F Sharp
- El episodio se transmitió el 21 nov 2021
- TV-MA
- 57min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.8/10
3.6 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe teens get their bearings as Misty finds hell on earth quite becoming. In the present: revenge, sex homework, and the policeman formerly known as Goth.The teens get their bearings as Misty finds hell on earth quite becoming. In the present: revenge, sex homework, and the policeman formerly known as Goth.The teens get their bearings as Misty finds hell on earth quite becoming. In the present: revenge, sex homework, and the policeman formerly known as Goth.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Samantha Hanratty
- Teen Misty
- (as Sammi Hanratty)
Opiniones destacadas
Similar to the format that Lost used, now that the plane has wrecked, we see that the format is going to intercut with plane wreck/marooned in the woods storyline to show us who these people were in their Before life. Unlike Lost, we also get an After life many years later (for those who survived). And it's def. More gory than Lost.
Misty's character gets a lot of flak from viewers, but honestly she's easily the most interesting character in the series. It helps that both Christina Ricci and Sammi Hanratty, the latter in particular, are so fantastic. She is basically straight out of a comic book, weird and awkward kid, then turns into a superhero out of circumstance. Misty acts as a foil to the other main characters, both past and present, she pushes the narrative.
More awkward sexuality from nearly every character. Misty's date went from pathetic, to sad, to hilarious. Some role-playing goes awry, though a rabbit gets sacrificed and loins are stirred. I get why Misty did what she did at the end of the episode, plus it removes "the easy out" from the storyline. Misty is in her element in the wilderness, after being treated like a pariah in the real world.
Sammi Hanratty was spectacular in this episode.
More awkward sexuality from nearly every character. Misty's date went from pathetic, to sad, to hilarious. Some role-playing goes awry, though a rabbit gets sacrificed and loins are stirred. I get why Misty did what she did at the end of the episode, plus it removes "the easy out" from the storyline. Misty is in her element in the wilderness, after being treated like a pariah in the real world.
Sammi Hanratty was spectacular in this episode.
The second episode of Yellowjackets, titled "F Sharp," directed by Jamie Travis and written by Jonathan Lisco alongside creators Ashley Lyle and Bart Nickerson, deepens the harrowing narrative established in the pilot, immersing viewers further into the chaotic aftermath of the plane crash that strands the high school girls in the Canadian wilderness. This installment pushes the story beyond the initial shock, revealing the brutal realities of survival with unflinching detail, while intricately developing both the teen and adult versions of the characters. It maintains the dual timeline structure that enriches the overarching narrative, intertwining trauma, mystery, and character psychology with escalating intensity.
In the 1996 timeline, "F Sharp" begins where the pilot left off-amid the wreckage of the crash-plunging the audience into scenes of pandemonium and desperate action. The visceral depiction of the crash aftermath stands out, with particularly graphic and unsettling imagery such as the amputation of Coach Ben's leg by Misty (played by Samantha Hanratty) in an intense, nerve-wracking scene that blends horror and survival pragmatism. This moment painfully underscores the primal stakes and the girls' forced transition from victims to survivors, embodying the series' recurring tension between innocence lost and raw survival instinct. Misty's multifaceted character becomes increasingly central here, her medical knowledge and calm under pressure shadowed by undercurrents of instability and future menace, a duality brilliantly conveyed through both Hanratty and Christina Ricci's adult portrayal.
The episode also begins to explore the early social fractures and alliances forming among the survivors, emphasizing interpersonal dynamics alongside the physical struggle. Shauna's (Sophie Nélisse) resourcefulness is foregrounded, particularly in moments such as her preparing rabbit stew, which symbolically highlights both the macabre necessity and the creeping normalization of their dire situation. The narrative carefully constructs the slow unraveling of social order, illustrating how alliances are tentative and trust is frayed amid survival pressures. The theme of vulnerability expressed through the girls' reactions to both tangible threats and psychological disintegration is a compelling throughline, solidifying the show's intricate character-driven plotting.
In the present-day 2021 timeline, the episode shifts its focus to the complex adult lives of the survivors, revealing fractures in their relationships and ongoing trauma. Shauna and her husband's strained marriage reflects how the horrors endured in youth continue to ripple into their present, while Natalie's tense confrontation with Misty at a bar hints at simmering unresolved conflicts. The show skillfully balances these present-day moments of domestic unease and social tension with flashbacks, creating a layered narrative that invites audiences to piece together the puzzle of who these women have become and what secrets they harbor. This ongoing interplay between past and present grounds the mystery in emotional realism and psychological depth.
The direction by Jamie Travis is taut and atmospheric, sustaining a tight pacing that contrasts chaos with moments of eerie quiet. His visual composition emphasizes the menacing presence of the wilderness, with a visual palette oscillating between muted earth tones that evoke cold isolation and the claustrophobic interiors of the survivors' campsites. C. Kim Miles's cinematography captures the oppressive wilderness setting with an almost sentient quality, using light and shadow to amplify the tension and a pervasive sense of foreboding. The editing by Kevin D. Ross supports this rhythm, employing restrained but effective cuts that build suspense without sacrificing narrative clarity.
The episode's writing is notably complex, weaving together horror, drama, and character study with a delicate balance. The script expertly blends moments of tense survival action with sharp psychological insight and dark humor, evident in scenes where the girls' panic and despair are punctuated by flashes of sardonic wit or youthful irreverence. This tonal complexity enriches the viewing experience, preventing the narrative from descending into straightforward horror clichés. Moreover, the writing explores themes of alienation and female adolescence under extreme pressure, with Misty's middle school flashbacks offering a glimpse into her social isolation and burgeoning trauma, deepening her character's enigma and laying groundwork for future developments.
Performance-wise, the episode maintains the high standard set by the pilot. Samantha Hanratty's portrayal of teenage Misty is particularly gripping, effectively conveying a character oscillating between caretaker and potential threat, vulnerability and manipulation. Christina Ricci's adult Misty adds further layers of intrigue and menace, with subtle mannerisms bridging past and present selves. Sophie Nélisse and Juliette Lewis (adult Shauna) continue to deliver nuanced performances that reveal the emotional toll of survival and the fracture lines in their characters' psyches. The ensemble cast's chemistry and individual portrayals significantly amplify the episode's emotional resonance and tension.
Noteworthy scenes that punctuate the episode include the intense sequence where Misty amputates Coach Ben's leg - a moment both horrifying and emblematic of the brutal measures survival demands. Another striking narrative beat is the focus on the mysterious symbol etched on a tree and the enigmatic postcard Natalie carries, which persist as recurring motifs hinting at deeper mysteries, possibly supernatural or conspiratorial in nature, thus enriching the show's suspense framework and thematic complexity.
Thematically, "F Sharp" further delves into the disintegration of societal norms under duress, particularly through its depiction of adolescent girls thrust into an unforgiving environment. The episode probes the tension between cooperation and competition, innocence and corruption, and sanity and madness, while also suggesting that trauma's effects extend well beyond the physical to reshape identity and interpersonal dynamics over decades. The narrative's interlacing of survival horror with psychological drama situates Yellowjackets within a growing tradition of genre-bending television that prioritizes character complexity over conventional plot-driven thrills.
Culturally and cinematically, the episode continues the series' engagement with survival narratives akin to Lord of the Flies and psychological horror and drama shows such as Mare of Easttown and Big Little Lies, while also evoking the fractured temporality and mystery layering reminiscent of Lost. The attention to female adolescence amidst trauma aligns the series with a current television trend emphasizing complex female leads and unflinching examinations of gendered experience under pressure. The blend of supernatural hints with raw human drama enhances the series' distinctiveness, marking it as a sophisticated contribution to survival genre television.
"F Sharp" marks a compelling continuation of Yellowjackets' eerie and psychologically rich tapestry. Its detailed portrayal of survival's grim realities intertwined with sharp character development and haunting mysteries elevates it beyond simple thriller fare. While some viewers may find the relentless intensity and graphic imagery challenging, these elements serve the story's exploration of trauma's multifaceted impact profoundly. The episode's taut direction, complex script, and outstanding ensemble performances combine to probe not just how the girls survived physically, but how survival fractures and shapes identity and relationships decades later. "F Sharp" challenges and engages the audience to consider the deeper consequences of trauma and the darkness lurking beneath adolescent experience in extremis, affirming the show's place as a nuanced and provocative drama, well beyond typical genre conventions.
In the 1996 timeline, "F Sharp" begins where the pilot left off-amid the wreckage of the crash-plunging the audience into scenes of pandemonium and desperate action. The visceral depiction of the crash aftermath stands out, with particularly graphic and unsettling imagery such as the amputation of Coach Ben's leg by Misty (played by Samantha Hanratty) in an intense, nerve-wracking scene that blends horror and survival pragmatism. This moment painfully underscores the primal stakes and the girls' forced transition from victims to survivors, embodying the series' recurring tension between innocence lost and raw survival instinct. Misty's multifaceted character becomes increasingly central here, her medical knowledge and calm under pressure shadowed by undercurrents of instability and future menace, a duality brilliantly conveyed through both Hanratty and Christina Ricci's adult portrayal.
The episode also begins to explore the early social fractures and alliances forming among the survivors, emphasizing interpersonal dynamics alongside the physical struggle. Shauna's (Sophie Nélisse) resourcefulness is foregrounded, particularly in moments such as her preparing rabbit stew, which symbolically highlights both the macabre necessity and the creeping normalization of their dire situation. The narrative carefully constructs the slow unraveling of social order, illustrating how alliances are tentative and trust is frayed amid survival pressures. The theme of vulnerability expressed through the girls' reactions to both tangible threats and psychological disintegration is a compelling throughline, solidifying the show's intricate character-driven plotting.
In the present-day 2021 timeline, the episode shifts its focus to the complex adult lives of the survivors, revealing fractures in their relationships and ongoing trauma. Shauna and her husband's strained marriage reflects how the horrors endured in youth continue to ripple into their present, while Natalie's tense confrontation with Misty at a bar hints at simmering unresolved conflicts. The show skillfully balances these present-day moments of domestic unease and social tension with flashbacks, creating a layered narrative that invites audiences to piece together the puzzle of who these women have become and what secrets they harbor. This ongoing interplay between past and present grounds the mystery in emotional realism and psychological depth.
The direction by Jamie Travis is taut and atmospheric, sustaining a tight pacing that contrasts chaos with moments of eerie quiet. His visual composition emphasizes the menacing presence of the wilderness, with a visual palette oscillating between muted earth tones that evoke cold isolation and the claustrophobic interiors of the survivors' campsites. C. Kim Miles's cinematography captures the oppressive wilderness setting with an almost sentient quality, using light and shadow to amplify the tension and a pervasive sense of foreboding. The editing by Kevin D. Ross supports this rhythm, employing restrained but effective cuts that build suspense without sacrificing narrative clarity.
The episode's writing is notably complex, weaving together horror, drama, and character study with a delicate balance. The script expertly blends moments of tense survival action with sharp psychological insight and dark humor, evident in scenes where the girls' panic and despair are punctuated by flashes of sardonic wit or youthful irreverence. This tonal complexity enriches the viewing experience, preventing the narrative from descending into straightforward horror clichés. Moreover, the writing explores themes of alienation and female adolescence under extreme pressure, with Misty's middle school flashbacks offering a glimpse into her social isolation and burgeoning trauma, deepening her character's enigma and laying groundwork for future developments.
Performance-wise, the episode maintains the high standard set by the pilot. Samantha Hanratty's portrayal of teenage Misty is particularly gripping, effectively conveying a character oscillating between caretaker and potential threat, vulnerability and manipulation. Christina Ricci's adult Misty adds further layers of intrigue and menace, with subtle mannerisms bridging past and present selves. Sophie Nélisse and Juliette Lewis (adult Shauna) continue to deliver nuanced performances that reveal the emotional toll of survival and the fracture lines in their characters' psyches. The ensemble cast's chemistry and individual portrayals significantly amplify the episode's emotional resonance and tension.
Noteworthy scenes that punctuate the episode include the intense sequence where Misty amputates Coach Ben's leg - a moment both horrifying and emblematic of the brutal measures survival demands. Another striking narrative beat is the focus on the mysterious symbol etched on a tree and the enigmatic postcard Natalie carries, which persist as recurring motifs hinting at deeper mysteries, possibly supernatural or conspiratorial in nature, thus enriching the show's suspense framework and thematic complexity.
Thematically, "F Sharp" further delves into the disintegration of societal norms under duress, particularly through its depiction of adolescent girls thrust into an unforgiving environment. The episode probes the tension between cooperation and competition, innocence and corruption, and sanity and madness, while also suggesting that trauma's effects extend well beyond the physical to reshape identity and interpersonal dynamics over decades. The narrative's interlacing of survival horror with psychological drama situates Yellowjackets within a growing tradition of genre-bending television that prioritizes character complexity over conventional plot-driven thrills.
Culturally and cinematically, the episode continues the series' engagement with survival narratives akin to Lord of the Flies and psychological horror and drama shows such as Mare of Easttown and Big Little Lies, while also evoking the fractured temporality and mystery layering reminiscent of Lost. The attention to female adolescence amidst trauma aligns the series with a current television trend emphasizing complex female leads and unflinching examinations of gendered experience under pressure. The blend of supernatural hints with raw human drama enhances the series' distinctiveness, marking it as a sophisticated contribution to survival genre television.
"F Sharp" marks a compelling continuation of Yellowjackets' eerie and psychologically rich tapestry. Its detailed portrayal of survival's grim realities intertwined with sharp character development and haunting mysteries elevates it beyond simple thriller fare. While some viewers may find the relentless intensity and graphic imagery challenging, these elements serve the story's exploration of trauma's multifaceted impact profoundly. The episode's taut direction, complex script, and outstanding ensemble performances combine to probe not just how the girls survived physically, but how survival fractures and shapes identity and relationships decades later. "F Sharp" challenges and engages the audience to consider the deeper consequences of trauma and the darkness lurking beneath adolescent experience in extremis, affirming the show's place as a nuanced and provocative drama, well beyond typical genre conventions.
The quality in the dialogue, performances, effects, and pacing varies scene to scene.
The chemistry between the characters is not natural. The history is insisted by forced delivery. Shauna and Jeff have the worst chemistry. It's difficult to say these actors/actresses are terrible. Because without a proper script, and proper direction, performances will vary. Making the pacing stilted.
The pacing suffers most from the writing. The flow in story is jarring flashing back from past to future. And there are many examples of television and film doing this properly. But this show suffers greatly from the ebb and flow of drama, humor, shock gore, etc. And the pattern in which these change affects the tone; so when something dark happens, it is followed by an inappropriate "light-hearted" moment. And then switches back to a serious ominous tone which unintentionally ruins that moment, making it either feel out of place or inappropriate. Characters are irritating, and don't act like human beings. They make decisions that feel like they are only doing it for the convenience of the plot, and not because they are doing it out of the reaction of the environment they are living.
Maybe worst of all, there is very little redeeming qualities I can list. It's very stale and uninspired. A waste of time in my opinion.
The chemistry between the characters is not natural. The history is insisted by forced delivery. Shauna and Jeff have the worst chemistry. It's difficult to say these actors/actresses are terrible. Because without a proper script, and proper direction, performances will vary. Making the pacing stilted.
The pacing suffers most from the writing. The flow in story is jarring flashing back from past to future. And there are many examples of television and film doing this properly. But this show suffers greatly from the ebb and flow of drama, humor, shock gore, etc. And the pattern in which these change affects the tone; so when something dark happens, it is followed by an inappropriate "light-hearted" moment. And then switches back to a serious ominous tone which unintentionally ruins that moment, making it either feel out of place or inappropriate. Characters are irritating, and don't act like human beings. They make decisions that feel like they are only doing it for the convenience of the plot, and not because they are doing it out of the reaction of the environment they are living.
Maybe worst of all, there is very little redeeming qualities I can list. It's very stale and uninspired. A waste of time in my opinion.
Whoa, that was a surprise but not a big one to be honest. We can all see here what lack of self love and confidence might do to a teen, especially if he was getting nothing then suddenly everything.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe book Misty is reading in the 1992 flashback at the beginning is 'The Cheerleader' by Caroline B. Cooney.
- ErroresWhen teen Misty finds the damaged flight data recorder she simply bashes it on a rock to break it open. It is virtually impossible for a person to do so, let alone a teenager.
- ConexionesFeatured in La 74ª edición de los premios Primetime Emmy (2022)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 57min
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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