caveat! This article contains spoilers for From Season 3 Episode 9!Jade gives a speech about Victor. from Season 3, Episode 9 truly captures the special nature of the town’s longest-locked-up residents, highlighting the great advantages they have over other residents. For more than 40 years, Victor was essentially alone in the city.He first came to the town as a child with his mother and sister, who were brutally massacred along with other residents at the time. fromNocturnal monsters, one fateful night. More people would become trapped as the years passed, but Victor still had no family until his father Henry unexpectedly arrived.
Henry had long believed that his family had died after the disappearance, but Tabitha landed in Camden, Maine and informed Henry, while Eloise and Miranda died there. fromVictor was still alive in the town. After being locked up, Henry attempts to reunite with his son, whom he hasn’t seen in over 40 years, but Victor turns out to be more withdrawn and eccentric than his father expected. While mourning his struggles, Henry asks Jade for help, but Jade gives him the sage advice that she can’t cure Victor.he’s not broken,” Reflects larger themes throughout from Season 3.
Jade is right about Victor not being trained in Season 3 Episode 9
Victor cannot be measured by the “normality” of the outside world.
Jade is obsessed with analyzing its meaning, but fromHe’s also seen a lot of character growth as he tackles these mysteries with the Bottle Tree number, his visions, his connections with the “Ankuy” kids throughout season 3, and the rest of the town. I did. From developing friendships with Tabitha and Ethan, to arguing with Jim, to spending time talking with Henry at the bar, Jade was proven to be one of fromThe wisest and calmest character ofEven though others see his obsession as insane. So it’s no surprise that Jade is able to explain Victor’s situation perfectly.
Are you thinking of a way to cure him? He can’t do that because he’s not broken. Victor is a product of what this place has made him. Victor has been here for decades. He has been shaped by this place. He’s Tarzan who grew up in the jungle, and you’re the guy who comes in to make him feel bad for not knowing how to eat with a fork.
Jade does a great job of explaining Victor, and it should remind Henry, as well as the rest of the town, why they shouldn’t focus on making him “better.” Victor has been in a state of developmental arrest since the massacre, as he was left alone as a child in a town filled with manipulative and dangerous monsters and creatures. For a long time, Victor’s only “friend” was fromA boy in a white coat whose identity is difficult to decipher. Victor was never given the tools to grow up in “normal” society and learned that he could not trust most things around him..
Victor’s upbringing was unusual, so he cannot be considered “broken” or outside the norm.
If Victor grew up in the outside world, his attitude might be a little more concerning or questionable. But as Jade says, Victor is a product of this town, and this town has shaped him. Victor: “It’s impossible.”broken” or that there was nothing normal about his upbringing, so he was considered outside the norm. no one else is in fromThe town has experiences comparable to Victor’s lonely and tragic upbringing in Fromville. It’s completely unfair to measure his behavior, social skills, and emotional responses against othersfrom personality for his age.
The fact that Victor isn’t broken ties into Season 3’s theme that the city is about to “break.”
Victor cannot be defeated by the city that shaped him.
Since the season 3 premiere, the show has focused heavily on ideas such as: fromThe town is trying to destroy its residents. This is the driving force of Boyd’s story throughout Season 3, but it also applies to everyone else trapped in Fromville. What the town wants isbreakbend them to one’s will. But Victor cannot be crushed by the town. Because it’s already made him who he is. The machinations and power of the town to crush everyone else is exactly what shaped him into who he is today.
therefore, Victor is less vulnerable to these manipulations and tricks by the town Just like the rest of Fromville’s residents. This is a great strength and advantage he has over the town, allowing him to understand the forces of evil at hand far better than the others. victor survived fromSince the town of is the longest, it is better for others to learn from him than to strive. ”repair”or ignore him. He understands what monsters want, how forces manipulate and change people, and what visions to trust, and he understands what others want from the outside world. I am fighting against it from this perspective.
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“I didn’t know how to get home”: Victor’s tragedy from the story just got more heartbreaking.
When Victor makes his long-awaited reunion with Henry in Season 3, Episode 5, his story becomes even more harrowing with one heartbreaking line.
Victor has been stuck in this town for so long that he’s forgotten what it’s like to be so focused on trying to get out. Victor had convinced himself that his childhood before coming to Fromville was just a dream.which meant that the town could not manipulate him by teasing him with these memories. Since he had no family left, the monsters could not use the safety of Héloïse or his mother to trick him, leaving little room. fromthe ability to try psychologicallybreak” he.
Was Victor, the sole survivor of the Frome massacre, always the town’s plan?
The city can shape Victor however it wants.
Victor’s being the only survivor of the massacre may have been intentional, given that he was often isolated due to his differences with other residents. As the Monster’s mission to “break” the Void attests, Fromville often functions like a psychological and social experiment, with unknown evil forces acting as scientists and those trapped in Become a guinea pig. By raising young Victor alone in this town, the powers that be can shape him as they wish.
fromKavanaugh family |
||
---|---|---|
character |
actor |
status in from season 3 |
miranda |
sarah booth |
deceased |
henry |
robert joy |
alive |
victor |
Scott McCord |
alive |
Eloise |
Ellie Couette |
deceased |
It also doesn’t make much sense for the monster to kill all living humans at once. The town thrives on the gruesome nature of its history; from Season 3’s time travel reveal makes the cyclical nature of the place even more important. By saving Victor, he serves as a “living memory” of the town and an encyclopedia of all the town’s fears and rules.This also serves to emphasize to new residents just how poor the place is. fromThe monsters had previously hinted that they were going easy on Victor, perhaps because he was a key part of the town’s plans.
When Victor and Henry pass through the tunnel,
from
Season 3, Episode 6, one of the monsters said to him.
Look, Victor, if you keep coming here, someday we’ll let you stay here.
. ”
Needless to say, Victor simultaneously serves as a story of hope for the town. The characters debate whether hope is dangerous or a strength. fromthe forces will certainly bait it in some way. From the memory of the boy in the white coat’s message to Christopher that Victor recovers, it is revealed that the children of “Ankui” created the root of the symbol and the roots of the distant tree through hope. Hope is literally in the DNA of this place. Young Victor’s survival against all odds brings hope to others who have come in fatefully, but it may be the intention of some intervening force.