{"id":45612,"date":"2022-08-15T02:54:06","date_gmt":"2022-08-15T02:54:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/westworld-season-4-finale-review-que-sera-sera\/"},"modified":"2022-08-15T02:54:06","modified_gmt":"2022-08-15T02:54:06","slug":"westworld-season-4-finale-review-que-sera-sera","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/westworld-season-4-finale-review-que-sera-sera\/","title":{"rendered":"Westworld: Season 4 Finale Review – “Que Ser\u00e1, Ser\u00e1”"},"content":{"rendered":"
Warning: The following contains full <\/em>spoilers<\/strong><\/em> for the Westworld Season 4 episode “Que Ser\u00e1, Ser\u00e1,” which aired on Aug. 14 on HBO.<\/em><\/p>\n to read <\/em>our review of last week’s Westworld episode, “Metanoia,” click here.<\/p>\n With Westworld going so big with its robot apocalypse, and even bigger with the absolute end point for all humanity, there was no story left… than to go back to the park. Shrink it all back down to something smaller. give us Westworld<\/em> again. It was almost comical how far reaching the story journeyed beyond the park of the first two seasons (while still keeping it in the title), so much that this season and the previous one featured new <\/em>parks, just to make things feel tethered. There were no massive surprises in “Que Ser\u00e1, Ser\u00e1” (since there there was no going back from last week) but it still unfolded nicely as an “aftermath”-style finale leading us into the next — and presumedly final — stage of the story.<\/p>\n “Que Ser\u00e1, Ser\u00e1” focused on Hale’s final showdown with William, Caleb and Frankie’s escape and tearful goodbye, and — at long last — Dolores’ true role in all of this. The Christina\/Dolores reveal felt right, but also underwhelming. It wasn’t too hard to figure out that she’d dreamt up Teddy (especially<\/em> after they revealed that she’d also created Maya, her mean boss, and even paranoid Peter) to help her wake up but that didn’t stop the sentiment of the moment, and the tender scenes between them, from working. In fact, this is the most attention paid to their relationship to date. The bigger revelation at play here, breaking it all down, was that Dolores’ world was digitally separate<\/em> from everyone else. She was a ghost who’d surrounded herself with a small circle of ghosts. <\/p>\n Side Quest: Hale stomping on the floor of the digital city map, rocking Dolores’ reality, was pretty rad.<\/p>\n