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Believing Marienne (Tati Gabrielle) has overdosed, Joe leaves her on a park bench. However, a flashback reveals that Nadia (Amy-Leigh Hickman) helped Marienne fake her death using beta blockers to lower her heart rate. Marienne successfully escapes back to Paris, safe with her daughter.
S04E10 isn’t a finale. It’s a thesis statement: Love doesn’t redeem Joe. It just finds him better hiding places.
Episode 10 effectively ends the "Jonathan Moore" era. By the time the credits roll, Joe Goldberg has never been more dangerous. He has more money, more influence, and—most terrifyingly—he has stopped lying to himself about who he is. For those rewatching or relistening to the finale, it stands as a masterclass in psychological horror and character evolution.
Episode 10 wraps up the "whodunit" mystery while setting up what could be the most dangerous season yet. The final shot of Joe looking at his reflection—not with disgust, but with adoration—is the chilling conclusion we deserved.
Upon waking in the hospital, Joe comes clean to Kate about his past—though he remains selective with the truth. Kate, now in control of her father's massive empire, decides to help Joe "scrub" his image.
Without Penn Badgley’s charming face, you hear the manipulation first: the pauses, the false sympathy, the way his voice softens right before a kill. You realize you’ve been rooting for a monster – not because he’s likable, but because his narration sounds reasonable.
Believing Marienne (Tati Gabrielle) has overdosed, Joe leaves her on a park bench. However, a flashback reveals that Nadia (Amy-Leigh Hickman) helped Marienne fake her death using beta blockers to lower her heart rate. Marienne successfully escapes back to Paris, safe with her daughter.
S04E10 isn’t a finale. It’s a thesis statement: Love doesn’t redeem Joe. It just finds him better hiding places. you s04e10 m4a
Episode 10 effectively ends the "Jonathan Moore" era. By the time the credits roll, Joe Goldberg has never been more dangerous. He has more money, more influence, and—most terrifyingly—he has stopped lying to himself about who he is. For those rewatching or relistening to the finale, it stands as a masterclass in psychological horror and character evolution. S04E10 isn’t a finale
Episode 10 wraps up the "whodunit" mystery while setting up what could be the most dangerous season yet. The final shot of Joe looking at his reflection—not with disgust, but with adoration—is the chilling conclusion we deserved. Episode 10 effectively ends the "Jonathan Moore" era
Upon waking in the hospital, Joe comes clean to Kate about his past—though he remains selective with the truth. Kate, now in control of her father's massive empire, decides to help Joe "scrub" his image.
Without Penn Badgley’s charming face, you hear the manipulation first: the pauses, the false sympathy, the way his voice softens right before a kill. You realize you’ve been rooting for a monster – not because he’s likable, but because his narration sounds reasonable.