Spoilers for Legion follow. Be forewarned. Shall we begin?
Well, that was certainly one heck of a ride! And I hope you all stayed after the credits like good superhero movie-loving nerds, because if you didnât, you missed something big. Letâs get into it, shall we?
Last weekâs episode marked the triumphant return of the Division 3 employee who first interrogated David in the pilot, and as this episode begins, we learn all about what heâs been up to since then. Well maybe âtriumphantâ isnât exactly the right world â he and his army of goons might appear to have the upper hand as we open this eighth chapter, but his face and body were badly burned during Davidâs escape attempt, and the trauma of his recovery is wreaking havoc on his relationship with his husband and son. Yup, didnât expect a flashback about how the evil shadowy government goon is actually a caring family man, did you?
Now that Davidâs aware of his full power, though, it doesnât take much for him to easily subdue the Division 3 army via Katamari Damacy methodsâ aka crumpling them all up into a giant mass of angry stuck-together people. With the Interrogator (who we learn is named Clark) captive, the gang has different ideas of what needs to be done next. Ptonomy, unsurprisingly, wants to kill him; Dr. Bird wants David to read his mind and steal D3âs secrets; David just wants to try to reason with him and learn how to coexist with mutants; and Cary just really wants David to stop exerting himself and let ’em take the Shadow King out of his head already. And all the while, everyone at Division 3 can see everything that the Interrogator is seeing (including his husband, who appears to work there, too! Thatâs⦠adorable? Do you think thatâs where they met? How dare this show make me care about the minor villains so much!), because heâs got a camera in his eye thatâs recording everything.
Of course, Cary is right to think that getting rid of the Shadow King should probably be their main priority; heâs starting to break out of confinement. During their negotiations with Clark, Syd receives a sudden mental visit from Lenny, whoâs able to communicate with her because of the time Syd and David swapped bodies. Unsurprisingly, sheâs not on board with the whole âforcibly remove the Shadow King from Davidâs headâ plan, and tells Syd that the only way sheâs letting go of David is if Syd helps her escape; otherwise, he dies when they try to separate the two. Syd doesnât quite buy it yet, but she is quick to fill Clark in on the details in the hopes that heâll help save her boyfriend, which is some pretty potent foreshadowing for whatâs to come later.
Speaking of which, itâs all about to pop off now as Davidâs taken to the lab and strapped to a machine that, I kid you not, looks exactly like the electronic cerebrectomy device from The Muppet Movie (Given that this series has already borrowed from the Muppets in the form of Davidâs terrified âRainbow Connectionâ cover, Iâm gonna go ahead and call this intentional). The machine, weâre told, will identify all the brainwaves in Davidâs head that donât belong to him and suck them out, which also has the nifty side effect of allowing David to go on a psychedelic trip back through his own memories while Pink Floyd plays in the background.
Finally, David comes face to face with his demons, literally. Heâs worried that the Shadow King is a part of him too, now, and asks Lenny point blank: âWho am I without you? What happens to me when youâre gone?â You know, the sort of typical stuff you worry about when youâre in recovery for a mental illness and youâre not sure how much of your personality is rooted in the behavior making you ill in the first place.
And as we all suspected when Lenny first floated the idea past her, Syd takes matters into her own hands and extracts the Shadow King from David herself with a well-timed kiss. Things go pretty nuts from there as he bounces from Syd to Kerry, and Ptonomy shoots up the whole lab trying to stop it from happening (dude, a machine gun? Are you really that bottom line-oriented that youâd be cool with killing all your friends?).
With the Shadow Kingâs psychic powers and Kerryâs rad martial arts skills, she’s nearly unstoppable until David gets in her way and the two launch themselves at each other like superheroes and villains are supposed to do. The good news is, the Shadow King gets forced out of Kerryâs body. The bad news is, he plants himself right into Oliver instead (who just got his memories of Melanie back, because twist the knife why donât you), and he escapes in his body before anyone even realizes theyâre gone. And together, they seem to be looking for something. Or someone?
Thereâs also one more good thing to come out of the aftermath: they might not have won, as David tells Syd, but he and Clark agree that Summerland and Division 3 should probably be working together to stop the Shadow King. Except, maybe nobody actually did tell the guys at D3 headquarters, because the end credits are interrupted by a GIANT ROBOT EYEBALL trapping David inside itself like a pokéball and flying away with him? Could that have been the âequinoxâ the D3 guys talked about deploying earlier in the episode? Or could it be something else entirely? (Fingers crossed for Mojo â I will have satisfaction, damn it!) Who knows, but Iâm certainly going to tune in next season to find the heck out.
What about you? Now that the first season is done with and all (well, most) of our most burning questions about David have been answered, what did you think? Let us know in the comments!
Images: FX Networks