![]() ![]() 'The Eternal Enemy' is an amusing mix of The Terminator and the long-forgotten late '90s show Early Edition. ![]() The meeting gives Spence the boost he needs to return to Brightcliffe and accept Sandra's apology with love before telling a story at that night's Midnight Club. His growing confidence and self-acceptance has been one of this season's most affecting character arcs and William Chris Sumpter’s performance is terrific. Mark takes him to meet a group of LGBTQ activists and he is astonished to find people who accept him for who he is and who don't treat him with fear or disgust. ![]() Spence, at least, is having a good time, despite Sandra's revelations. Ilonka, however, is too blindsided by the reveal that Shasta is, in fact, Julia Jayne, something that most of the audience probably worked out several episodes ago. If you're thinking that her demands to be snuck into Brightcliffe sound a bit suspicious and probably a really bad idea then you are not wrong. She goes and sees Shasta who suggests that they recreate the ritual themselves later that night. Ilonka reacts to all of this – and to an absolutely disastrous encounter with Katherine, which ends with her venting her rage and cruelly reducing Kevin's girlfriend to tears – in the way that she's reacted to every extreme event this season. Still, despite Amesh suggesting that they are experiencing a case of folie à deux (the madness of two) simply too much has happened for it all to be so easily explained away. While Kevin and Ilonka say that they’ve both seen the same ghosts – the old man and woman – the others deny having seen anything. In fact, this episode briefly flirts with the idea that all of the magical events that have taken place over the course of the series might have rational explanations. ![]()
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