First things first: if you haven't already seen the second episode of Showtime's "Yellowjackets" sophomore season and are a fan of the buzzy show, go see it. Save yourself from the spoilers you know are coming on social media, fast and hard as the snow in the somewhere in Canada wilderness. Save yourself for supper and watch.
Once you've had your fill, you're going to have some questions. Why is Travis having glowy visions of Lottie when he's having sex with Nat? Who is the man with no eyes again? One question gets soundly answered in this episode, punily titled "Edible Complex." As Collider writes, "It was never a question of if the team would resort to cannibalism, it was simply a question of when." But why in Wiskayok does the show cut away from its first and most important cannibalism scene, splicing it with an extended fantasy sequence? The answer rests in trauma and the lies we tell ourselves.
We knew it was going to happen, but we might not have known it was going to be Jackie (Ella Purnell) to get the first bite taken out of her — except for the fact she's been stored in the meat shed since freezing to death; I suppose that was a dead giveaway. Props to the show, I guess, for making cannibalism look like a BBQ. It's not simply near-starving hunger that drives the girls and Travis (Kevin Alves) to devour their departed friend, it's that she smells delicious, having been accidentally cooked instead of cremated. The team wakes up to the smell, like bacon at your mom's house on Saturday morning.
In their own heads, the characters look different. They look beautiful, classy, washed and serene.
The decision to start to eat is an extended one, made even more dramatic by the inclusion of Radiohead's "Climbing Up the Walls," which also had a great turn in "Peaky Blinders." Music is going to be a big deal this "Yellowjackets," season, thanks to the addition of new music supervisor Nora Felder, formerly of "Stranger Things," who helped my tween son finally believe me that Kate Bush is amazing. Looper describes the Radiohead song as "mysterious, popular" and it certainly fits for a creepy moment in the woods, infused with tension.
Shauna (Sophie Nélisse) is the one who goes first with the cannibalism. The others seem to look to her as if for permission. She's the leader in this and the only one with any secret experience (she ate the ear, after all). Jackie's best friend and representative in the afterlife, Shauna says eerily, "She wants us to," which seems to imply that Jackie is asking for it.
It makes sense that the teens would go to a fantasy of ceremony. The Yellowjackets have already relied upon ritual to get through their ordeal.
But to themselves, in their own heads, the characters look different. They look beautiful, classy, washed and serene, and sitting at a grand table in the forest. In the fantasy sequence, which the episode cuts with gritty flashes of ripping into Jackie's corpse, the teens are seated at a banquet table, a feast laid out before them of roast meats (not human ones) and delicious fruits. They're dressed in Greek finery with togas, robes (which seem to predict adult Lottie's robes when she's cult leader supreme) curls and laurel wreath crowns. Their mannerisms at the table are sweet, shy, almost childlike and polite. They are gods, maybe, or at least royals. That's before they dig into the feast. Then they can't believe their luck, nor how good all the food seems to be.
It makes sense that the teens would go to a fantasy of ceremony. The Yellowjackets have already relied upon ritual to get through their ordeal. Lottie leaves the heart of the bear she's killed as an offering. She must "bless" Travis and Nat every time they go hunting. As humans, how do we try to make sense of the senseless? We organize it. We say it has meaning, like the symbols in the woods. We sometimes fall back upon patterns and tell ourselves they're protecting us.
And like the Yellowjackets, we look away to survive.