FROM Season 3 Episode 3 Review: Mouse Trap
Critic’s Rating: 4.75 / 5.0
4.75
FROMily.
What. Just. Happened?
Are we supposed to just go on living our lives now after watching FROM Season 3 Episode 3 and pretend like they didn’t just leave us on the mother of all cliffhangers? Hello!
It’s rare for a show to truly leave you speechless, but FROM manages to do that regularly. And it never gets stale, either.
An abundance of gotcha moments can get annoying if they’re played in a way meant solely to illicit shock and not to add anything to the narrative. FROM doesn’t have that problem.
One thing about this series is that things move slowly and quickly simultaneously. Time is nothing but a construct in this world, and as we watch each day unfold, they aren’t always filled with action and fright.
Some days are more subdued and more about world-building and character-building, and this was one of those.
The cliffhanger from FROM Season 3 Episode 2 picked up rather quickly as the demon on the phone pretending to be Thomas taunted Jim through the phone, and basically told him he was a terrible father.
I’m not the biggest Jim fan, if only because his short temper and willingness to make terrible decisions at every turn have made him more of a liability than a help throughout much of his time in the town.
But Jim has been through a lot, and like many in the town, he’s done the best he could given the circumstances. He’s not actively trying to disappoint his children. He’s just being pulled in various directions when the only direction that matters right now is being there for his children.
The monsters’ phone calls to taunt are yet another way they’re trying to penetrate the town’s psyche. They’re playing with their food right now before deciding to do the next big thing to assert dominance.
Boyd is aware that they’re becoming sitting ducks because it’s so obvious that things are changing for the worse. They may have found a way to survive with the talisman, food, and the rules they put in place, but it’s apparent that’s not enough anymore.
They got complacent in that town, and when they fought to do something, like during FROM Season 1 Episode 10, the town came back hard.
But that’s not a reason to give up, and Boyd understands that now. They can’t be content just to survive each day. They have to start finding reasons to live.
Look no further than to Ethan to see how much the town can break your spirit. He lost his mom and Tian-Chen within like a few days of each other. Victor yelled at him, and they lost some of the animals.
He’s been incredibly courageous considering what he’s had to see, but adults can only take so much before they break, and Ethan’s only a child. He was asking genuine questions to Jim, morbid, sure, but all rooted in his wanting his missing mother to be adequately cared for should she have died.
Jim’s hot temper came out to play as usual, and he’s grieving Tabitha’s absence as much as the kids are, but he needs to figure out a way to put his children’s feelings above his own. It’s like parenting 101.
Poor Ethan can’t be pep-talked out of self-loathing and disappointment anymore, and people need to start understanding that. He’s a child, but his feelings are valid.
It’s not as if you need to tell him that things will never get better, but there’s also no use in pretending like you have it all figured out, especially when it’s VERY obvious that you do not.
Boyd’s optimism, even in the face of mounting losses, is commendable, but it’s just words now. It was always words, but they feel even more hollow when, each day, some terror sweeps through and leaves devastation in its wake.
Boyd’s desire to capture a monster makes perfect sense because what do they have to lose now? The town is picking them off one by one, and they have to do something.
I understand where Donna and Ellis came from, and even the Father Khatri hallucination, but what’s the alternative? Do nothing?
If Boyd can devise a tangible plan that at least gives him a fighting chance, he needs to do it. They have to start taking chances and risks because staying pat and accepting the hand they’re dealt is not working.
That town is filled with terrified and brave individuals, but Boyd is the one they look at to make the tough calls, and he has to decide how to proceed.
Sleeping out in the bus for the night feels like step one toward his goal of capturing one of the monsters, and I’m curious how that will play out. I’m Team Boyd all day, every day, but he should take a few nights to study them more and then formulate his plan.
Was Father Khatri speaking facts? Did the monster succeed in breaking Boyd?
I don’t think so, but if he doesn’t attack this plan in a way to limit the danger to himself and others, I’m afraid they might.
Elsewhere in the town that day, Fatima was still eating rotten food and doing it in broad daylight. Seriously. Why didn’t she take a handful and then go and hide somewhere?
Naturally, this occurred so that Tillie could catch her and the two could bond, even though Fatima was not her for any of the spirituality Tillie brings.
It’s funny when people in town get indignant over things that are a little out there, unnatural, or not “normal.” It’s as if the nightmare they’re living in day in and day out is totally plausible, but other things can’t possibly be true.
Tillie was trying to be there for Fatima and offer her comfort, which Fatima desperately needed. There’s something wrong with this pregnancy, and maybe Ellis is a little too preoccupied and scared to vocalize that. But he and Fatima aren’t communicating because they’re so terrified of hurting each other.
But not talking to one another is truly what’s hurting them right now.
Tillie was a sounding board for Fatima to at least say out loud that she was scared instead of just feeling the emotion. Vocalizing that kind of pain can do wonders for your psyche and help you feel so much less alone.
Whether you believe in tarot cards or not, Tillie was trying to do a good thing, and I wasn’t here for Fatima trying to make her feel bad about it. However, Fatima also feels incredibly unmoored.
Side note, that’s one of the things I love most about this show. Everyone has moments that don’t paint them in the best light, but they’re also living through the worst moments of their lives.
It’s okay to give people grace.
Well, everyone but Dale and Randall. And Jade when he’s being EXTRA offensive.
Anyway, I was nervous about the tarot reading, but Fatima got her answer differently.
A bird essentially killing itself when you ask the universe whether or not your baby is okay tells me all I need to know about where this story will go if there were any doubts to begin with.
There are so many possibilities here, and I’m terrified for Fatima, Ellis, and the whole damn town. There’s something sinister happening with this pregnancy.
Out in the woods, Kenny led a team out to get food where he and Jim found it, and aside from Jade seeing a dead man who tried to strangle him and Dale’s constant complaining, they seemed to be gathering a lot of food.
Kenny’s still a live wire, and Kristi’s just being there was probably the comfort he needed in that moment. If he’s not ready to unpack his emotions, trying to force him to will not help.
I was confused as to why they had to draw straws to go out there until I realized they had to sleep out there! Suddenly, Dale’s brattiness made a little more sense.
There’s no use in blaming Jade for what happened to Kristi, but what a turn of events. Kristi was injured, and Jade destroyed that creepy statue shrine to free her. Now, they have to stay in the woods overnight.
Nothing terrible is going to happen there, surely.
I hope this season delves deeper into the things the townspeople are seeing. Jade’s been seeing visions since forever, and we’ve seen countless others as well, with Elgin seeing the creepy lady and Randall seeing the bugs here.
What does it mean?
That question pervades this whole series and every storyline, perhaps none more than Tabitha’s.
She’s obsessed with trying to figure out why she was placed in that town to meet Henry and how to make sense of things so she can get her family back.
Every time Henry opens his mouth, things get more disturbing because it sounds like Miranda almost made a map of everything she saw in her dreams (?) around her house and the town.
Seeing the bottle tree was just another thing that got Tabitha’s mind whirling, and I wasn’t even surprised when she started to question everything when she found that bracelet in Henry’s car.
It was getting weird. And for sleep-deprived Tabitha, it had to make even less sense than everything she had just gone through because how do you land back in the “real world” and meet Victor’s father and have all these coincidences?
Nothing added up, and I didn’t blame her for being scared and suspicious at that moment. Maybe she wasn’t actually back, and this was really some adjacent world or something sinister.
She was already not thinking clearly, and when everything came to a head, I knew an accident was on the horizon. Fights or arguments in cars almost always lead to accidents, people!
But what happened next shocked me to my core because what do you mean Tabitha, an unconscious Henry, and these three EMTs are about to join the town?
Oh. My. God!
This can not be real. Tabitha got out only to go right back in? Victor’s going to reunite with his father? Did Tabitha ever actually “get out?”
The questions continue to mount as my jaw stays permanently on the floor. It’s so good to have this show back.
Loose Ends
- It’s good to see Bakta! I was wondering about her, and it’s nice to know that she’s doing as well as can be expected.
- What did Victor dig up? And why did he go to Sara with it?
- Julie hates her daddy so much right now. She’s sick to death of him messing up.
After this one, there’s a lot to discuss, so please let me know your thoughts in the comment section below!
What could we be in for next?
You can watch FROM on Sundays at 9/8c on MGM+.
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