A Song for the End of Everything
- Episode aired Jul 11, 2025
- TV-MA
- 51m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
A mysterious new pirate with terrifying abilities - known as the Mule - catches the attention of the Foundation and Empire.A mysterious new pirate with terrifying abilities - known as the Mule - catches the attention of the Foundation and Empire.A mysterious new pirate with terrifying abilities - known as the Mule - catches the attention of the Foundation and Empire.
Featured reviews
Despite the well-known challenges of adapting Asimov's Foundation for the screen, this episode feels hampered by a lack of effort to translate the story's core concepts into a visual language suited for film and television. Narration can be a powerful storytelling tool, but here it feels like a crutch, as if the writers struggled to convey the narrative through the medium's visual strengths and leaned too heavily on exposition.
The portrayal of the Mule, a pivotal character, also misses the mark. By a country mile. Rather than capturing the sophisticated and nuanced figure from Asimov's novels, this version comes across as a sadistic thug. In the source material, the Mule is a complex antagonist whose power lies in psychological manipulation and emotional control, not a placeholder for willy-nilly violence or gore. His depiction here is a major departure from the original, and I dare say a great vulgarisation as well. That being said, I am sure that there are ways to bring the thread back to the true importance of this character as the outlier that messes up the otherwise perfect system of psychohistory and the vindication of the latter, albeit after some rough patches for the entire Foundation project.
The portrayal of the Mule, a pivotal character, also misses the mark. By a country mile. Rather than capturing the sophisticated and nuanced figure from Asimov's novels, this version comes across as a sadistic thug. In the source material, the Mule is a complex antagonist whose power lies in psychological manipulation and emotional control, not a placeholder for willy-nilly violence or gore. His depiction here is a major departure from the original, and I dare say a great vulgarisation as well. That being said, I am sure that there are ways to bring the thread back to the true importance of this character as the outlier that messes up the otherwise perfect system of psychohistory and the vindication of the latter, albeit after some rough patches for the entire Foundation project.
The Best Sci-Fi show of my lifetime continues to impress! I have been waiting years for this season and almost thought it might not happen .They didn't open with the most climactic theatrics you might expect, but enough foreshadowing to leave counting the days until the next episode. I admit I am biased, but this Sci-Fi Epic appeals to die hard nerds and action buffs alike without doubt. I do think the first 2 Seasons are very hard to beat, but with this being Apple's Most well made and successful show anything is possible. If you want to know what happens you'll have to watch it yourself, but I expect this to end up being the lowest rated of the season (hopefully).
While season 1 was the set up and necessary for the foundation of the universe, season 2 really got going and delivered some of the best Sci Fi Tv I have seen. Season 3's introduction of the Mule is incredible and it is clear to me that the writers know what they're doing. The Cleons are once again suiting up for some interesting dynamics and it is marvellous how the writers make the 3 Cleons (Dawn, Day, Dusk) characters feel different every time we see them. The foundation plotline is also really interesting and I'm enjoying the development we're seeing. Now all that's missing are Gaal and Hari.
...the single most important line in the entire episode, right at the start and so throwaway that even us avid book readers could have missed it.
The Empire in decay, the hierarchy of Foundation in complacent "yeah, yeah, Hari's got a plan" mode, Demerzel's very *very* long game gets lampshaded (*that* law!).
It's almost as if the producers and writers have read and studied the books in detail and know what they are doing...
The look is outrageously beautiful, literally everybody is trying to out-snark everyone else and,..,.oh, yeah - the human race might be trundling towards its end.
And there is one last shocker to come for those who don't know the books. I sort of envy them.
The Empire in decay, the hierarchy of Foundation in complacent "yeah, yeah, Hari's got a plan" mode, Demerzel's very *very* long game gets lampshaded (*that* law!).
It's almost as if the producers and writers have read and studied the books in detail and know what they are doing...
The look is outrageously beautiful, literally everybody is trying to out-snark everyone else and,..,.oh, yeah - the human race might be trundling towards its end.
And there is one last shocker to come for those who don't know the books. I sort of envy them.
I understand why some may reel at the inflection incurred, but, there's no denying this is good Sci-Fi.
From the stunning visuals, solid acting and galaxy spanning opera this is the kinda story I dream about.
This opening episodes purpose was to set the stage, and it achieved that - I'm hopeful this talented team can continue their success and deliver another phenomenal season.
From the stunning visuals, solid acting and galaxy spanning opera this is the kinda story I dream about.
This opening episodes purpose was to set the stage, and it achieved that - I'm hopeful this talented team can continue their success and deliver another phenomenal season.
Did you know
- TriviaAll entries contain spoilers
- Quotes
Gaal Dornick: The Mule is here. We're out of time.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland(Temple of Divine Providence)
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 51m
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