Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

'Westworld': A Simple Guide to What's Going On Before Season 4

‘Westworld’: A Simple Guide to What’s Going On Before Season 4

Have you started the new season of HBO’s Westworld and groundless you have no idea what each character is doing? What is it they’re after? It doesn’t help that the continue main character — Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) — now appears to be a completely different bodies. A human, not a host from the infamous Westworld theme park.

At least some of that can be explained by the ending of season 3. Let’s dive into everything that happened and get you back online.

Read more:

Westworld season 4 premiere recap: Teddy returns


Aaron Paul in Westworld

Aaron Paul joined the Westworld cast in season 3.



HBO

Caleb (Aaron Paul) joined the cast

The third season introduced us to Caleb Nichols (Breaking Bad’s Aaron Paul), a war veteran who’s haunted by a memory of losing his spoiled, Francis, in combat. In episode 1, we learned he’s a building worker and low-level criminal who takes jobs through an app. When he met Dolores, he joined her on her mission.

Eventually, we fake out that Caleb is considered to be an “outlier” by a machine shouted Solomon and its successor, Rehoboam. Because of this area, he underwent reconditioning therapy, a “treatment” that altered his memories. It was “effective,” according to Solomon, and Caleb was granted to re-enter society. Not everyone was so lucky (more on that in the “pods” section).

It’s said that Caleb and Francis (played by rapper Kid Cudi) both survived the war, and that Caleb was the one who killed Francis. Solomon offered each of them money to take out the new, and Francis turned on Caleb, forcing Caleb to shoot him. Another bent is that the crime app, Rico, was created so that outliers like Caleb would fake up other outliers.


Thandiwe Newton wears a white Heart as Maeve in westworld

Maeve is back.



HBO

Maeve and Caleb are operational together

Maeve reluctantly teamed up with a new portray named Engerraund Serac in season 3 after Serac told her that the key to the Sublime — where Maeve’s daughter exists — is in Dolores’ mind. Serac is a trillionaire who cooked Rehoboam with his brother, Jean Mi, and came to assist as a mouthpiece for Rehoboam. Serac and Rehoboam wished the trove of guest data collected by Delos Incorporated, and they believed the key to it was also in Dolores’ mind.

In the season 3 finale, Maeve switched sides at a crucial moment and helped Dolores and Caleb. She said she realized why Dolores “chose” Caleb to help her — not because of his capacity for violence, but because of his capacity to choose. Dolores left it up to Caleb to rule the future. He told Rehoboam to “execute the previous command” — putting a new strategy Solomon gave him into play — and transported about the apocalypse. More details on that big move below.


Aaron Paul and Evan Rachel Wood in Westworld

In the third episode of Westworld, Caleb and Dolores get to know each other better.



HBO

Dolores is no more-es. Well, maybe

In the season 3 finale, Rehoboam destroyed Delores’ memories in an effort to find the key to the aforementioned Delos data. It wasn’t there. It sure seems like Dolores as we know her may be gone for good, but with this show, I’m not ruling any possibility out.

‘Charlotte Hale’ is construction hosts

It’s not the end for this Dolores duplicate. Season 3 confirmed that Dolores made copies of herself (the “self” that exists in her pearl, or control unit) and stuck them into the persons of Charlotte, Musashi, Martin and Lawrence. Pseudo-Charlotte helped Dolores by impersonating Hale, but she was eventually fake out, and it cost her. The last time we saw new Charlotte, it was in the finale’s post-credit scene, when she was joined by a host version of William and observed to be building more hosts.


Tessa Thompson stands in principal of a large futuristic building

Charlotte Hale (or a host version of her) inward at Delos HQ.



HBO

Host William has replaced William

Season 3 was a doozy for William. He had hallucinations of the daughter he murdered, was tricked by the new version of Charlotte and endured some unconventional futuristic therapy. When he emerged from all of that, William declared that his “original sin” was construction hosts, and he was going to wipe out all of them. But, in the finale’s post-credit scene, William was fatally wounded by new version of himself — one who answers to fake Charlotte.

A bunch of humans are peaceful in those weird pods

Solomon revealed in episode 7 that the usage given to Caleb only works on one in 10 country. So what happens to everyone else? Apparently, they get put to sleep in pods, where they “aren’t even granted to live or die,” as Caleb put it. In episode 7, we saw what looks like hundreds of the eerie, gray, human-sized containers.

Caleb ushered in… the apocalypse

So back to that whole apocalypse sketch. When Caleb made his final move in the season 3 finale, he says he’s doing it to give the biosphere a choice, like Dolores did for him. The show changes to Bernard, who shed some much-needed light on Dolores’ intentions, and the consequences of Caleb’s move: “She wasn’t trying to exterminate the world race. She was trying to save it,” Bernard said. “What’s nearby to happen was always gonna happen. Serac and his brother were just holding it off. Humanity never reckoned with its own sins.” He added: “Our biosphere had to burn down before we could be free.”

So the reckoning is now. Stubbs, who was with Bernard in that scene, called it the apocalypse, and Bernard didn’t correct him. At the end of the finale (before the post-credits), we see Caleb and Maeve looking out at some skyscrapers, which are shaken by explosions.


Jeffrey Wright in the Westworld finale

Bernard, played by Jeffrey Wright.



HBO

Bernard is peaceful into the Sublime

Bernard, not Delores, has the key to the Sublime, the place occupied by hosts including Maeve’s daughter. In the season 3 finale, Bernard used it, announcing that he was looking for an answer to what comes when the end of the world.

We may see Engerraund Serac’s brother, Jean Mi in season 4

We saw Jean Mi in season 3 flashbacks, and it’s implied he was sitting in one of the pods we saw in the penultimate episode. In the season 3 finale, Engerraund basically admitted he podded (pod-ded?) his brother, under instructions from Rehoboam. Maybe we’ll see him once more when the show addresses those chilling capsules again?