Arrow season 2 episode 8 imdb series#
A number of smartly placed imagery throughout the series supports this, namely the opening theme with an apple and the two Michelangelo-esque portraits of a man and a woman at Eve’s quarters.ĭuring the first few scenes at school, Martha walks up the stairs with Magnus Nielsen ( Moritz Jahn/Wolfram Koch) and Bartosz Tiedemann ( Paul Lux/Roman Knizka). The immediate biblical reference here has to be of Adam and Eve, the first man and first woman to be created as per the Book of Genesis. This parallel world revolves around her, making her Adam’s counterpart who eventually grows to become Eve. Martha also wears Jonas’ yellow jacket to school which is a major tip for us conspirators. This is intriguing because if everyone’s story is misaligned with the timeline we know of, why is Erik’s the same? It’s easy to argue, now that he has an elder brother Kilian Obendorf ( Sammy Scheuritzel) who’s dating Martha. But their grandfather Helge Doppler ( Tom Philipp/ Peter Schneider/Hermann Beyer) is yet again chanting the phrase, “It will happen again.” Ulrich is the chief of police instead of Charlotte in this timeline, and is now investigating the disappearance of Erik Obendorf ( Paul Radom). Charlotte’s daughter, Franziska Doppler ( Gina Stiebitz/Carina Wiese) is deaf-mute while her sister Elisabeth Doppler is not.
Ulrich doesn’t live Michael’s life but he’s surely cheating on his pregnant wife Hannah Nielsen ( Maja Schöne) with Charlotte Doppler ( Karoline Eichhorn/Stephanie Amarell). There’s a possibility that Ulrich plays the role of Michael Kahnwald ( Sebastian Rudolph). Their torn family photo in the kitchen suggests Ulrich is no longer there. Things in this world look as if they were a reflection of Jonas’- his house is now hers, her bed is on the opposite side of the room, and her father Ulrich Nielsen ( Oliver Masucci/Winfried Glatzeder) never shows up for breakfast. The series of related events in this timeline commences on Novemwith Martha waking up from a dream. The world that Martha brought Jonas to is in its pre-apocalypse phase. She uses the time machine again, leaving Jonas to fend for himself in her world. Her parting words, “I’ll make this right, I promise” is extremely reminiscent of what Jonas proclaimed in the previous season. Martha tells Jonas that Jis when their worlds “form a knot that is inextricably intertwined. This is probably why the title card Dark is also displayed in a mirrored format. Jonas’ hair is parted the other side too. When Martha brings Jonas to her world, if you notice closely, the wound on her right cheek from the previous scene is now on the left. Do you notice how many times the number three frequents? Hold that thought. In a side story, this episode also introduces three new characters called The Unknown (Jakob Diehl/Hans Diehl/Claude Heinrich), who appear to be the same person from three stages of his life, setting fire to Adam’s origin base. From DARK S3E1, “Deja Vu” Photo: IMDbĭark Season 3, Episode 1, “Deja Vu” begins with a quote by German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer: “Man can do what he wills but he cannot will what he wills,” which practically foreshadows Martha’s plan of taking Jonas Kahnwald ( Louis Hoffman/Andreas Pietschmann/Dietrich Hollinderbäumer) to a parallel world where she belongs. But when Martha Nielsen ( Lisa Vicari/Barbara Nüsse/Nina Kronjäger) appeared in Season 2, Episode 8, “Endings and Beginnings” at the scene of her own death, it opened up ineffable situations for Season 3. Until that very moment, we were led to believe there is only one Universe. Last year, the German Netflix original series Dark took a major plot leap with the introduction of another world in its Season 2 finale “Endings and Beginnings.” Three portals were opened at the same time creating a wormhole between generations: the primary base in 2020, the post-apocalyptic Winden, Germany in 2053 and the origin base in 1921.