Word: This story comprises spoilers from “The Beast in Me.”
Should you thought there was no doable manner out for Claire Danes’ Aggie within the “The Beast in Me” finale episode, that was by design.
Showrunner Howard Gordon — with whom Danes labored on “Homeland” — particularly crafted the ending of the Netflix sequence to place the viewer in Aggie’s footwear, pondering there’s no doable manner for her to return out on prime as Nile Jarvis (Matthew Rhys) quashes her hopes of proving he murdered his spouse (and others).
“The sensation I wished the viewers to really feel by proxy is the horrible frustration of, ‘Oh my God, she is aware of the reality, however she will be able to’t get it on the market. She’s screwed.’ ”
Certainly, “The Beast in Me” ends with Aggie’s efforts to show that Nile killed his first spouse rendered moot, as Nile frames her for the kidnapping and homicide of Fennec after she discovers that he did, in actual fact, kill his first spouse after studying that she was an FBI informant.
However Nile is undone by his new spouse Nina (Brittany Snow), who secretly information him confessing to all of it. He’s arrested after which shortly thereafter murdered in jail on the behest of his uncle.
“It truly is a little bit bit concerning the narratives we inform ourselves. What’s the reality? What’s our curiosity within the fact? What’s our funding within the lies we inform ourselves?,” Gordon defined to TheWrap, declaring that Aggie should conclude that she was partially liable for the accident that killed her son, regardless of blaming Fennec all these years.
“I wished this to really feel prefer it wasn’t simply ‘Examine, test, test,’ as a result of there have been loads of braids to knit collectively. The previous homicide, current penalties, how the dominoes would fall for each character who was complicit, half complicit, willfully, semi-willingly. Together with and greater than anybody, Aggie, who has to reconcile herself with the truth that she was not directly, however immediately sufficient, liable for the loss of life of her little one.”

As for the lure set for Nile, Gordon admitted the tape recorder was initially “a placeholder” till the writers may determine a distinct method to convey him down, however they couldn’t beat it.
In truth, for a quick second, Gordon thought-about a far bleaker ending for the sequence: letting Nile get away with it.
“For a second, I awakened in the future and I stated, ‘What if we simply doubled down on that awfulness?’ However it didn’t really feel good.”
However Nile is useless proper?
Sure, Gordon confirmed. He’s gone. “That character has had his story informed,” he stated. However we reside within the age the place restricted sequence continuously evolve into ongoing drama sequence, so may Gordon see revisiting this story in a second season?
“I believe that to the extent that Aggie is a author who has been delivered to this subsequent stage of her life, no matter that stage is … if there’s a story, there is perhaps extra. I’m tempted by the character of her grifter father ultimately. We’ll see how the present does and if an concept comes. However I believe they’d be open to extra.”
“The Beast in Me” is now streaming on Netflix.
