
context of the story and as opposed to maybe taking anything away from what's in the books
it really strengthens the themes and messages of Pullman's story yeah well as we get to the
very final scene we have Coulter visiting father mcphail now
cardinal mcphail's room to congratulate him but when we say congratulate it's not so much
congratulations it's more like congratulations you were played sucker yes she says to him you know
you were both the spider and the fly in this web that I've made, sort of that he's both an instrument for her work and also the prey.
And then she's given him a death sentence as the cardinal and being like, well, you know, I know what you did, so I'm going to do whatever the fuck I want.
And what I want to do is roam the myriad of
universes oh the spider and the fly father graves's demon is a spider and we see it in the last scene
father garrett who comes to and asks him to sign the stuff for cleansing the witches
his is the fly she's made him both the spider and the fly he's between both of those men
she's played them all against each other yes that's
that's a great that's a great i didn't think about it i didn't think about it until i just
realized i'm like oh shit father garrett fly demon yeah and they're all there you know mrs
coulter also a poet is she's actually quite accomplished and so in this scene uh he says
to her he's like you forget yourself and she like gives this huh i forget
myself and the demon her monkey demon grunts he's like yes and me too i was sitting here going oh
forget myself huh okay i'll show you forget myself i'll show you forget myself cardinal
i love that emphasis you know we've seen a lot,
especially described in the books,
that her demon, right,
just has such presence
that people shy away from it.
Like their own demons are like,
oh, I cannot take that.
And you know what?
The little lizard cannot take this monkey.
What's it going to do?
Like tear the lizard in two?
Which I do like the lizard's voice, though.
The lizard and the monkey are both cute.
And that has, again again nothing to do with this
but anyway
Mrs. Coulter says
you know what I'm gonna do whatever the fuck I want
you're gonna turn your other cheek
and then
she leaves and she's like
he thinks that she's gonna go
look for Asriel and she's like no
not everything is about dick
alright she's gonna look look for Asriel, and she's like, no, not everything is about Dick, alright?
She's gonna look for something way more valuable.
And then she calls him Hugh.
She says, goodbye, Hugh.
Hugh McPhail! He's a Hugh McPhail!
Hilarious.
It's the funniest shit in the whole fucking world.
I was screaming laughing.
What a power move
everything she did in that moment truly ruth ruth iconic she leaves she's free at last with the
magisterium to go search for other worlds and her daughter before the magisterium finds her first and
i think this is totally some of the setup for father McPhail to end up being the Father Gomez in the story.
I'm guessing he's going to be Father Gomez.
I think he's going to be heading the bomb for Lyra and he'll fail, as we know.
He'll probably be scorned and pushed out and Father Graves will be instituted.
And I'm guessing Father Gomez, Father, not Father Gomez now, but Father McPhail will go off to hunt Lyra, which is A. Hysterical because it's Lyra's
dad, right, in real life. And then
B. No real
spoilers, but I just never realized the Father Gomez
and Bonneville parallels till right this
moment.
Oh, interesting. Scorned
by the mother. Yeah, no, absolutely. Stalking
Lyra to kill her because they're upset
at their failure in the hands of Mrs. Coulter.
Yeah, they've
got that going on there. Yes.
It will be funny. Both of Lyra's parents,
you know, both fictional and real,
will be searching for her.
Slash Daphne.
What an episode.
What an episode. Not as real.
Not in this season.
The other dad.
Not Yorick either. Not Lee either. The the other dad not yorick either not lee either the other other dad
well what an episode and we are so ready for episode three eliana what do you expect to see
in episode three i know we've had a few spoiled things just from trailers i haven't seen that
many of the trailers partially because i like haven't looked too hard for them, and also I couldn't find them because I didn't try very hard, obviously.
I was like, I don't know where it is, and that seems like way more work than I want to put into it, and they'll just go into it blind.
As we all know, I was like, maybe we'll see Joe Pari this episode, and clearly we did not.
So I think we're going to finally see Joe Pari. We have to bring back Lee Scoresby because we didn't have him at all this episode, so I think we have gonna finally see joe parry we have to bring back lee scoresby because
we didn't have him at all this episode so i think we have to bring him back because you know
contracts yeah i'm kind of surprised like that because we you know his i think they're cutting
his journey down a lot um and maybe maybe they're making the journey with him and joe parry longer
and having the beginning the track to the journey but he's gonna go to Nova Zembla
I saw a frame from Nova Zembla
that you actually can see the bar
he actually is going to go to Samirskis
and go to Nova Zembla but I'm guessing we're gonna
get that done this episode and he's gonna get
to the Shaman this episode
yeah and I think we're gonna get
you know Mrs. Coulter
entering Chittagatse
actually we might not.
That would be interesting if we didn't and built that suspense
for what she's going to do first in this episode.
And I think we're also going to see,
we have to see a follow-up to The Witches and stuff.
What do you think, Chloe?
What do you think we're going to get this episode?
I think we're going to get this weird new scene of Coulter and Lee,
as we've seen from that trailer clip.
There's a really tiny trailer clip.
So we have a made up scene that's new.
I'm interested to see how that works.
And we're going to go from there
and I guess I think we're going to get some
Will and Lyra spending time together
which is nice.
Is Lyra going to lose the alethiometer
this episode?
That's what I'm wondering but it feels too early.
Does it? Because then it's episode
four, and then we only
have three episodes left, so maybe.
Or she could
lose it, but it will be at the end
of the episode. That's what I'm thinking. I think we'll
close maybe on that, so lose it at the end, because
I think they go back to Oxford, so.
Yeah, she has to
because she told Mary Malone that she's going to come back the next day.
So they come back, and I think we're going see some exploits i think we get the movie theater scene i think
they go on a date i'm pretty sure we get their first date okay that's important to me because
i just really you know lyra's had omelets she was gonna have this cookie and i don't know why
but i just really want lyra to try a burger it's
just like really important to me and i want to see her react to that i had a burger the other night
it was great i might have a burger for lyra holy shit i hope she gets a burger i think that's uh
i hope that and i hope we get some more pan sass that's what i want oh yorick i hope we get a
yorick i hear we might see yorick he was in the trailer i i've been wondering i don't know how but i want it so yes
same maybe he rescues lee or something because they could also be in love that could be cool
i'd be fine with that i'm open i'm open i'm an open book so i hope you surprise me tonight his
dark materials negative capability yeah i mean lee and york is a better ship than some potentially canon
some potentially canon things that we are getting in uh some of these other stories so
oh my god well thank you so much for listening into our recap of his dark materials series two
episode two the cave it was a blast if you have enjoyed listening to this, please feel free to subscribe to us on many
other places that you can hear us, like
iTunes, Apple Podcasts, if you're on
there. Google Podcasts,
you name it. Yes, and of course, keep up with
some of the things that we're saying about His Dark Materials.
We also tweet some other
insights and cool links. Find us on
Twitter at Girls Gone Canon, C-A-N-O-N
on Twitter, or maybe
you have something to say about any of these episodes.
Feel free to shoot us an email at girlsgonecanon at gmail.com.
Yes.
And we do have a Patreon, patreon.com slash girlsgonecanon.
If you're in our Thunder tier or above, that's $10 and above tier, you get access to our Discord channel,
which we are talking about His dark materials constantly there we have
a spoilers channel a no spoilers channel we have the books we have the books of dust please come
hang out it's very active there and people in the five dollar and up tier stranger tier and above
will get a special episode on a song device and fire this month and next month they'll get a
special episode on his dark materials that is again patreon.com slash girls gone canon yes and of course this week later this week look forward
to a la belle sauvage episode following the book of dust book one yes as always i have been one of
your hosts chloe and i've been another one of your hosts Eliana
see you next week
goodbye
oh
shit