Agatha All Along S01e05 đ đ
If Episode 4 of Agatha All Along gave us a moment of musical catharsis and coven bonding, Episode 5ââDarkest Hour, Wake Thy Powerââsystematically dismantles it. In a blistering 30 minutes, showrunner Jac Schaeffer flips the board, reminding us that this is still a story steeped in manipulation, generational trauma, and the terrifying consequences of unchecked power. The episode opens with the coven crashing through the next door on the Witchesâ Road: a straight-out-of-VHS horror movie from the 1980s. The production design here is immaculateâwood paneling, flickering tube TVs, and a synth score that hums with dread. The trial? A Ouija board.
This isnât just nostalgia bait. The trial forces each witch to confront the spirits theyâve ignored . As the board spells out a nameââthe air freezes. Longtime Marvel fans know this as Agathaâs son in the comics, and the show confirms it with devastating efficiency. Agathaâs composure cracks for the first time, not with rage, but with something worse: fear. Teenâs Crown of Chaos The episodeâs seismic shift happens in the final seven minutes. After a frantic escape from a possession attempt (shades of The Evil Dead ), the coven turns on Agatha. But itâs Teen (Joe Locke) who steals the show. When Rio (Aubrey Plaza) goads himâcalling him âthe witch with no nameââhis eyes glow blue. A crown of blue psychic energy forms around his head. The ground shakes. The Road spits the coven out. agatha all along s01e05
The reveal? (aka Wiccan), one of Wanda Maximoffâs âtwinsâ from WandaVision . If Episode 4 of Agatha All Along gave
Warning: Full spoilers for Agatha All Along Episode 5. This isnât just nostalgia bait
Itâs a twist many suspected, but the execution is pitch-perfect. Locke sheds the puppy-dog energy immediately. His final lineââYou want me to be the villain? Fineââis delivered with a cold fury that recontextualizes every previous episode. He wasnât just a fanboy; he was a ghost looking for his motherâs murderer. Kathryn Hahn delivers her most layered performance yet. This episode reveals that Agatha didnât just covet powerâshe failed to save her son. Her constant belittling of the coven (âYouâre not witches. Youâre sad, desperate womenâ) reads now as projection. When she screams at Teen, âYou sound just like her!â (referring to Wanda), itâs both a threat and a confession: she sees history repeating.