- Entertainment
- TV
- Sci-Fi Shows
- Pluribus
OPINION | The latest episode of Pluribus proves this isn't your usual alien invasion story, with a cameo that's not to be missed
Comments (0) ()When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Apple)
Pushed to encapsulate the essence of Pluribus in a sentence or two, you're likely to evoke classic sci-fi horror stories such as Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Episode one certainly played with some of the familiar terrors you'd expect to see in an alien takeover, even if it's clear that creator Vince Gilligan is keen to push past obvious tropes in search of something different, something more alien, if you will. But the latest episode – and it's associated cameo – proves Pluribus is anything but conventional.
Full spoilers for episode 6 of Pluribus follow.
You may like-
Pluribus season 1 review: "Easily one of the year's best dramas"
-
Alien: Earth's season finale is a cliffhanger not a conclusion – and I feel a bit robbed of xenomorph action
-
Tim Robinson's darkly madcap comedy thriller The Chair Company is the perfect antidote to the most overused trope on TV
Green Living
As chilling as that sounds, none of this compares to the simple fact that The Joined have made no efforts to hide their ultimate goal, which is to assimilate Carol and the 12 other characters who are immune to the virus. Whether it takes them days, months or even years, The Joined calmly inform Carol that she will eventually succumb to their control once they discover how to bypass her immunity. The entire intellect of humanity combined is working on this problem around the clock.
There's an eerie sense of finality to this, an existential helplessness compounded by Carol's sheer loneliness in the wake of humanity's collapse and her own personal grief. The second episode leans into this aspect of the horror more sharply, dropping the outright scares in favour of a prolonged, unsettling discomfort. That is, until episode five.
The new normal remains anything but normal to Carol, who starts making videos for her fellow survivors in the hope that they might help her turn things back to the way they were. She's discovered that there is a chance to undo The Joining, even if she doesn't know what that entails just yet. And crucially, Carol has the space and freedom to investigate this now that The Joined have abandoned her city because they "need a little space" from her.
Sign up for the Total Film NewsletterContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.With all the time in the world on her hands, Carol soon discovers that every public trash can nearby is filled with empty milk cartons. Further investigation reveals that The Joined aren't consuming milk in these, however, but rather a "strange yellow liquid" that's hard to define.
Eventually, Carol's prodding leads her to a dog-food factory named Agri-jet that houses lots of leftover food and something far more disturbing wrapped in plastic. Is it human remains? Something alien? We don't know, not straight away, because Carol gasps in horror, and then the credits immediately roll in. It's not until the following episode that the truth is revealed in classic scary movie fashion.
Food for thought
Episode six begins with Carol running outside of the factory, overwhelmed by what she just saw. Still, she's determined to use her video camera and film the horrors hidden within to create concrete proof of what The Joined are really up to.
You may like-
Pluribus season 1 review: "Easily one of the year's best dramas"
-
Alien: Earth's season finale is a cliffhanger not a conclusion – and I feel a bit robbed of xenomorph action
-
Tim Robinson's darkly madcap comedy thriller The Chair Company is the perfect antidote to the most overused trope on TV
Viewed firsthand through the footage she films, we see Carol reveal human heads shrink-wrapped in plastic. There are tons of them, along with many other different body parts, too. "This is what this whole plant is being used for," says Carol. "Right under our noses." There's also a meat grinder the "size of a bus," but we don't get to see it. The implication is that this is the source of the yellow liquid that The Joined drink, presumably, to sustain their control somehow.
Something doesn't feel quite right, though. For a show so consistently surprising and off-kilter, this is the first time that Pluribus borders on predictable. Of course The Joined have been eating humans all along. They're every bit as sinister as their alien peers from stories of a similar fashion. Gilligan hasn't been afraid to reveal answers to some of the show's biggest questions early on, but doesn't this particular reveal — just two-thirds of the way through season one — transform Pluribus into a more traditional genre story?
In any other show, it would, but Pluribus is far too smart and deranged to slip into cliche so easily. It turns out that everything about this reveal, from its so-called predictability to the way it was shot like a found-footage horror film, is actually designed to subvert audience expectations further.
The opening credits kick in after Carol's factory visit, and then we're suddenly thrown into an LA hot tub party where Koumba, one of the few humans who remains Unjoined, is enjoying the company of a few naked women. The Joined is always on hand to make each survivor happy...
This horny bubble Koumba's fashioned in his own decadent version of the apocalypse is about to burst abruptly, though, when Carol arrives to tell him the truth. Except, Koumba already knows.
"Is this about them eating people?" asks Koumba, much to Carol's shock and horror. "It is troubling," he adds with a casual tone of voice that suggests anything but.
And just like that, Carol's urgency and the sheer horror of what we've discovered is turned on its head. How can Koumba be ok with this? Why didn't he tell Carol when he first found out? And why aren't their cannibal habits giving Koumba the ick in that hot tub?
The answer to this mystery is, of course, John Cena. No, really.
Killing with kindness
The former wrestler turned Peacemaker star leads a video The Joined have created to address questions regarding their "food supply." Except, this isn't really John Cena. It is the real actor who's been cast to play himself in this unsettling infomercial, but Cena the character has been subsumed into the collective group mind of The Joined, just like the rest of humanity.
As Cena explains, there is a limit to what The Joined can eat. Their inability to harm life in any form means they can't harvest wheat or corn or rice, let alone eat meat. With 7 billion mouths to feed, The Joined risk starvation. There's only so much leftover food, after all, only so many apples to be found fallen from a tree.
Cena goes on to explain that 8-12% of the liquid they create is comprised of HDP, aka human-derived protein, which is taken from the 100,000 people who naturally die each day. In eating their remains, The Joined cherish the memory of those who have fallen and appreciate their sacrifice.
READ MORE
Pluribus is the antidote to 20 years of post-Lost mystery shows, and that's what makes it such a breath of fresh air
"We're not that keen on it, but we're left with little choice," adds Cena at the end. Sounds quite reasonable, right? It's kind of understandable, especially when packaged by such a charming actor in a slickly produced video. Koumba is not "pleased with this," he admits. "None of us are." But it's a reality he must accept regardless, as must Carol because, let's face it, she has little other choice.
The result is a very different kind of horror than the one we were led to expect going into this episode. Because what starts out as a malevolent form of cannibalism, a plot to take over humanity and use it as an alien food source, is explained away with a logical calm that's perhaps even more horrifying in its banality. The use of statistics and acronyms to sell the idea of eating human flesh as a positive drains the emotion out of this reveal, just as The Joined have done to humanity as a whole.
There's also the expectation that we should accept this explanation as something justified and reasonable, which adds another layer to this. Forcing Carol to understand and even sympathise with these actions – "Cena didn’t mention most of the population will starve to death in the next ten years," says Koumba – means we too are being persuaded to do the same. In doing so, Pluribus toys with traditional notions of horror through an ethical and even existential lens, making us somewhat complicit in accepting The Joined and their actions moving forward.
The episode quickly moves on then, reverting the focus back to Carol's individual journey. First, her loneliness is magnified upon learning that the other survivors have chosen to leave her out of future meet-ups, and then hope suddenly arrives when she learns that consent must be given for The Joined to assimilate her. By the time episode six jumps to Manousos in Paraguay, we've all but forgotten that the alien virus is forcing innocent people to eat dead humans for sustenance.
And it's all thanks to John Cena. Or at least, his charming smile, even if it is identical to the one shared by 8 billion other people in this chilling version of what some might call utopia.
Pluribus is currently streaming on Apple TV. Never miss an episode with our Pluribus release schedule.
CATEGORIES Apple TV Plus Streaming Services
David OpieContributorWith ten years of online journalism experience, David has written about TV, film, and music for a wide range of publications including Indiewire, Paste, Empire, Digital Spy, Radio Times, Teen Vogue and more. He's spoken on numerous LGBTQ+ panels to discuss queer representation and in 2020, he created Digital Spy's Rainbow Crew interview series, which celebrates queer talent on both sides of the camera via video content and longform reads. Passions include animation, horror, comics, and LGBTQ+ storytelling, which is why David longs to see a Buffy-themed Rusical on RuPaul's Drag Race.
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
Logout Read more
Pluribus season 1 review: "Easily one of the year's best dramas"
Alien: Earth's season finale is a cliffhanger not a conclusion – and I feel a bit robbed of xenomorph action
Tim Robinson's darkly madcap comedy thriller The Chair Company is the perfect antidote to the most overused trope on TV
Alien: Earth ending explained: Who dies and how does it set up season 2?
Pluribus writer says he has no plans to reveal what the sci-fi mystery is a "metaphor" for anytime soon: "The show becomes meaningless"
Breaking Bad creator's new show Pluribus debuts to a 100% Rotten Tomatoes score as viewers say its first episode is "one of the best pilots in recent memory"
Latest in Sci-Fi Shows
Vecna actor Jamie Campbell Bower explains how Stranger Things: The First Shadow play "informed" and "qualified" his work in season 5: "This is a child screaming for love"
Fallout season 1 will soon be free to watch on Prime – but only if you have the right TV
Stranger Things season 5 pulls in 59.6 million views in 6 days, making it the biggest English-language premiere week "in the history of Netflix"
The Stranger Things finale runtime has been officially confirmed, and it's only the second longest episode of the show
Stranger Things fans have resurrected a rather sinister season 2 theory involving Mike and Nancy's do-nothing dad – and the evidence in season 5 is overwhelming
Fallout season 2 gets festive in new teaser trailer with fresh looks at The Ghoul, a Deathclaw, and a Radroach attack
Latest in Features
Everything announced at the Total War 25th Anniversary Showcase
Pluribus' surprise cameo deliberately flips the show's most horrifying scene on its head to chilling effect
Fallout season 2 is "taking some swings", but isn't committing to any canonical ending from New Vegas: "It's what we would want to see as fans"
With 25 years of Total War under its belt, the future of Creative Assembly's iconic strategy series looks brighter than ever: "We've got the best roadmap we've ever had"
Octopath Traveler 0's devs see it as "new game" despite its mobile origins: "We wanted to go back to the beginning – to start from zero"
Warhammer, I am begging you for an apothecary in my Emperor's Children army
GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS
1Octopath Traveler 0 review: "The strongest entry in this retro-styled JRPG series yet, I love the greater focus on tactical battles"- 2Sleep Awake review: "An all-timer horror premise is let down by tired stealth that I feel like I'm sleepwalking through"
- 3Metroid Prime 4: Beyond review: "The series' atmosphere has never been better, while being dragged down by a boring overworld and clunky psychic powers"
- 4Routine review: "This imperfect but wonderfully atmospheric moon-based horror leaves a strong impression"
- 5Marvel Cosmic Invasion review: "Excellent '90s-tinged superhero brawling across a punchy campaign falls just short of arcade bliss"
1Five Nights at Freddy's 2 review: "We have waited two years for a Five Nights at Freddy's 1.5"- 2Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery review: "Brings Knives Out back to its roots for a sequel that's almost on a par with the original"
- 3Wicked: For Good review: "Builds to an incredibly cathartic conclusion, but isn't quite as captivating as Part 1"
- 4The Running Man review: "Some fun action and Glen Powell's star power aren't enough to energize this disappointing Stephen King adaptation"
- 5Predator: Badlands review: "Die-hard fans may be disappointed, but as a blockbuster action-adventure, Badlands kills it"
1Stranger Things season 5 volume 1 review: “Can the Duffer brothers stick the landing? It’s sure looking like they will”- 2Pluribus season 1 review: "Easily one of the year's best dramas"
- 3The Witcher season 4 review: "The Henry Cavill-less fourth season is the best yet"
- 4IT: Welcome to Derry review: "A supremely confident step back into the history of Stephen King's cursed town and killer clown"
- 5Splinter Cell: Deathwatch review: "A pale imitation of the long-dormant stealth franchise"