![]() He adopted different kids, but there’s an element of Hargreeves from both these timelines: He has his own agenda he’s never truly loved these children. This is the same Hargreeves we met in season two, in ’63, but this Hargreeves never adopted those kids. You’re seeing a much darker side of Reginald. ![]() I definitely thought Hargreeves had changed. The last two episodes really upped the ante. I’m sure it will if previous seasons are any indication. The intention is that this timeline, whatever we’re in now, has merged people from other timelines into one and that may or may not have repercussions in the future. He has his wife back, which should also provide some interesting places to go how that works out. And that was the plan a promise she made to Hargreeves to support him when he needed it. And they are now in a timeline together, which shouldn’t be. So in the reprogramming of the universe - which is the place we’ll probably go to in season four if we get one - they now exist in the same timeline together. The promise that he made to Allison was he’d give her back the two things she wanted the most: her daughter, Claire, and her husband, Ray, but they exist in two different timelines. In the reprogramming of the universe that Hargreeves didn’t get to complete because Allison sort of chose the family over him in that last moment, he did get some of the resets done. Sticking to the conversation of the finale, how is it that Allison (Emmy Raver-Lampman) is able to get both Raymond Chestnut (Yusuf Gatewood) and Claire (Coco Assad) back in different timelines? So, I have a really good sense of what season four would be, and it should be just as bonkers as the other seasons - what a challenge these superheroes, this family has being powerless. I have nothing passed that in my brain, but I’ve sort of kept to a trajectory. When I started this thing, I sort of knew four seasons of the show. I’ve already sort of worked out the beginning, middle and end of it. ![]() But I know what season four is in my head. We haven’t been picked up - I have my fingers crossed. In a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, showrunner Steve Blackman opens up about those themes and how they’ve evolved throughout the series, as well as his hopes for a fourth season (while awaiting renewal): “It’s fun to play that these abilities can continue to grow through seasons and change as we as human beings change.”Īfter such a major ending with season three, what are your plans for a possible fourth season? Umbrella Academy reveals how far someone will go when they’ve suffered trauma after trauma, explores the argument of nature versus nurture, and sends a positive message of how families can be loving and accepting of their trans relatives with how the popular series brought Viktor’s story to the screen following Elliot Page’s transition. GLAAD: Racial Diversity Up Among LGBTQ Characters on TV Overall Representation Dropsīy the end of the episodes, the Sparrows and Umbrellas find they are more similar than they originally thought: just kids trying to make their dad proud, only to find that their father never cared for them and has always had his own agenda, regardless of which group of children he decided to adopt on Oct.
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