4.2 The Burden Of Beauty Halfway through this week’s episode it occurred to me what I think Banshee is trying to do in its final season. Truth be told, season four has so far seemed a little more grounded and slow than what we’re used to from this show, but I think there’s a reason for that because, if I’m not much mistaken, this year is shaping up to be Banshee by way of True Detective. In pre-release interviews it was suggested that there would be fewer experimental episodes this year, because this season as a whole is an experiment itself. And while that may seem a risky choice for a final run, Banshee was never going to play it safe. If it did it wouldn’t be Banshee. So instead of billionaires using semi-trailers as their travelling lairs/personal torture chambers or heists shot in first person, instead we’re getting a puzzle-box mystery that slowly gets pieced together through time jumps and gradual reveals of just what happened in the intervening two years. Any complaints about Rebecca’s abrupt departure seem a little unfounded now; she might be dead, but it’s hard to imagine that she isn’t going to be a hugely important ongoing presence on the basis of this episode. Rebecca had secrets of her own, and whatever the truth of her death, her agency seems to have only grown stronger in the last two years. Despite what his former friends think, the show doesn’t seem to be suggesting he may be the killer. Proctor, on the other hand, clearly knows more than he’s letting on, and while the two previous corpses would suggest that this wasn’t just a retaliation to Rebecca’s side business, there’s a chance that her death was designed to look like the work of a serial killer to divert suspicion. Maybe. Personally, I think Proctor is a clear red herring, although there is something tantalising to the idea of his protégé having become a dangerous enemy. What is becoming more evident with each episode is that Banshee is now full of different factions who have every reason to want to hurt each other. Calvin Bunker is gearing up to make a power play while his brother leaks information to Carrie to assist in her ongoing vigilante campaign against the scumbags of Banshee (which, by the way, is awesome). A very big and very dangerous cartel has become involved and the hillbillies Hood and Rebecca maimed probably aren’t going to vanish quietly into the night. Brock is stuck under Proctor’s thumb and Hood is grappling with ongoing guilt over his abandoning of Job, while Carrie kept searching. Basically, the town is a powder keg gearing up for a very big explosion. Rebecca’s death lit the fuse, and now all we can do is get ready.  But hey, for now Banshee is back, they’re boldly wading into new territory and there’s a tantalising mystery driving the plot and promising a build to a spectacular conclusion. To my mind, only a creative team with complete confidence in their vision could pull off the feat they did with season three and then decide to take a hard left instead of staying the course. That, to me, is the most exciting part of what we’ve seen so far.  Read Gabriel’s review of the previous episode, Something Out Of The Bible, here.