*watches episode of Pluribus
*reads about the Darien Gap and those mental trees, like something from an angry space planet!
*watches episode of Pluribus
*reads about the Darien Gap and those mental trees, like something from an angry space planet!
âšđ„ Episode 8 of Pluribus is a total mood shift! My full Patreon reaction for âCharm Offensiveâ is now live â so much to unpack!
âšđ„ Episode 8 of Pluribus is a total mood shift! My full Patreon reaction for âCharm Offensiveâ is now live â so much to unpack!
I'm starting to become more vocal about #Covid, and I'm getting so much fucking pushback from people who have not bothered to stay informed on the topic.
I'm trying to find a way to communicate to the people that I love that they *should* be worried about catching the virus, and they should do everything they can to avoid catching it, especially repeatedly.
But nobody listens to the Cassandras.
If what we predicted doesn't come true, we're happy, but nobody remembers that we were predicting dire things.
If what we predicted does come true, we're not happy, and still nobody remembers that we were predicting dire things.
Nobody wants to hear that Covid is an airborne immune destroying virus and that 5-10 years down the road (or even now!!!), they're going to be mysteriously sicker. Of course it will not be attributed to Covid, because nobody believes that Covid is an immune-destroying virus except us Cassandras and a few nerdy researches tucked away in the halls of academia or whatever.
I am so fucking frustrated at this point! I almost feel like I'm gaslighting myself, because I don't have peers who have the same amount of knowledge and who are taking the same types of precautions to protect themselves and the people that they care about.
My friends are starting to treat me like a tinfoil hat conspiracy theory nut. I don't even push knowledge on them unless they ask me. And they don't even ask me, because they know they will get an irritatingly long and passionate infodump about it.
We as a society really fucked up. We as a world really fucked up. The things that we could have done in order to prevent so many people getting sick and dying were so damn simple, but nobody wanted to do them.
And now, even the people who are closest to me, to whom I can't help leak Covid information to, are tired and exhausted and don't want to hear it.
They don't want to see me in my mask. They don't want to understand my perspective, they have no compassion for my struggle these last six years, and they are not even curious how I've never caught it. They don't care that to the best of my knowledge, I have protected myself from it over the last six years, and I'm one example of how a person can do so.
I tried to remind them that it's OK to mask again. It's OK to get a HEPA filter. It's OK to assess risks before you go somewhere. Nobody fucking wants to do that! Everybody wants it to be over, they want to go back to pre-Covid days, they want everything to be normal and happy and shiny and whatever again.
And it cannot be because we did not defeat the virus. It is here to stay. It continues to mutate, it continues to infect people and give them long Covid, and it does continue to kill people. They just don't see this information in regular media. A person has to go digging for it in actual research papers and follow the people who have continued to track the virus, citizen scientists, as it were.
Nobody likes a know-it-all. I feel like they are all just waiting for me to catch it. They're waiting for me to fuck up (that's what I'm getting into gaslighting/tinfoil hat territory -- not trusting the people who say they care about me). They all want me to relax my fucking boundaries and not wear a mask around them and not to be cautious.
It's like fucking #Pluribus, except those aliens can't do harm to living beings or even pick a damn apple, even though they are scheming behind the scenes to infect the last remaining people.
I feel like there are people in the world who, if I caught Covid, would laugh and point and say see, you're one of us now.
I would love to be able to let my boundaries down for a while, the way Carol did when she went running off with her alien companion. But then, more likely than not, I would catch Covid. And with my pre-existing immune issues? I would be signing my own death warrant.
No temporary pleasure or escape is worth that.
Though I did wish yesterday that somebody would give me an atomic bomb* because I'm about ready to nuke the entire universe so we can start over.
* if you haven't seen the show, you won't get that reference
Battle for the Ballot: Best Dramatic Presentation 2026
The two Best Dramatic Presentation categories are among my favourites in the Hugos, because I consume a lot of SFF media and have a lot of thoughts and feelings about them. Since my post last year about why I had wanted Loki S2 to win a Hugo in 2024 (which I was working on for a while but ended up not posting it in time for it to sway anyone), Iâve been toying with the idea of producing more writing around some of my favourite things from each year, in case it helps anybodyâleast of all me, in getting it all out of my system.
I know Iâm posting this with one day to go before nominations (these take so long for me! I must develop a better system for next year đ€), but Iâm really writing this to sound out my own thoughts about the DP categories this year, because it is absolutely bananas with how stacked they both are. There have been some truly great speculative television shows and films, stuff that Iâm sure weâll still be talking about for years to come, and making decisions to boil my favourite media down to just 5 per categoryâespecially given the fiddliness of Long Form and Short Form where TV is concerned, which Iâll get to in a secâis going to be excruciatingly difficult for me.
So come along on a journey with me as I parse my thoughts, and who knows! Maybe Iâll argue my way to your heart about some of this, or tell you about something you hadnât heard of beforeâsome of which Iâve already written about before, but Iâm getting ahead of myself!
Let me know what your ballot looks like, and if youâre nominating any of the below shows, films, and other dramatic works, or if youâre including other things entirely. Iâm curious!
TV series and the Long Form/Short Form debate
A big question for many fen every year is âdo I nominate one episode from a TV series that stands on its own or that adequately represents the show in Short Form, or do I nominate the whole season in Long Form because itâs one complete narrative, and isolating one chapter of it would be unfair?â
Understandably, itâs a tough one; when a show inevitably gets votes in both categories, it can lead to headaches for the Hugo Administrating Team as they have to sift through the numbers and ultimately decide which category it should be nominated in1, which I donât envy at all. But at the same time, as a voter, I have to go with what my heart says and name my favourite episodes in Short Form, regardless of whether Iâve also named the show/season as a whole in Long Form, because if enough others have put that same episode down, then thatâs whatâll make it through to the shortlist, and I would want my vote to count towards those totals.
All that to say: if you expected a clear stance from me on this, HA! Iâm afraid I donât have one đâand to be perfectly honest, this is exactly the sort of thing where peopleâs mileage will vary the most.
My personal method of deciding whether to nominate entire TV seasons rather than one specific episode is purely based on ~vibes~, on whether or not I thought the season works better in its totality than through its individual parts, versus cases where one outstanding episode eclipses all the others for me. Not all shows are written the same, of course, and those that favour a longer narrative arc (as a lot of prestige TV does nowadays) tend to find their way on my long form ballot more often than not, as opposed to the more episodic writing that isnât as popular now but used to be ubiquitous in the pre-streaming era.
Ultimately, you may agree or disagree with me on my reasoning for some of my choices below, whether on the LF/SF question or my actual opinions of the various media, and thatâs fair enough. I welcome discussion in the comments, but please keep it civil!
Jump to:
Long Form: Entire TV Seasons
You might see episodes from some of these further down in the episode/short form discussion.
Andor, Season 2+
This is kind of my front-runner among the TV seasons for the Long Form category. Overall, I enjoyed it slightly more than season 1 for a few reasons: first of all, the pacing was much more even, with a little bit more action and intrigue peppered throughout the season as opposed to having several quieter mini-arcs that slowed things down in places; and crucially, there was a lot less dithering from Cassian Andor, our reluctant protagonist, who finally comes into his own as a rebel after being passively tossed about this way and that in the first season. The agency he has in this one makes him much more interesting as a character, and brings him on the same level as other players in the budding rebellion front, like Mon Mothma and Luthen Rael. In fact, with all the different character arcs completed, Andor finally becomes what Rogue One always wanted to be: a testament to the great sacrifices necessary for revolution to take root.
I liked a lot of what went down in this season as tensions continued ramping up between the Empire and the Rebellion; the Ghorman subplot was outstanding, especially with Dedra and Cyrilâs journeys as instruments of Imperial oppression and violence, as was Mon Mothmaâs arc from quiet resistance financier to full-on political rebel on the run, with her heartbreaking arc where she realises the personal cost of rebellion. None of the individual episodes in season 2 came even close to the intensity or narrative brilliance of One Way Out, which was hands down my favourite episode of season 1, but thatâs okayâI think this season works so much better in its totality, that Iâll be happy to nominate it wholesale.
I still need to re-watch Rogue One actually, to see if my (very mid) opinion on it changes at all, but ultimately Iâm just really happy this show was made, and that it looked and felt amazing throughout. Itâs probably my favourite Star Wars story, period, and I am so chuffed that so much of it was filmed in the UK (in locations I know and visit all the time, including my old workplace!2), and is full of incredibly talented and classically trained British theatre actors who fill the space with their physicality and make their performances memorable even in the smallest of roles3.
Severance, Season 2+
Another really strong contender for this category. If you ask me which TV show might win the LF Hugo between this, Andor, or Pluribus, my money would probably be on Severance, even if I personally prefer Andor thematically and Pluribus cinematically. Thereâs no doubt Severance is an absolute masterpiece of televisionânay, of cinemaâand the fact that the most anti-capitalist story of our time is coming directly from the big tech megacorp Apple is an irony that is as delicious as it is hilarious.
Aside from its bonkers world-building (which still has so many unanswered questions!), this season of Severance also dove pretty deep into its characters, whom we only got to know a bit in season 1. I donât want to get too spoilery here, but thereâs a handful of moments in this season that go SO HARDâparticularly that one slow episode that everyone else hated for some reason, where we follow Patricia Arquetteâs character as she goes to her dingy home town and fills us in on the cult lore around Lumon Industries, and of course the team building episode in which our intrepid heroes actually go outside, but itâs all weird in that trademark Lumon way where nothing really fully makes sense, and it leaves the viewer feeling uncomfortable, like somethingâs not quite aligned right.
But yeah, the world-building, man. Itâs something else. I was glued to my screen and my mind was running a mile a minute trying to join the dots and figure out the answers to the showâs mysteries, much like our heroes consolidate memories refine macrodataâremember, the work is mysterious and importantâand the excitement of getting it just before the show confirmed it was super fun. Yet, finally understanding what macrodata refinement is was actually a really tragic moment, and everything that happens after that made my heart break for the innies who are stuck living a half-life they canât escape, on pain of death.
Ultimately, what I loved the most about the second season of Severance is its staunch anti-capitalist messaging that speaks to the average office worker today regardless of where they may be in the world, because corporate manipulation knows no borders:
This relatability is what keeps me hooked, and what I think elevates the show from pretty sci-fi to a classic of our times. Itâs definitely got my vote.
Pluribus, Season 1+
God, talk about another cinematic masterpiece. When Breaking Bad/Better Call Saulâs Vince Gilligan said he was working on a new show (which he was writing specifically for Rhea Seahorn to star in), I was crossing my fingers and my toes that it would be sci-fi, and Pluribus has completely blown my expectations out of the water. Not only does it mark Gilliganâs return to science fiction for the first time since The X-Files, but he brings his now-trademark cinematic visual language to it, full of tight choreography and nuanced subtext through visual and music cues, which is what made BB & BCS so special.
The result is an unnerving combination of horror, absurdist humour, and subtle world-building, centered around a complex character named Carol Sturka, who is one of only a few humans not to join the weird hive mind connection that takes over all other human beings on the planet, and doesnât want to even entertain the idea. Iâve seen many reviews call her unlikable and unrelatable, and while the first part may be true (I was really tired of her contrarian nature in the first half of the season), I think thereâs something more going on here than just a selfish white American woman who expects the world to move just for her.
The thing is, Vince Gilligan does not talk down to his audience; he expects us to keep up and to pick up what heâs putting down, whether thatâs subtle digs at the publishing industry (it is truly hilarious to me that the protagonist of this show is an actual romantasy author!), not-so-subtle digs about community building and the harm humanity has done to the planet and to each other (particularly around resource distribution, iykyk), and questions about human nature that we are left to ponder: would you trade world peace for the complete flattening of human culture? Are we capable of retaining what makes us human while not actively harming the world around us, or each other? What is humanity, really, or human nature even?
Big stuff coming from an Apple TV show, once again; should I even be surprised at this point?
I think the long game of this show is going to be Carolâs character development from grumpy selfish miser to someone who genuinely cares about other peopleâa reverse Walter White, if you will. Gilligan is all about the narrative arc, and he has been known to deliver some of the best narrative arcs in TV ever, even if they take a while to stick the landing. I have faith that he is cooking something we havenât even yet begun to poke at, if Better Call Saul is any indication, and between the already great writing and the showâs superlative production value, I think Pluribus is going to be a low-key modern classic. Vince has my vote, now and always.
My Hero Academia: The Final Season+
I wrote about this extensively in my Hugo ballot recommendations post a couple of months ago, so Iâll pull a quote from that as to why I loved it so much:
Yâall, what can I say: this has been my favourite anime of the last decade, and the fact it is ending has had me in my feelings for months. Iâve been deeply invested emotionally for many years, watching the simulcasts on the same day as the anime airs in Japan since around season 2, and this last season has been all payoff for almost ten yearsâ worth of story. Every Saturday from October 4th till December 13th, I tuned in and bawled my eyes out for 20 minutes straight, which for an anime aimed at teenage boys is an absolute feat. Defying every expectation, it stuck the landing for every little story beat, every subplot, and every theme set up over its ten year tenure perfectly, making it one of my absolute favourite stories in the superhero genre.
This is definitely one of those where context is essential, so I donât think it can be viewed in a vacuum and appreciated to the same extent as having watched all previous seven seasons. You can try, but it wouldnât be worth it just for the awards. Just watch the show so the ending can hit you like a ton of bricks in the best way possible, even if you miss the deadline. Itâs fun, itâs moving, itâs made with so much love for American comics through a uniquely Japanese perspective. I canât recommend it enough, and itâll definitely be on my Long Form ballot even if Iâm one of ten people who put it there đ€·đ»ââïž
Honourable mentions/near misses+
Long Form: Films
Sinners+
This was probably my favourite SFF film of last year. Not only is it atmospheric, fun, and lush with cross-border folkloric world-building (Hoodoo magic and Irish vampires?! yes please!), but the story touches so many themes that a regular popcorn movie wonât even veer towards, and it does so brilliantly.
All the many layers of the Black and POC experience in the South during the Prohibition era (and beyond) are crystallised in the character arc of each ensemble cast member, with some absolutely outstanding performances by Hailee Steinfeld (whose character Mary is biracial, and torn between safety and belonging), Michael B. Jordan (who plays identical twins Smoke and Stack so well he walked away with an Oscar for it), and Wunmi Mosaku in particular as Smokeâs wife Annie (sheâs such an underrated performer, but Iâm so glad to see her actually flex her acting skills after her appearance in Loki). Weâre talking themes like the push and pull of religion and its role in both keeping communities together and also oppressing them, the safety of BIPOC in a white supremacist society, and even the immigrant experience⊠the truth is your average blockbuster would neverâbut this is Ryan Coogler, and he wonât sugar-coat things for a mainstream audience, instead telling a story only he could tell, filled with truth, complexity, and nuance, something I really wish more filmmakers would embrace nowadays.
The filmâs protagonist, Sammie (Miles Caton) has a preternatural gift with music, and the plot revolves around a juke joint Smoke and Stack put together, and the connection that music can create across time and even cultureâwith a wonderful supernatural twist.
One of my favourite moments is when the villain Remmick (an immortal Irish vampire played by Jack OâConnell) turns up at their juke joint and cries with joy at the emotions Sammieâs music has brought him after years of numbness. He talks about his own experience of colonialism at the hands of the British Empire and the subsequent erasure of Irish culture through the centuries, which is a very real thingâbut heâs also a predator who has been making his way through the land trying to trap people and turn them into vampires, chased away by indigenous people who could tell he was a monster before attacking a couple who are Klan members. Itâs clear that he doesnât want Sammieâs music in order to connect people, but to use it as a tool on his quest to propagate a vampire race, and that seemingly sweet moment of connection is exposed as the performative allyship that it is.
There are some phenomenal action sequences too, with the last third of the film keeping me on the edge of my IMAX seat4. Genuinely, this film was such a breath of fresh air: delightfully complex but also fun, in ways that cinema just doesnât dare to be right now. I was sad they didnât win all the awards they were up for, but perhaps we can give it a Hugo instead.
Frankenstein+
Â©ïž Netflix 2025I have a full review of this here, but basically: the SFF-ness of this is lush, as expected from a Guillermo Del Toro movie, and for the most part it works well as an adaptation of the book. As I mention in my other post, it doesnât quite reach the heights of the NTâs theatre adaptation, which I still consider the ultimate version of this story, but it does similar things with the characters as Penny Dreadful, which is my runner-up favourite, save for the very end, and itâs that ending that makes the whole thing fall short for me, unfortunately.
To quote myself:
Why do we sing sad songs, when we know their ending is unhappy? When our instinctual yearning for a happy ending is met with the inevitability of human flaws getting in the way, that emotional release we experience is what my ancestors called catharsis. As the audience we accept that because of who these characters are, they would always make these choices and lead the story to the same outcome, time and again, even though weâd like them to change, to choose better, so they can be happy in the end.
What makes Frankenstein compelling in any iteration is its core conflict: Victorâs refusal to acknowledge the Creature as human, despite the fact that the Creature is deeply human, as much as his creator would like to think otherwise. We are invited to empathise with the Creatureâs plight, to see how he thinks and feels, how he desires things we all do: safety, friendship, love. Victor is incapable of recognising this, and so the two clash eternally. Such is the tragedy, and no matter what minor changes are made to it, the good adaptations always recognise the impasse between the two at the end. Itâs what makes the story tick.
My ultimate issue with the way Del Toro chose to end his adaptation of Frankenstein is that it ultimately robs us of our deserved catharsis by artificially resolving the incontrovertible stalemate between the two leads, giving us a happy(ish) ending in which Victor, at deathâs door, forgives the Creature for the violence and destruction heâs wrought, apologises for what he did to him, and urges him to live on, free of guilt, yet completely alone. The Creature then walks off into the Arctic sunrise, liberated from his vendetta yet devastated at losing his creator.
Itâs a lovely thought in principle, a Del Toro-ism about accepting oneâs nature and walking away from oneâs painful past, and if it were an original story without baggage Iâd be all for itâafter all, The Shape of Water had similar, pro-monster themes of letting go of trying to fit into a world that wonât accept you anyway, and I ate that up voraciously. But here, in taking a tragedy that is so classic and ingrained, loading it with a bunch of new traumas and subplots, and then resolving it all with a little monologue, the ending robs the story of its true conclusion, fundamentally missing the point of the source text, and doing a disservice both to Victor and the Creature.
I still think itâs a strong contender in the category, and definitely one of my favourite SFF movies I saw last year, despite my issues with it. However, given all my favourite TV shows above, I think I might eschew giving this one of my ballot spots, but I wonât be disappointed to see it on the final ballot, should it make it through.
Thunderbolts*+
I loved this movie A LOT, you guys, and it made me very sad that it flopped at the box office. I donât blame people for being fatigued with Marvelâs mediocre superhero slop, but they should have given this movie a chance at the very least, because it might not have been the movie we wanted, but it was definitely the movie we needed right now.
(c) Disney/Marvel Studios, 2025I was very surprised with how deep it went into the trauma our various superheroes and anti-heroes have sustained through their previous adventures, and the level of empathy with which it treated them all:
And then, thereâs Bob.
(c) Disney/Marvel, 2025Bob is a new guy, recruited to be experimented on in hopes of becoming a superhero. He seems normal, average even, and he reluctantly joins our motley crew as they escape from a trap set by their employerâbut under the surface he carries a deep wound, a gash that opens up to swallow him whole and turns him into The Void, his mysterious alter ego who awakens when Bobâs absolutely OTT superpowers kick in. The rest, as they say, is plot.
Thereâs a lot of (predictably dark) humour in this, and I was surprised with how much I liked these characters once they were given enough room to be protagonists, rather than minor antagonists in someone elseâs story. While they haphazardly join forces into a makeshift team, their trauma is taken seriously, coalescing into the filmâs climactic battle that pits the reluctant heroes against The Void, who weaponises each of their subconscious against them. The Void is Depression, by any other nameâitâs the dark voice inside that tells each of our anti-heroes that they are worthless, unlovable, guilty, and alone. In order to beat him they have to reach out with empathy to themselves first and then to each other, and literally hold each other in a tight embrace as a reminder that they are not alone. What wins the day is friendship, empathy, and love, not unlike the last season of My Hero Academia, which I also loved last year, or Superman, which Iâm about to get into below.
I cried BUCKETS while watching Thunderbolts* in the UKâs largest IMAX screen alongside my Bucky Barnes-obsessed friend, who has since made this film her entire personality (affectionate), and honestly, Iâve also been thinking about it ever since. Again, itâs a delightful little irony that the megalithic Disney/MCU would come out with a narrative so introspective and empathetic, especially at a time that loneliness and isolation is rampant among the filmâs core audience of young men. I really hope that watching this film inspired people to reach out and be less alone in their struggles, and that the financial hit Disney took with it wonât keep us from seeing more of these characters in the future.
Also! A fun fact I noticed while listening to the soundtrack was that the filmâs main theme is a reversed version of the main Avengers theme; just listen to the first few seconds of both themes and youâll hear it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-Jzgp1jNiQ
Superman+
A good Superman movie?? In this economy?? Hallelujah!
I love a lot about what this film does with the core Superman premise. It gets Clark right, down to his farm boy roots and dorky kindness. It gets Superman right: his power isnât unbeatable, and it isnât even the most powerful thing about him (spoiler: itâs the dorky kindness). It gets Lex Luthor rightâespecially for our timesâby having him be a smart but petty tech billionaire with an overinflated ego, someone who funds an invasion and even starts a pocket dimension on a whim, without once thinking of the consequences. It even gets Jimmy Olsen right simply by bringing him out of the margins where heâs been relegated for the last several Superman adaptationsâand itâs actually really funny that heâs the one guy with the most game in this film, and that thatâs how he gets to help out.
The structure of the film is an absolute delight, too. From the very start, we are thrown into the midst of a losing fight for Superman, which is a bold choice, as is having Clarkâs relationship with Lois Lane already set up (and she even knows about him being Superman!). We donât spend any time whatsoever on origin stories, budding relationship exploration, or long-winded expositionâwe simply hit the ground running, and find out the particulars as we go along. It is assumed we know who Superman is, because⊠we all know who Superman is. And the themes around identity, responsibility, community, and how we should treat each other are laid bare without pretence, very directly speaking to the audience about contemporary problems weâre all facing day to day. Itâs a genuine breath of fresh air not to be treated like an idiot, frankly.
There are a couple of things I donât like about it though. For one, the film feels very busy, with so many characters and subplots and easter eggs thrown in, that if you blink youâll definitely miss something. Relatedly, not all of those characters or subplots are treated equally, because there simply isnât enough screen time to go around for everything. So the Justice Friends get the short shrift, as do Papa and Mama Kent, as does Krypton6, so that we can focus on the personal and political stakes that Clark/Superman has to overcome.
This is another superhero story with empathy at its heart, where the answer to even the most cosmic problems is⊠just be kind. Kindness is punk rock. As one of my favourite YouTube video essayists put it, this Superman is the American hero we desperately need right now. Someone who will stand up for whatâs right even when the rest of the world tells him not to, someone with an unshakeable moral compass that only points to goodness. Watch that whole video actually, Dove does such a fantastic job analysing the cultural geography that plays into this film, and how it all ties together to bring us this ray of f*cking sunshine:
All this to say, I love that James Gunn can make a superhero movie that aims to appeal broadly but doesnât feel like it panders to the lowest available denominator, and that he had the guts to (a) make the story feel relevant to our current times, what with all the invasions/âwarsâ going on right now that are purely happening for profit and that no one is doing anything to stop đ, and (b) leave us with a message of hope, that we can imagine a kinder world and that we can be the instruments of making that vision a reality. That kindness can be punk rock.
Dare I say, this was the movie that made me go, âhuh, maybe the genre isnât dead yetâ, which⊠please, let it not be dead, I really like superheroes!
Honourable mentions/near misses+
The âI havenât seen these yetâ caveat+
Long Form: Non-Film/TV
B-Maskâs âThe REAL Thunderbolts Story: Marvelâs Greatest Scamâ*
This is a 2.5 hour love letter to comics, and the first in a five-part series that tells the story of the real Thunderbolts from the comic books (a team that bears very little resemblance to the one portrayed in the recent MCU film discussed above). It features complex animations drawing from the original comic book art, as well as a full cast of voice actors bringing the characters to life with their performances.
* Iâm personally torn on whether this would qualify for BDP-LF or BRW (seeing as it is technically a fanwork, and not an original work), but either way it is nothing short of a masterpieceâI wrote more about it in my 2025 underrated Hugo picks post, if youâre interested.
Short Form: TV Episodes
A caveat: my reasoning around nominating a particular episode is kind of like nominating my favourite chapter of a novel. Especially with how a lot of the prestige TV shows are made nowadays, individual episodes function as chapters in a longer story, so they have to be considered in the context of the wider narrative theyâre a part of. If they are from a second, third, or even last season of a long-running show, even more so.
Alsoâand this might be a slightly spicy takeâI personally donât like that a lot of Hugo voters seem to only watch the individual episodes on the eventual shortlist without any context, and then complain that they didnât get what was going on. Thatâs because context matters, and while I understand that it would take a lot of time to watch an entire season (or even several!) to be able to appreciate a single episode⊠if you want your vote to be informed, thatâs the job, innit?
This has happened several times to me, where thereâs an episode on the shortlist from a show I donât watch (and have no intention of watchingâsorry Lower Decks), so I just skip it and donât put it in my ballot at the end, or rank it below my own favourites. I do the same with sequels to books I havenât read, out of respect for the work itself as well as its author, but thatâs just me I guess! đ€·đ»ââïž
Anyway, here are some thoughts about my favourite episodes of speculative TV from this year, under spoiler tags for obvious reasons.
Two episodes from Stranger Things, Season 5+
âChapter Four: Sorcererâ
I loved, loved, loved this episode. The moment Will uses his new power⊠it gave me goosebumps, it was so goodâand the fight sequence in front of the gate to the Upside Down is incredible. Rather than the writing, though, I want to praise the actorsâ performances and the work of the crew who worked on the practical effects, stunts, and complicated cinematography in this episode. Especially given more recent revelations about how the Duffers went into production with season 5 without having ironed out the ending, and the stress that added to the poor production crew, I think any flowers should really be going to them for making such an outstanding piece of TV despite the challenges.
âChapter Six: Escape from Camazotzâ
Yes, the scene in this photo feels a little ludicrously long considering theyâre both on the run and about to be caught by the Big Bad, but I loved the heart of this relationship and the character development for both Holly and Max in this episode. I had also seen the Stranger Things play in London a couple of years back, and this episode eliminated the issues I had with the world-building in that, which at first had seemed to contradict the revelations in season 4 about Vecna/Henry Creelâs agency as a villain and his role in shaping the Upside Down⊠I was glad to see that in fact all the loose threads from the various seasons did connect, and that the strands from the play were relevant too.
Various episodes from Severance, Season 2+
S2E4: âWoeâs Hollowâ
I mentioned this episode in my discussion of the series earlier, but let me get into it here: this is one of the best episodes of TV ever made, period, and I will fight you on this. I donât know if it would stand alone in any capacity, considering the weird tone is already a lot to deal with and thereâs a lot of plot and character interaction that picks up from where the last season left off, not to mention a big-time betrayal that ends up echoing through the rest of season 2.
I spent a good chunk of the beginning wondering if this was a simulator or a dream sequence because it didnât fully make sense for our protagonists to be outside the Lumon offices, and the uncanny doppelgangers guiding them through the forest seemed almost dreamlike, but the reality was much more sinister in the end, which tracks. If thereâs a single episode from this show Iâd nominate, itâd be this one.
S2E8: âSweet Vitriolâ
People hate this episode because itâs slow and follows an unlikeable antagonist whom we are invited to empathise with, and thatâs precisely the reason I like it. First of all, we get way more insight into the Lumon cult corporation from Harmony Cobel, who ostensibly grew up in the cult and has invested her whole life into the companyâs welfare. This is also where we begin to see cracks form in her resolve as an antagonist, as she has realised that the company sees her as an expendable cog despite her lifelong investment and dedication, and so she decides to fight them, to prove that this little cog is actually so important, it might well bring the whole house down.
Itâs interesting also for thematic reasons, outside of the showâs world. On an individual level, the image of someone who grew up in poverty while idolising a particular company, then making their entire life revolve around it so as to gain favour and socioeconomic mobility, gaining that and then losing it when the company no longer sees them as valuable, is unfortunately too relatable. So is seeing a small town that once had its own industry and community be taken over by a mega corporation and become completely dependent on it, eventually falling into destitution once the corporation pulls their activities out of the town. The actual commentary here is silent, but extremely powerful.
I donât think Cobelâs about-turn is enough to fully make her an anti-hero, but I really enjoyed this episode for all the insight it gave us both into her and the world of Severance outside of Lumon HQ.
S2E10: âCold Harborâ
There is a strong argument to be made that the season two finale is absolutely worth a nomination as well, making this a really tough choice. Two seasonsâ worth of mystery solving and internal corporate espionage culminate in this one-hour episode where our protagonists clash with one another and with the antagonists, and itâs just adrenaline all the way down.
Some spoilery thoughts here.While the big questions have been answered (where is Markâs wife? what is Cold Harbor? what are they doing with all those sheep?), so many more remain. Is there a way to save the innies at all, if Lumon ends up falling? Can Mark S. and Helly R. ever hope to have a life outside these walls? And what happens to Gemma now that sheâs out, even though she has 24 distinct, hand-crafted personalities inside her?
Thereâs actually a great take I hadnât come across before I sat down to write this, and that is that the finale actually inverts the Orpheus & Eurydice narrative of Mark and Gemma, by having Markâs innie actually choose to stay behind in Lumon so he can be with Helly. Itâs less of a lack of faith and more of a conscious decision, which perhaps makes it even more tragic as Gemma watches her husband (sort of) run toward danger and another woman, leaving her alone at the exit, screaming for him to come back.
Having written about the other episodes already, I do think ep4 is a stronger contender purely from a craft/vibes standpoint, whereas the finale is more typical in many ways, as it focuses on exposition and plot and is faster paced. YMMV here, for sure, but Iâm inclined to pick ep4 over this one, now that I think about it.
Two episodes from Pluribus, Season 1+
Episode 1: âWe is Usâ
Itâs not often that a TV pilot stands on its own two feet well. Itâs even less common for the film-making to be so good that one must gasp in awe at the choreography, cinematography, and editing, multiple times throughout the course of the episode. One of my biggest peeves is when a TV pilot is so mired in exposition that there is no room for characters or atmosphere until the next episode because they simply have to give you the setup quicklyâit ends up feeling flat and boring and frankly, it puts me off more than it entices me to keep watching until it gets better.7
Well, this episode does none of that.
Gilliganâs forte is silent scenes that actually speak volumes. There is so much storytelling in this episode that has no words; we watch an intergalactic viral hive mind sequence take over the Earth in perfectly synchronised movement, and the storytelling is in the silence, the perfect unison, and the eerie smiles as the hive mind consciousness flattens the individuals inside. A lesser writer would put exposition in dialogue, possibly giving too much information for where we are in the story, but Gilligan knows that less is more. We get just enough to hook us in, and the rest is pure atmosphere and of course, character.
Carol is introduced as a grumpy romantasy author, a lesbian in a loving relationship who constantly finds reasons to be miserable, much to her partnerâs chagrin. When the hive mind sequence is spread via planes in the air, Carol loses her partner, and simultaneously the world. The panic that ensues is completely understandable, and it gets worse at every turn as she is met with more and more hive mind people, but no one else like her. What a place for a pilot to leave us in! Arenât you hooked just by reading this?? GO WATCH THIS SHOW!
Episode 7: âThe Gapâ
The title refers to a real place that Manousos (pictured) has to cross, but also I suppose to the gap between Carol and others at this point in the show. This is another masterfully crafted episode with a dual narrative point of view, where Carol continues her life in Albuquerque while Manousos is making his slow way up through South and Central America towards Carol, crossing cities, climbing mountains, and trudging through thick, treacherous jungles, all while refusing the hive mindâs help at every opportunity.
Some spoilery thoughts here.At first, itâs admirable; he wonât even take gas without paying for it somehow, even though everything he comes across is at his disposal. Soon enough, however, his steadfastness turns into stubbornness that does more harm to him than good. When he gets seriously injured in the jungle (something that was completely preventable, had he accepted the hive mindâs help and transited through safer means),
Meanwhile, Carol stoically endures complete and total isolation for a long time as a result of the hive mind evacuating the whole metro area of Albuquerque, which happened when Carol hurt one of them (and by extension, all of them) quite badly while trying to find answers. She is given resources and sustenance remotely, and for a while enjoys her peaceful environment, going around town and doing whatever she feels like⊠until she finally cracks under the pressure of extreme loneliness, and asks the hive mind to come back.
Itâs an incredibly powerful moment actually, seeing someone as stubborn sturdy as Carol finally admit that she canât live her whole life completely cut off from other people, even though she hates the hive mind on principle, and canât wrap her mind around accepting this status quo. In fairness, she makes it to about a month and a half, which is pretty long, but her isolation was also so complete that there were zero people around her for that whole timeâan unfathomable experience thatâs so well depicted on screen. I personally love the rooftop golf scene as an example of how utterly devoid of people the landscape is, a mundane sort of post-apocalyptic image.
This is probably my favourite episode in season 1, and even think it could be presented without context and still mostly work alright for new viewers⊠Though Iâd still hope that people would watch the whole season anyway. If I had to pick one episode to represent the series as a whole, Iâd say itâs this one.
Short Form: Non-TV
âSongs No One Will Hearâ by Arjen Lucassen (music album)
I wrote a fair amount about this pre-apocalyptic concept album in my underrated Hugo recommendations post; hereâs a snippet:
The result is an album that grapples with the essence of the human condition (something Lucassen is very adept at), asking what makes life worth living from the perspectives of a bunch of different characters as they try to come to terms with the impending end of the worldâincluding those who think itâs all a hoax, those who embrace it, and those who rage against the dying of the light. It straddles a weird and fun line between diegetic/in-world music thatâs on the radio and telling the story as a sung-through musical, which is a little different than what you might expect, particularly for a progressive rock album. But thatâs the Arjen Lucassen guarantee: big questions, big emotions, and a sound that isnât afraid to change dramatically when necessary, even mid-song. Full of theatricality, Songs No One Will Hear is in some ways very similar to Lucassenâs Ayreon albums, but retains its own identity both musically and thematically.
Weâve been known to nominate SFF music albums when they arise, and on occasion those musicians have even responded to being recognised by fandomâseeing Clipping live in Helsinki was fun!âso this wouldnât be out of the realm of possibility, though perhaps it is a bit of a left field suggestion for most Hugo voters as a progressive rock concept album.
While heâs extremely popular in his own niche, most of Lucassenâs fans arenât in SF fandom and vice versa, something that I would love to help shift by talking about his work more to Hugo voters and talking to Ayreon/Lucassen fans more about joining our community and coming to Worldcon, especially as the next few years are looking quite international. Lucassenâs very obvious Golden Age influences are bound to have pointed many of his fans to the genre, so the bridge is already half-built.
Iâm sure that Iâll be one of very few people longlisting this album, but đ€·đ»ââïž! I really think If you see just a single, solitary vote for it in the full data, know that it was me!
Footnotes