Warning: Contains spoilers. Still need to catch up on Wilderness episode 6? Read Carey’s review of episode 5 here.
Wilderness has a lot to wrap up in its final episode. The main question, one which has lingered throughout the series, is: who is Olivia? Having spent five hours so far with the protagonist, we should have an idea of who this person is – but all we have are questions. Is she a sociopath, completely lacking in empathy? Is she a wronged woman, driven to extremes by a painful betrayal? Or is she a latent psychopath who possessed the ability to kill, but wasn’t aware of it?
Even Will seems confused by his wife as she insists on cleaning their crime-scene apartment, saying, “This is my home.” It’s impossible to know if she feels any remorse for Garth’s death. Is she in shock, or does she just not care?
Will and Olivia’s marriage is on even shakier ground after his reveal that he slept with another colleague, and Olivia offers no insight into what she is thinking. We don’t know until Will tells her that he’s arranged for a transfer back to England, where they can have a fresh start, and Olivia responds by saying that she wants a divorce.
We then have a prolonged scene of Olivia drunkenly dancing around her neighbour Ash’s apartment, flirting before kissing the woman who is clearly infatuated with her. It’s really unfortunate that actress Morgana Van Peebles was given nothing to do other than be the token person of colour best friend who Olivia flirts with when she needs validation.
The victory dance doesn’t last for long, because when Olivia returns home Will informs her they are not divorcing. Not because he loves her and can’t imagine life without her, but because he doesn’t want to admit to his parents that his marriage was a failure. And just to make sure we know that Will is the worst person ever, he threatens to tell the police Olivia murdered Garth in cold blood. “Everything from this point further is on you,” he says, once again refusing to take responsibility for any of his actions. If Cohen-Jackson wasn’t such a charismatic, charming man, this series would have fizzled out several episodes ago.
Coleman and Jackson-Cohen build a palpable tension together, but this entire episode is too reminiscent of Gone Girl, with the toxic codependency of two seriously messed-up people bringing out the worst in each other.
Olivia ultimately betrays Will, telling the detectives that she lied to give him an alibi. He is found guilty of Cara’s murder and sentenced to 25 years in prison. Behind bars, Will asks Olivia to wait for him to serve out his sentence. It’s notable that he repeats to Olivia, “I need you.” Not “I love you.” Finally, we get some insight into why Will married Olivia, even though he was chronically unfaithful. He felt like he needed to get married, and pretty, supportive wife Olivia fit the bill.
The similarities between Gone Girl and Wilderness only multiply as the story wraps up, with Olivia resembling Amy Dunne in the worst way. When Olivia visits Will at Rikers, she tells him he will be a father. But he has a surprise for her as well – Will has deduced that Olivia is the one who killed Cara, and he wants to blackmail Olivia into staying with him.
Olivia doesn’t seem to care about being loved – at least, not by Will. She also doesn’t seem to care about right and wrong, or good and evil. She doesn’t show any sadness that Cara is dead, or that Garth is dead, or that Will cheated on her with Marissa and who knows who else. All she cares about is her own freedom. Everyone else is collateral damage.
In a whiplash-inducing twist, Wilderness slaps on a heavy-handed feminist message in its final moments. When Will desperately asks Olivia, “Who are you?” she replies, “I’m who you made me.” This leaves the viewer to conclude that Olivia was a good, non-violent person before Will cheated – that it’s patriarchy that destroyed her values and has driven her to bring a baby into the world out of spite.
In our last moments with Olivia, we see her back out West, visiting the location of Cara’s death, where a man tells her, “Careful, honey!” and tells her about the “silly girl” who fell to her death. Olivia responds by launching into a monologue about how blaming women for their misfortunes drives them to extremes.
“Does it ever occur to you where any of this ends?” she asks him. “It ends with us reaching the end of our tether. And where does that leave us? We become the thing to be scared of. We become the f*cking wolves.”
And this is where Wilderness ends – impressive but unfocused. At first, Olivia’s speech sounds like a triumphant feminist declaration – one we should be cheering along with in solidarity. But we’d be cheering for a liar, a murderer and a potential sociopath.
Moral ambiguity can be fascinating, but Wilderness didn’t inspire any new, original ideas that hadn’t been explored in so many other forms of entertainment. Still, at least this one had pretty scenery.
What did you think of Wilderness? Let us know in the comments below…
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