Yellowjackets: 3x07 Croak.
We just need to find these people so we can go home.
Three seasons into Yellowjackets and it looks like the show is completely committing to the idea that what is haunting our survivors isn’t in fact a spiritual emptiness, isn’t the personified wilderness, but a combination of natural phenomena that they haven’t fully understood and mental health problems that have escalated out there, for a variety of reasons. What gets me the most about Croak is the proximity of everything – the fact that these bumbling, excited scientists under the guidance of their “mountain man”, who may be good at his job but doesn’t seem like an outstanding survivalist with any particularly impressive skill, have made it to just a few kilometres away from the village armed with nothing more complex than a map and a compass, and an emergency sat phone that they’re passé enough about that they break it in a tussle while high. The wilderness, over these past twelve or so months, has felt so remote, so inescapable, but it turns out that civilisation has never been quite that far away, and could have been reached if there had been a concerted effort. Instead, the two groups – and all the accrued histories and prejudices and baggage that come with them – clash. One group is a scientific team – successful in an attempt to record the Arctic banshee frog, a (entirely fictional) species of frog that goes into hibernation for seven years to emerge for a mating event that explains the screams and screeches. The other has succeeded in surviving horrible ordeals, has built a village out there, has organised around a shared religion. It’s a culture clash, in which one side comes armed with all the skills of seasoned hunters, and the other with one guy and a crossbow.
I like the opening of the episode, which follow one cute little frog like a Planet Earth episode. It seems like nothing, too small to have much of an impact, until it begins to scream, and joins hundreds of other frogs in a chorus. There is something infectious about Hannah and Edwin’s excitement to have captured them on their DAT recorder, to be the first to have done it, after dedicating their academic career to them. They’re in love with each other, and they love the same thing. Kodi watches, disaffected, like he’s watching a nature documentary about two weird humans, and he’s ready to demonstrate his survival skills (killing a rabbit with a crossbow) but reluctant to share anything else substantial about himself, making him suspicious to Edwin, who also doesn’t like Hannah’s attraction to his rugged manliness. In any other story, a character like Kodi would be associated with potential danger – the stranger who doesn’t provide details about his backstory, who is the only one bearing weapons and who is the only one who can get them out. In this story, we know that there are much more dangerous things lurking in these woods, and that this danger hunts in packs.
The proximity goes beyond the presumed closeness of a way out that must have been there this whole time, it’s also the moment when the three enter the camp, attracted by the scent of barbecue (oh Ben), to find something so overwhelmingly strange that they have no clue how to react. It’s the closeness to safety and home summarised by Van’s hopeful “we’re going home”. Ben’s head is right there on a table but if everyone stayed calm, they could probably just go home from here by following Kodi out of these woods. They’d have a lot to explain, and what would follow them around after the return from the wilderness would be much worse than the rumours that the surviving Yellowjackets have had to deal with, but all of them would have made it out alive at this point. It’s so close – but then there’s Lottie, screaming “no”, burying an axe in Edwin’s head. “They don’t belong. It doesn’t want them here” she says, after months of nothing but silence from the wilderness, after having had to use Travis and Akilah as a conduit because her own perceived connection to it was severed. I don’t think that there can be much doubt here that this is a psychotic break, the result of her meds running out all these months ago and something upsetting her balance so much that this violence that diminished any chance of all of them just walking out of there is inevitable. Kodi and Hannah run, and the girls immediately give chase, because even their harmless games have been practice for the hunt. Kodi gets one bolt away and hits Melissa. Instead of staying behind with her, Shauna tells Mari to look after her or else. Instead of staying behind as the group’s designated medical expert, Misty joins the chase.
It goes on for a while. Everyone splits up. Van and Tai stumble over the tent and Van has a heartbreaking, immediate instinct to call her mother from the sat phone before realising that it’s broken. Tai says that at least these provisions will help the village, and Van, again, heartbreakingly, pleads that they don’t need it because they can go home now. There is an immediate and obvious split in terms of what everyone thinks is happening going forward, a divide between considering the village home and trying to still get back to their actual home. They’re such obvious ideological splits that I kind of wish they had carried through more strongly into the adult timeline.
Misty loses her glasses in the chase but directs Akilah and Travis to try and push Kodi towards the cliff where, if he did fall, he would join the still missing Crystal – but they end up pulling him up instead, which, considering that with the sat phone broken he is the only tenuous link to the outside, is the correct decision here, but maybe not one that will work out, considering their rescue is still three months out. Hannah gives herself up, and Shauna seems to very much consider killing her, before Hannah mentions that she knows where some first aid supplies are stashed (and with Mari and Gen eventually realising that the only way to remove the bolt from Melissa is to push it all the way through, some antibiotics would definitely help).
In the present timeline, Shauna listens to the DAT again on her own and focuses on the part we haven’t quite witnessed yet, Hannah’s very personal spoken letter to a child, trying to explain herself, like someone who knows she is going to die. She has already put the pieces together in her head, and she is about to do something drastic about it, but then Misty, Tai and Van join her in her mission. Tai evades questions about why she went to see Lottie on the day she died, but Van’s concerns are visibly growing. Once they’re all in a car together, Shauna explains that Hannah had a daughter when she was a teenager, a daughter Shauna has managed to track down (that she does this in the short span of time she is given here is one of the least believable things that have happened on the show). That daughter, Shauna is convinced, is the one who sent her the tape, meaning that someone must have brought it back from the wilderness, because as we learn later from Callie’s snooping, none of the three strangers ever made it back alive. They’re headed for Richmond, Virginia, but before they can make it, Misty gets a phone call from Walter telling her that the DNA under Lottie’s fingernails matches Shauna’s. There’s a hilarious sequences of everyone in the car frantically texting each other while Shauna drives, but it’s cut short by Van coughing up blood!
They drive Van to the hospital and it is not looking good. While Misty confronts Shauna about the DNA, leading to Shauna just driving away on her own (not beating the bad friend allegations), Van begins hallucinating in the hospital bed: first she sees herself in the bed transported back to the wilderness, and her younger self sets the bed on fire (poor Van, with the fire), telling her that every time she survived the impossible, it was an even trade. That very much plays into what Tai has been telling her this whole time, becoming more and more insistent that they need to bring more sacrifices – and in a second hallucination, Van tells a fully Dark Tai that she wants to speak to the real Tai, that she needs her instead, even though Dark Tai keeps insisting she is the one who can help her. It’s not looking good for the annoying patient in the next bed over.
And back at the motel room, Callie talks to her father, telling him she has found a record of the disappeared scientists online, that they disappeared very close to where Shauna was lost, and that maybe Shauna isn’t a good person that bad things happened to, but straight up a bad person. Jeff is scratching and scratching, because the walls are closing in and it’s all too much. Shauna reunites with her knife and brings it to her calm and reasonable conversation, so I’m sure this will all end well.
Random notes:
RIP Melissa theories. I think I’m a little bit sad that we don’t get to see that particular reunion play out, because I for one would have very much liked to see the version of Shauna confronted with it.
This episode is full of little bits of information: the stash that Ben came across was from an earlier scientific team, Melissa and Gen never made it out alive.
Very in-character for Jeff to complain about their “poorly furnished” motel room! Also, “I appreciate that secrecy is your love language”.
Misty: I’m not family but we have a very intense trauma bond.
Lottie after killing Edwin has fully descended into herself, smearing herself with his blood, trying to commune with the wilderness. It’s horrifying – but Mari’s “go fuck your blood dirt, Lottie” still made me chuckle. With all of that, having Blood Bitch by the Cocteau Twins in the end credits is certainly a choice.
A bunch of options here for the DNA reveal: Walter could be straight-up lying, it could be one of those things where it’s familial DNA and this was actually Callie, Shauna may have fought with her but not killed her. Melanie Lynskey plays Shauna’s reaction as completely inscrutable, so very hard to tell.