![]() And, as this reviewer’s introduction to Álex de la Iglesia‘s horror mastery, 30 COINS is a hell of an introduction.ģ0 COINS follows Father Vergara ( Eduard Fernández), an exorcist, sent away by the church, to become the local priest of Pedraza, a remote town in Spain. And, reader, we honestly can’t wait to know how this high-intensity, drama-filled series ends in its climactic finale. At the time of the review, we had access to the first seven episodes of the series. ![]() However, in HBO’s latest horror series, 30 COINS, we see these elements taken and built upon, revealing a thought-provoking series that will leave viewers hooked and wanting desperately to know what is going to happen next. These are elements of religious horror that may come across as familiar to horror fans. Spider-like demon creatures that this reviewer would elect not to hug ever. Another Redditor pointed out that before Nadia goes back to 1982 for the first time, she sees Horse on the subway platform and he calls her "Nora.A biblical conspiracy. One Redditor put forth an idea back when the first season aired that Horse was there to help Nadia and Alan navigate their loops. Elite Daily speculates that he's also a time traveler. Fan theories have sprung up that perhaps Horse is involved, because of how he tends to turn up at odd moments. In season 1, Nadia thought he had something to do with the time loop, but that turned out to be a dead end. One minor recurring character is a homeless man named Horse. Nadia heads back to the bathroom (the spot from the first season where she kept regenerating). One Redditor speculated that Nadia missing both Ruth's death and funeral was a punishment of sorts for disrupting the timeline by abducting her infant self.įinally, Nadia goes to Maxine's where they're holding the wake for Ruth. When she checks her watch, it's April 30, a month after her birthday. The lights in the car go out, and when they come back, the car is full, and she sees her grandmother, mother (with baby) and Ruth making their way through the car. If you've read Piranesi by Susanna Clarke, the scene feels somewhat familiar - the novel deals with inter-dimensional travel and features a flooded hall. It's unclear if it's merely underneath the subway tracks for somewhere otherworldly. Instead of being hit by them, Alan and Nadia start falling (through time? space? both?), and each one ends up in some type of flooded hall with columns and arches. All of a sudden, trains come speeding toward the pair on the tracks from both sides. Once back out of the train, they continue to wander the tracks, and Alan talks about his experience in 1962 Berlin, how he wasn't sure if he was supposed to have stopped his grandmother's friend Lenny from tunneling to West Berlin. It's April 30, and a month has passed somehow. When they get on, they find Maxine and Lizzy on the way to the wake of Nadia's godmother. When they get to the station, the train doesn't show up, and they go down the tracks, eventually finding a train car, but not the right train. There are more signs of the collapse of time. ![]() Does Nadia take her infant self back to 1982?įinally convinced the baby has to go back to Nora in 1982, Alan and Nadia try to make their way back to the train with baby Nadia. Maxine puts a cooked chicken in the oven and it comes out raw– standard time chaos. For one, Nadia sees multiple Ruths on the stairs walking up to Maxine's apartment. ![]() As Alan tries to persuade Nadia she can't let time collapse on itself, time continues to fall apart around them. Nadia and Alan eventually find each other at Maxine's, where they're sort of back at Nadia's 36th birthday from the first season.
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