![]() Grace never shows, and after some archery and advice from Uncle Ulysses (an Apache data analyst told him to aim with his heart), Hannah hatches her second scheme, this one with Travis: to disrupt the wedding, the plot of which is shown to us in a quirky Claymation sequence that - while I understand how it fits in spirit - didn’t really click for me. After a brief attempt at making Grace jealous by canoodling with Travis, Hannah awaits Grace in her yurt later that night, typing her a letter (which is when she realizes the “G” key is broken) and rejecting a clumsy advance from Sebastian. Hannah proclaims her love, but Grace is adamant that she’s going to marry Edgar and that she loves him. ![]() So she hatches her first scheme: She’ll distract everyone at the rehearsal dinner with talk of plants (including Devil’s Trumpet) and Aniq doing drugs in order to talk to Grace alone. While in a sad bubble bath (with eggs cooking on a hot plate nearby, which does not seem safe from an electrocution standpoint), Hannah gets this blunt advice from her cold mother: “Get over it.” (Not that Isabel knows what “it” is, as far as we know.) Hannah gamely tries, but when she sees Grace walking down the aisle at the wedding rehearsal, she realizes she cannot. Unfortunately for Hannah, Grace breaks things off for real about a week before the wedding. Which leads to a monthlong affair in which they seem happy and lovey (in Hannah’s story, at least). At Grace’s bachelorette party, after Grace and Zoë fight, Hannah comforts Grace and they kiss. As they all got older, Edgar got more interested in work and less interested in their hobbies, but Hannah still loved him dearly.īut! Turns out, Hannah also loves … Grace! After Edgar brought Grace to Hannah’s Francophile-themed Adoption Day (because she doesn’t know her birthday) party and gifted her the typewriter he’d bought from Grace, the two women discovered their shared love of antiques and France and began spending more and more time together (including in Amsterdam, where Edgar brought Grace for lunch but ended up being too busy with work). They bonded due to a “frigid mother and absent father.” Sebastian was … also there. Hannah was a precocious child who took up odd hobbies (taxidermy, architecture, carving wooden anchors, etc.) to fill the void left by the lack of affection from her adopted parents, and Edgar did those hobbies right alongside her. Getting one potential motive (hatred) out of the way quickly, we learn that Hannah and Edgar had a good relationship in childhood. ![]() (How on trend of Hannah!) This means: muted yet saturated color lingering camera shots Belle & Sebastian tunes quirky asides title cards onscreen pregnant pauses between dialogue and more. Hannah’s tale starts long before the wedding weekend, though, and is styled as a quirky Wes Anderson–esque mind movie. (She doesn’t point out that literally anyone could have accessed the poisonous plant from her garden since it’s, you know, out in the open, but I was thinking it.) Hannah quickly sees what’s up: The trio thinks Devil’s Trumpet killed Edgar, and because it’s in her garden, they think she did it. Zoë is single-minded when it comes to protecting her little sister. Well, Danner and Aniq are “heading” Zoë is what I would call “storming.” She is on a tear, convinced that Hannah is guilty, guilty, guilty. So, of course, that’s where this episode kicks off, with Zoë, Aniq, and Danner heading to Hannah’s yurt to question her. To learn more about how and for what purposes Amazon uses personal information (such as Amazon Store order history), please visit our Privacy Notice.After last week’s revelation that Edgar was most likely poisoned with Devil’s Trumpet - a hallucinogenic and fatal flower that Hannah grows in the garden outside her yurt - all archery arrows seem to be pointing at Edgar’s adopted sister re: the murder. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Cookie Preferences, as described in the Cookie Notice. Click ‘Continue without accepting’ or ‘Customise Cookies’ to decline these cookies, make more detailed choices or learn more. ![]() Third parties use cookies for the purposes of displaying and measuring personalised advertisements, generating audience insights, and developing and improving products. This includes using first- and third-party cookies which store or access standard device information such as a unique identifier. If you agree, we will also use cookies to complement your shopping experience across Amazon stores as described in our Cookie Notice. We also use these cookies to understand how customers use our services (for example, by measuring site visits) so we can make improvements. We use cookies and similar tools that are necessary to enable you to make purchases, to enhance your shopping experiences, and to provide our services, as detailed in our Cookie Notice.
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